Tag Archives: chronic insane

Reasonable Rehabilitation

Amariah Brigham was Utica Asylum's First Superintendent

Amariah Brigham was Utica Asylum’s First Superintendent

The change in attitude between the old-style treatment of the insane and the new moral treatment’s philosophy (introduced by Pinel and Tuke) cannot be emphasized enough. Though some of the worst cruelties and neglect had fallen out of favor by Benjamin Rush’s time (December 24, 1745 – April 19, 1813), the man considered the “Father of American Psychiatry” believed that any physician treating an insane person had to first dominate that individual–usually through fear. Hence, threats and coercion were considered perfectly acceptable ways to gain the necessary control and authority.

One of the pioneers in American psychiatry, Dr. Amariah Brigham (December 26, 1798 – September 8, 1849) urged a completely different style of treatment. He and others of like mind developed the (then) modern insane asylum, which was capable of putting their ideas into action. For instance, Brigham believed that mental occupation was useful in effecting a cure, and suggested engaging patients’ minds in learning. He urged every institution to have something of a school within it, containing books, maps, scientific apparatus, and so on. Patients could learn reading, writing, drawing, music, arithmetic, history, philosophy, etc. The instructors in these schools would engage with patients constantly: they would teach, of course, but would also eat with patients, join them in recreational activities, and generally become their comrades. This type of engagement was for patients who were curable.

Interior of Shoe Shop, Willard Asylum for the Insane

Interior of Shoe Shop, Willard Asylum for the Insane

Patients Making Rugs, Hammocks, etc. at Hudson River State Hospital, 1909

Patients Making Rugs, Hammocks, etc. at Hudson River State Hospital, 1909

For those who weren’t (the chronic insane), manual tasks such as farm work, basket-weaving, sewing and embroidery, painting, printing, shoe-making, etc. would go a long way toward engaging patients’ attention and re-directing their thoughts in a positive manner. The physical work would also preserve their health by keeping them active.

In either type of patient, this kind of moral management, with its regular schedule, mental diversions, and lack of coercion, could be expected to help patients much more than the fear-based management of preceding philosophies. If the public had provided enough money to implement these programs effectively, the early hopes of the new psychiatric profession might have been realized.

Chronic Insane Are a Problem

Vanderburgh County Poor Farm, circa 1900

Early mental health specialists differentiated between the acute insane–curable–and the chronic insane, for whom they felt little hope. Alienists believed that insanity was curable if it could be caught and treated early, and were eager to get patients into institutions as quickly as possible. The beautiful, elaborate  institutions they supervised were specially constructed to jolt someone who had recently become insane from his or her mindset, and restore it to health.

Even though it was seldom cured, chronic insanity was still a problem society needed to address.  Alienists argued that it was far cheaper to house the insane in large institutions that were nearly self-sustaining, than to throw them in prisons or poorhouses where there was little opportunity for them to help earn their keep. Additionally, some chronic insane would be cured in an asylum, thus saving society the expense of housing them for a lifetime. Because of these arguments, several states built asylums specifically for their chronic insane.

Winnebago County Asylum for the Chronic Insane, 1899

Willard Asylum for the Chronic Insane

 

 

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Better Treatment for the Insane


The Incurable Insane

Waupaca County Asylum for the Chronic Insane, circa 1902, courtesy Wisconsin History and Genealogy website

Waupaca County Asylum for the Chronic Insane, circa 1902, courtesy Wisconsin History and Genealogy website

When asylums were first built, alienists had high hopes that their patients would be quickly cured. Most felt that if families could bring patients in soon after the onset of symptoms, therapy and a changed environment would be helpful. Superintendents tried to get patients, then, during the “acute” phase or within a year of their becoming insane.

Families didn’t usually act this quickly. They often tried to keep family members at home until their symptoms became too difficult to manage. Asylums began to get patients who had been insane for a long time, and there was not as much hope for a cure. At that point, asylums began to differentiate between acute and chronic care. They spent most of their energy with patients they thought stood a good chance of returning to society. Asylums provided little more than custodial care to the chronic insane, and institutionalization became a lifelong fate for these unfortunate patients.

Institutional Check

Institutional Check