History of mental disorders
Egyptian and Mesopotamian
Limited notes in an ancient Egyptian document known as the Ebers papyrus appear to describe disordered states of concentration and attention, and emotional distress in the heart or mind.[1] Some of these have been interpreted as indicating what would later be termed hysteria and melancholy. Somatic treatments typically included applying bodily fluids while reciting magical spells. Hallucinogens may have been used as part of healing rituals. Religious temples may have been used as therapeutic retreats, possibly for the induction of receptive states to facilitate sleep and the interpreting of dreams.[2]
Indian
Ancient Hindu and Punjabi scriptures known as Ramayana and Mahabharata contain fictional descriptions of depression and anxiety states. Mental disorders were generally thought to reflect abstract metaphysical entities, supernatural agents, sorcery or witchcraft. A work known as the Charaka Samhita from circa 600 BC, part of the Hindu Ayurveda ("knowledge of life"), saw ill health as resulting from an imbalance among three kinds of bodily fluids or forces called Dosha. Different personality types were also described, with different propensities to worries or difficulties. Suggested causes included inappropriate diet; disrespect towards the gods, teachers or others; mental shock due to excessive fear or joy; and faulty bodily activity. Treatments included the use of herbs and ointments, charms and prayers, moral or emotional persuasion, and shocking the person.[3]
Chinese
Mental disorders were treated mainly under Traditional Chinese Medicine by herbs, acupuncture or "emotional therapy". The Inner Canon of the Yellow Emperor described symptoms, mechanisms and therapies for mental illness, emphasizing connections between bodily organs and emotions. Conditions were thought to comprise five stages or elements and imbalance between Yin and yang.[4]
Ancient Greece and Rome
In ancient Greece and Rome, madness was associated stereotypically with aimless wandering and violence. However, Socrates considered positive aspects including prophesying (a 'manic art'); mystical initiations and rituals; poetic inspiration; and the madness of lovers. Now often seen as the very epitome of rational thought and as the founder of philosophy, Socrates freely admitted to experiencing what are now called "command hallucinations" (then called his 'daemon'). Pythagoras also heard voices.[5] Hippocrates (470–ca. 360 BC) classified mental disorders, including paranoia, epilepsy, mania and melancholia.[6]
Through long contact with Greek culture, and their eventual conquest of Greece, the Romans absorbed many Greek (and other) ideas on medicine.[7] The humoral theory fell out of favor in some quarters. The Greek physician Asclepiades (ca. 124–40 BC), who practiced in Rome, discarded it and advocated humane treatments, and had insane persons freed from confinement and treated them with natural therapy, such as diet and massages. Arateus (ca. AD 30–90) argued that it is hard to pinpoint where a mental illness comes from. However, Galen (AD 129–ca. 200), practicing in Greece and Rome, revived humoral theory.[8] Galen, however, adopted a single symptom approach rather than broad diagnostic categories, for example studying separate states of sadness, excitement, confusion and memory loss.[5]
Playwrights such as Homer, Sophocles and Euripides described madmen driven insane by the gods, imbalanced humors or circumstances. As well as the triad (of which mania was often used as an overarching term for insanity) there were a variable and overlapping range of terms for such things as delusion, eccentricity, frenzy, and lunacy. Physician Celsus argued that insanity is really present when a continuous dementia begins due to the mind being at the mercy of imaginings. He suggested that people must heal their own souls through philosophy and personal strength. He described common practices of dietetics, bloodletting, drugs, talking therapy, incubation in temples, exorcism, incantations and amulets, as well as restraints and "tortures" to restore rationality, including starvation, being terrified suddenly, agitation of the spirit, and stoning and beating. Most, however, did not receive medical treatment but stayed with family or wandered the streets, vulnerable to assault and derision. Accounts of delusions from the time included people who thought themselves to be famous actors or speakers, animals, inanimate objects, or one of the gods. Some were arrested for political reasons, such as Jesus ben Ananias who was eventually released as a madman after showing no concern for his own fate during torture.
Hebrew and Israelite
Passages of the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament have been interpreted as describing mood disorders in figures such as Job, King Saul and in the psalms of David.[8] Nebuchadnezzar is described as temporarily losing his sanity.[9] Mental disorder was not a problem like any other, caused by one of the gods, but rather caused by problems in the relationship between the individual and God. They believed that abnormal behavior was the result of possessions that represented the wrath and punishment from God. This punishment was seen as a withdrawal of God's protection and the abandonment of the individual to evil forces.[10]
Middle Ages
Persia, Arabia and the Muslim Empire
Persian and Arabic scholars were heavily involved in translating, analysing and synthesising Greek texts and concepts. As the Muslim world expanded, Greek concepts were integrated with religious thought and over time, new ideas and concepts were developed. Arab texts from this period contain discussions of melancholia, mania, hallucinations, delusions, and other mental disorders. Mental disorder was generally connected to loss of reason, and writings covered links between the brain and disorders, and spiritual/mystical meaning of disorders.[11] wrote about fear and anxiety, anger and aggression, sadness and depression, and obsessions.
Authors who wrote on mental disorders and/or proposed treatments during this period include Al-Balkhi, Al-Razi, Al-Farabi, Ibn-Sina, Al-Majusi[12] Abu al-Qasim al-Zahrawi, Averroes,[13] and Unhammad.[14]
Under Islam, the mentally ill were considered incapable yet deserving of humane treatment and protection. For example, Sura 4:5 of the Qur'an states "Do not give your property which God assigned you to manage to the insane: but feed and cloth the insane with this property and tell splendid words to him"[15] Some thought mental disorder could be caused by possession by a djin (genie), which could be either good or demon-like. There were sometimes beatings to exorcise djin, or alternatively over-zealous attempts at cures.[16] Islamic views often merged with local traditions. In Morocco the traditional Berber people were animists and the concept of sorcery was integral to the understanding of mental disorder; it was mixed with the Islamic concepts of djin and often treated by religious scholars combining the roles of holy man, sage, seer and sorcerer.[17]
The first psychiatric hospital ward was founded in Baghdad in 705, and insane asylums were built in Fes in the early 8th century, Cairo in 800 and in Damascus and Aleppo in 1270. Insane patients were treated using baths, drugs, music and activities. In the centuries to come, The Muslim world would eventually serve as a critical way station of knowledge for Renaissance Europe, through the Latin translations of many scientific Islamic texts. Ibn-Sina's (Avicenna's) Canon of Medicine became the standard of medical science in Europe for centuries, together with works of Hippocrates and Galen.[18]
Christian Europe
Conceptions of madness in the Middle Ages in Europe were a mixture of the divine, diabolical, magical and transcendental. Theories of the four humors (black bile, yellow bile, phlegm, and blood) were applied, sometimes separately (a matter of "physic") and sometimes combined with theories of evil spirits (a matter of "faith"). Arnaldus de Villanova (1235–1313) combined "evil spirit" and Galen-oriented "four humours" theories and promoted trephining as a cure to let demons and excess humours escape. Other bodily remedies in general use included purges, bloodletting and whipping. Madness was often seen as a moral issue, either a punishment for sin or a test of faith and character. Christian theology endorsed various therapies, including fasting and prayer for those estranged from God and exorcism of those possessed by the devil.[19] Thus, although mental disorder was often thought to be due to sin, other more mundane causes were also explored, including intemperate diet and alcohol, overwork, and grief.[20] The Franciscan monk Bartholomeus Anglicus (ca. 1203 – 1272) described a condition which resembles depression in his encyclopedia, De Proprietatibis Rerum, and he suggested that music would help. A semi-official tract called the Praerogativa regis distinguished between the "natural born idiot" and the "lunatic". The latter term was applied to those with periods of mental disorder; deriving from either Roman mythology describing people "moonstruck" by the goddess Luna[21] or theories of an influence of the moon.[22][23]
Episodes of mass dancing mania are reported from the Middle Ages, "which gave to the individuals affected all the appearance of insanity".[24] This was one kind of mass delusion or mass hysteria/panic that has occurred around the world through the millennia.[25]
The care of lunatics was primarily the responsibility of the family. In England, if the family were unable or unwilling, an assessment was made by crown representatives in consultation with a local jury and all interested parties, including the subject himself or herself. The process was confined to those with real estate or personal estate, but it encompassed poor as well as rich and took into account psychological and social issues. Most of those considered lunatics at the time probably had more support and involvement from the community than people diagnosed with mental disorders today.[26] As in other eras, visions were generally interpreted as meaningful spiritual and visionary insights; some may have been causally related to mental disorders, but since hallucinations were culturally supported they may not have had the same connections as today.[27]
Modern period
16th to 18th centuries
Some mentally disturbed people may have been victims of the witch-hunts that spread in waves in early modern Europe.[28] However, those judged insane were increasingly admitted to local workhouses, poorhouses and jails (particularly the "pauper insane") or sometimes to the new private madhouses.[29] Restraints and forcible confinement were used for those thought dangerously disturbed or potentially violent to themselves, others or property.[19] The latter likely grew out of lodging arrangements for single individuals (who, in workhouses, were considered disruptive or ungovernable) then there were a few catering each for only a handful of people, then they gradually expanded (e.g. 16 in London in 1774, and 40 by 1819). By the mid-19th century there would be 100 to 500 inmates in each. The development of this network of madhouses has been linked to new capitalist social relations and a service economy, that meant families were no longer able or willing to look after disturbed relatives.[30]
Madness was commonly depicted in literary works, such as the plays of Shakespeare.[31][32]
By the end of the 17th century and into the Enlightenment, madness was increasingly seen as an organic physical phenomenon, no longer involving the soul or moral responsibility. The mentally ill were typically viewed as insensitive wild animals. Harsh treatment and restraint in chains was seen as therapeutic, helping suppress the animal passions. There was sometimes a focus on the management of the environment of madhouses, from diet to exercise regimes to number of visitors. Severe somatic treatments were used, similar to those in medieval times.[19] Madhouse owners sometimes boasted of their ability with the whip. Treatment in the few public asylums was also barbaric, often secondary to prisons. The most notorious was Bedlam where at one time spectators could pay a penny to watch the inmates as a form of entertainment.[33][34]
Concepts based in humoral theory gradually gave way to metaphors and terminology from mechanics and other developing physical sciences. Complex new schemes were developed for the classification of mental disorders, influenced by emerging systems for the biological classification of organisms and medical classification of diseases.
The term "crazy" (from Middle English meaning cracked) and insane (from Latin insanus meaning unhealthy) came to mean mental disorder in this period. The term "lunacy", long used to refer to periodic disturbance or epilepsy, came to be synonymous with insanity. "Madness", long in use in root form since at least the early centuries AD, and originally meaning crippled, hurt or foolish, came to mean loss of reason or self-restraint. "Psychosis", from Greek "principle of life/animation", had varied usage referring to a condition of the mind/soul. "Nervous", from an Indo-European root meaning to wind or twist, meant muscle or vigor, was adopted by physiologists to refer to the body's electrochemical signalling process (thus called the nervous system), and was then used to refer to nervous disorders and neurosis. "Obsession", from a Latin root meaning to sit on or sit against, originally meant to besiege or be possessed by an evil spirit, came to mean a fixed idea that could decompose the mind.[35]
With the rise of madhouses and the professionalization and specialization of medicine, there was considerable incentive for medical doctors to become involved. In the 18th century, they began to stake a claim to a monopoly over madhouses and treatments. Madhouses could be a lucrative business, and many made a fortune from them. There were some bourgeois ex-patient reformers who opposed the often brutual regimes, blaming both the madhouse owners and the medics, who in turn resisted the reforms.[30]
Towards the end of the 18th century, a moral treatment movement developed, that implemented more humane, psychosocial and personalized approaches. Notable figures included the medic Vincenzo Chiarugi in Italy under Enlightenment leadership; the ex-patient superintendent Pussin and the psychologically inclined medic Philippe Pinel in revolutionary France; the Quakers in England, led by businessman William Tuke; and later, in the United States, campaigner Dorothea Dix.
19th century
The 19th century, in the context of industrialization and population growth, saw a massive expansion of the number and size of insane asylums in every Western country, a process called "the great confinement" or the "asylum era". Laws were introduced to compel authorities to deal with those judged insane by family members and hospital superintendents. Although originally based on the concepts and structures of moral treatment, they became large impersonal institutions overburdened with large numbers of people with a complex mix of mental and social-economic problems.[29] The success of moral treatment had cast doubt on the approach of medics, and many had opposed it, but by the mid-19th century many became advocates of it but argued that the mad also often had physical/organic problems, so that both approaches were necessary. This argument has been described as an important step in the profession's eventual success in securing a monopoly on the treatment of lunacy. However, it is well documented that very little therapeutic activity occurred in the new asylum system, that medics were little more than administrators who seldom attended to patients, and then mainly for other physical problems.[30]
Clear descriptions of some syndromes, such as the condition that would later be termed schizophrenia, have been identified as relatively rare prior to the 19th century,[36] although interpretations of the evidence and its implications are inconsistent.[37]
Numerous different classification schemes and diagnostic terms were developed by different authorities, taking an increasingly anatomical-clinical descriptive approach. The term "psychiatry" was coined as the medical specialty became more academically established. Asylum superintendents, later to be psychiatrists, were generally called "alienists" because they were thought to deal with people alienated from society; they adopted largely isolated and managerial roles in the asylums while milder "neurotic" conditions were dealt with by neurologists and general physicians, although there was overlap for conditions such as neurasthenia.[38]
In the United States it was proposed that black slaves who tried to escape were suffering from a mental disorder termed drapetomania. It was then argued in scientific journals that mental disorders were rare under conditions of slavery but became more common following emancipation, and later that mental illness in African Americans was due to evolutionary factors or various negative characteristics, and that they were not suitable for therapeutic intervention.[39]
By the 1870s in North America, officials who ran Lunatic Asylums renamed them Insane Asylums. By the late century, the term "asylum" had lost its original meaning as a place of refuge, retreat or safety, and was associated with abuses that had been widely publicized in the media, including by ex-patient organization the Alleged Lunatics' Friend Society and ex-patients like Elizabeth Packard.[21]
The relative proportion of the public officially diagnosed with mental disorders was increasing, however. This has been linked to various factors, including possibly humanitarian concern; incentives for professional status/money; a lowered tolerance of communities for unusual behavior due to the existence of asylums to place them in (this affected the poor the most); and the strain placed on families by industrialization.[30]
20th century
The turn of the 20th century saw the development of psychoanalysis, which came to the fore later. Kraepelin's classification gained popularity, including the separation of mood disorders from what would later be termed schizophrenia.[40]
Asylum superintendents sought to improve the image and medical status of their profession. Asylum "inmates" were increasingly referred to as "patients" and asylums renamed as hospitals. Referring to people as having a "mental illness" dates from this period in the early 20th century.[21]
In the United States, a "mental hygiene" movement, originally defined in the 19th century, gained momentum and aimed to "prevent the disease of insanity" through public health methods and clinics.[41] The term mental health became more popular, however. Clinical psychology and social work developed as professions alongside psychiatry. Theories of eugenics led to compulsory sterilization movements in many countries around the world for several decades, often encompassing patients in public mental institutions.[42] World War I saw a massive increase of conditions that came to be termed "shell shock".
In Nazi Germany, the institutionalized mentally ill were among the earliest targets of sterilization campaigns and covert "euthanasia" programs.[43] It has been estimated that over 200,000 individuals with mental disorders of all kinds were put to death, although their mass murder has received relatively little historical attention. Despite not being formally ordered to take part, psychiatrists and psychiatric institutions were at the center of justifying, planning and carrying out the atrocities at every stage, and "constituted the connection" to the later annihilation of Jews and other "undesirables" such as homosexuals in the Holocaust.[44]
In other areas of the world, funding was often cut for asylums, especially during periods of economic decline, and during wartime in particular many patients starved to death.[45] Soldiers received increased psychiatric attention, and World War II saw the development in the US of a new psychiatric manual for categorizing mental disorders, which along with existing systems for collecting census and hospital statistics led to the first Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM). The International Classification of Diseases (ICD) followed suit with a section on mental disorders.
Previously restricted to the treatment of severely disturbed people in asylums, psychiatrists cultivated clients with a broader range of problems, and between 1917 and 1970 the number practicing outside institutions swelled from 8 percent to 66 percent.[46] The term stress, having emerged from endocrinology work in the 1930s, was popularized with an increasingly broad biopsychosocial meaning, and was increasingly linked to mental disorders.[47]"Outpatient commitment" laws were gradually expanded or introduced in some countries.
Lobotomies, Insulin shock therapy, Electro convulsive therapy, and the "neuroleptic" chlorpromazine came in to use mid-century.
An antipsychiatry movement came to the fore in the 1960s. Deinstitutionalization gradually occurred in the West, with isolated psychiatric hospitals being closed down in favor of community mental health services. However, inadequate services and continued social exclusion often led to many being homeless or in prison.[48] A consumer/survivor movement gained momentum.
Other kinds of psychiatric medication gradually came into use, such as "psychic energizers" and lithium. Benzodiazepines gained widespread use in the 1970s for anxiety and depression, until dependency problems curtailed their popularity. Advances in neuroscience and genetics led to new research agendas. Cognitive behavioral therapy was developed. Through the 1990s, new SSRI antidepressants became some of the most widely prescribed drugs in the world.
The DSM and then ICD adopted new criteria-based classification, representing a return to a Kraepelin-like descriptive system. The number of "official" diagnoses saw a large expansion, although homosexuality was gradually downgraded and dropped in the face of human rights protests. Different regions sometimes developed alternatives such as the Chinese Classification of Mental Disorders or Latin American Guide for Psychiatric Diagnosis.
21st century
Starting from 2002 DSM-5 Research Agenda researchers were invited to contribute with their publication to the literature basis for the DSM-5, whose draft criteria are now available to the scientific community . In the meanwhile, serious limits of the current version of the DSM extremely high comorbidity, diagnostic heterogeneity of the categories, unclear boundaries have been interpreted as intrinsic anomalies of the criterial, neopositivistic approach leading the system to a state of scientific crisis.[49] Accordingly, a radical rethinking of the concept of mental disorder and the need of a radical scientific revolution in psychiatric taxonomy was proposed.[50]
See also
- Timeline of psychiatry
- Care in the community
- DSM-IV Codes
- History of psychiatric institutions
- Eugenics
- Sigmund Freud
- Involuntary commitment
- Mad Pride
- Mental hospital
- Neurology
- Psychiatric medication
- Psychiatric hospital
- Psychiatric survivors movement
- Psychoanalysis
- Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV (SCID)
- Punitive psychiatry in the Soviet Union
Notes and references
- ↑ Yuhas, Daisy. "Throughout History, Defining Schizophrenia Has Remained A Challenge (Timeline)". Scientific American Mind (March 2013). Retrieved 2 March 2013.
- ↑ Nasser, M. (1987). "Psychiatry in Ancient Egypt" (PDF). Psychiatric Bulletin 11 (12): 420–422. doi:10.1192/pb.11.12.420.
- ↑ Bhugra, D. (1992). "Psychiatry in ancient Indian texts: a review". History of Psychiatry 3 (10): 167–186. doi:10.1177/0957154X9200301002. PMID 11623029.
- ↑ Yizhuang M.D, Zou (20 February 2005). "History of Chinese Psychiatry". Chinese Society of Psychiatry. Retrieved 9 August 2008.
- 1 2 Pilgrim, D (2007). "The survival of psychiatric diagnosis.". Social science & medicine (1982) 65 (3): 536–47. doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2007.03.054. PMID 17470381.
- ↑ Stephen Hinshaw, The Mark of Shame, p57
- ↑ von Staden, "Liminal Perils: Early Roman Receptions of Greek Medicine," in Tradition, Transmission, Transformation, ed. F. Jamil Ragep and Sally P. Ragep with Steven Livesey (Leiden: Brill, 1996), pp. 369–418.
- 1 2 Davison, K. (2006). "Historical aspects of mood disorders". Psychiatry 5 (4): 115–118. doi:10.1383/psyt.2006.5.4.115.
- ↑ http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=daniel%204.25-34&version=TNIV;NASB;YLT
- ↑ Butcher, J; Holley, J.; Mineka, S. (2014). "2". Abnormal psychology. (Sixteenth ed.). Boston: Pearson. p. 30. ISBN 0205944280.
- ↑ Youssef, Hanafy A.; Youssef, Fatma A.; Dening, T.R. (1996). "Evidence for the existence of schizophrenia in medieval Islamic society". History of Psychiatry 7 (25): 55–62. doi:10.1177/0957154X9600702503. PMID 11609215.
- ↑ Haque, Amber (2004). "Psychology from Islamic Perspective: Contributions of Early Muslim Scholars and Challenges to Contemporary Muslim Psychologists". Journal of Religion and Health 43 (4): 357–377. doi:10.1007/s10943-004-4302-z.
- ↑ Martin-Araguz, A.; Bustamante-Martinez, C.; Fernandez-Armayor, Ajo V.; Moreno-Martinez, J. M. (2002). "Neuroscience in al-Andalus and its influence on medieval scholastic medicine". Revista de neurología 34 (9): 877–892. PMID 12134355.
- ↑ Millon, T. (2004) Masters of the Mind: Exploring the Story of Mental Illness from Ancient Times to the New Millennium John Wiley & Sons ISBN 978-0-471-46985-8 Page 38
- ↑ Paladin, A. Vanzan (1998). "Ethics and neurology in the Islamic world. Continuity and change". The Italian Journal of Neurological Sciences 19 (4): 255–258. doi:10.1007/BF02427614.
- ↑ "Religion tackles mental illness". BBC News (London). 17 April 1999.
- ↑ Stein, D. (2000). "Views of mental illness in Morocco: Western medicine meets the traditional symbolic". CMAJ 163 (11): 1468–1470. PMC 80417. PMID 11192655.
- ↑ Safavi-Abbasi, S; Brasiliense, LBC; Workman, RK; Talley, MC; Feiz-Erfan, I; Theodore, N; Spetzler, RF; Preul, MC (2007). "The fate of medical knowledge and the neurosciences during the time of Genghis Khan and the Mongolian Empire". Neurosurgical Focus 23 (1): 3. doi:10.3171/FOC-07/07/E13. PMID 17961058.
- 1 2 3 Laffey, P (2003). "Psychiatric therapy in Georgian Britain". Psychological Medicine 33 (7): 1285–97. doi:10.1017/S0033291703008109. PMID 14580082.
- ↑ Kroll, J.; Bachrach, B. (1984). "Sin and mental illness in the Middle Ages". Psychological Medicine 14 (3): 507–514. doi:10.1017/S0033291700015105. PMID 6387755.
- 1 2 3 Reaume, G (2002). "Lunatic to patient to person: nomenclature in psychiatric history and the influence of patients' activism in North America". International Journal of Law and Psychiatry 25 (4): 405–26. doi:10.1016/S0160-2527(02)00130-9. PMID 12613052.
- ↑ Delgado, J.M.; Doherty, A.M.S.; Ceballos, R.M.; Erkert, H.G. (2000). "Moon Cycle Effects on Humans: Myth or Reality?" (PDF). Salud Mental 23: 33–39.
- ↑ Online Etymology Dictionary Lunatic (Adj)
- ↑ Hecker, J. F. C. translated by Babington, B.G. Dancing Mania Of The Middle Ages History World International
- ↑ Robert Bartholomew and Erich Goode (2000) Mass Delusions and Hysterias Highlights from the Past Millennium Skeptical Inquirer Magazine, May/June
- ↑ Roffe, D.; Roffe, C. (1995). "Madness and care in the community: a medieval perspective". BMJ 311 (7021): 1708–1712. doi:10.1136/bmj.311.7021.1708. PMC 2539103. PMID 8541770.
- ↑ Kroll, J; Bachrach, B (1982). "Visions and psychopathology in the Middle Ages". The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 170 (1): 41–9. doi:10.1097/00005053-198201000-00007. PMID 7033474.
- ↑ Schoeneman, TJ (1977). "The role of mental illness in the European witch hunts of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries: an assessment". Journal of the history of the behavioral sciences 13 (4): 337–51. doi:10.1002/1520-6696(197710)13:4<337::AID-JHBS2300130406>3.0.CO;2-G. PMID 336681.
- 1 2 Wright, D (1997). "Discussion point. Getting out of the asylum: understanding the confinement of the insane in the nineteenth century". Social History of Medicine 10 (1): 137–55. doi:10.1093/shm/10.1.137. PMID 11619188.
- 1 2 3 4 Crossley, N. (2006) Contesting Psychiatry: Social Movements in Mental Health Chapter: contextualizing contention. Routledge ISBN 0-415-35417-X
- ↑ Dalby, JT. (1997). "Elizabethan madness: On London's stage". Psychological Reports 81 (3 Pt 2): 1331–1343. doi:10.2466/pr0.1997.81.3f.1331. PMID 9461770.
- ↑ Stompe, T; Ritter, K; Friedmann, A (2006). "The representation of madness in William Shakespeare's characters". Wiener klinische Wochenschrift 118 (15–16): 488–95. doi:10.1007/s00508-006-0641-y. PMID 16957981.
- ↑ "Bedlam", Encyclopædia Britannica, retrieved 3 June 2007
- ↑ "Bedlam", James J. Walsh, Catholic Encyclopedia, retrieved 3 June 2007
- ↑ Dalby, JT. (1993). "Terms of Madness: Historical Linguistics". Comprehensive Psychiatry 34 (6): 392–395. doi:10.1016/0010-440X(93)90063-A. PMID 8131383.
- ↑ Torrey (p339-342) comments that very early mental illness descriptions do not seem to fit schizophrenia , there is a ‘sporadic presence’ from 17th century, and then c.1800 "suddenly... it appeared." E Fuller Torrey, 'Surviving Schizophrenia', Harper, 1988
- ↑ Heinrichs RW (2003). "Historical origins of schizophrenia: two early madmen and their illness". J Hist Behav Sci 39 (4): 349–63. doi:10.1002/jhbs.10152. PMID 14601041.
- ↑ American Neurological Association Neurology and Psychiatry: Together and Separate Retrieved on 07-24-2008
- ↑ Harris, H.W.; Felder, D.; Clark, M.O. (2004). "A Psychiatric Residency Curriculum on the Care of African American Patients". Academic Psychiatry 28 (3): 226–239. doi:10.1176/appi.ap.28.3.226. PMID 15507559.
- ↑ Berrios G E & Porter R (eds) (1995) The history of Clinical Psychiatry. London, Athlone Press
- ↑ Mandell, W. (2007) Origins of Mental Health: The Realization of an Idea. Johns Hopkins University website. Retrieved 9 August 2008.
- ↑ Kavles, D. (1999). "Eugenics and human rights". BMJ 319 (7207): 435–438. doi:10.1136/bmj.319.7207.435. PMC 1127045. PMID 10445929.
- ↑ Livingston, K. (August 2003) "Deciding Who Dies: Evaluating the Social Worth of People With Mental Illness during the Holocaust Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association
- ↑ Strous, Rael D (2007). "Psychiatry during the Nazi era: ethical lessons for the modern professional". Annals of General Psychiatry 6 (1): 8. doi:10.1186/1744-859X-6-8. PMC 1828151. PMID 17326822.
- ↑ Fakhoury, W; Priebe, S (2007). "Deinstitutionalization and reinstitutionalization: major changes in the provision of mental healthcare". Psychiatry 6 (8): 313–316. doi:10.1016/j.mppsy.2007.05.008.
- ↑ Rosenthal, S. (19 May 2008). "Mental Illness or Social Sickness?". Dissident Voice. Retrieved 3 December 2010.
- ↑ Viner, R. (1999). "Putting Stress in Life: Hans Selye and the Making of Stress Theory". Social Studies of Science 29 (3): 391–410. doi:10.1177/030631299029003003. JSTOR 285410.
- ↑ Torrey, E. Fuller; Stieber, Joan; Ezekiel, Jonathan; Wolfe, Sidney M; Sharfstein, Joshua; Noble, John H; Flynn, Laurie M (1992). Criminalizing the Seriously Mentally Ill: The Abuse of Jails as Mental Hospitals. A joint report of the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill and Public Citizen's Health Research Group. ISBN 0-7881-4279-8. Retrieved 12 November 2010
- ↑ Aragona, Massimiliano (2009). "The role of comorbidity in the crisis of the current psychiatric classification system" (PDF). Philosophy, Psychiatry, & Psychology 16: 1–11. doi:10.1353/ppp.0.0211.
- ↑ Aragona, Massimiliano (2009). "The concept of mental disorder and the DSM-V" (PDF). Dialogues in Philosophy, Mental and Neuro Sciences 2: 1–14.
Further reading
- Millon, T. (2004) Masters of the Mind: Exploring the Story of Mental Illness from Ancient Times to the New Millennium John Wiley & Sons ISBN 978-0-471-46985-8
- Kent, D. (2003) Snake Pits, Talking Cures & Magic Bullets: A History of Mental Illness Twenty-First Century Books. ISBN 0-7613-2704-5
- Scull, Andrew. Social Order/Mental Disorder: Anglo-American Psychiatry in Historical Perspective. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1989.
- (French) Michel Foucault, Histoire de la folie à l'âge classique, 1961, Gallimard, Tel, 688 p. ISBN 978-2070295821
- (French) Claude Quétel, Histoire de la folie : De l'Antiquité à nos jours, 2009, Editions Tallandier, Texto, 618 pages. ISBN 978-2847349276