Chapter 2- Earliest Views of Abnormal Behavior

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Avicenna from Persia (BC 980-1037)

"prince of physicians" and author of The Canon of Medicine

The Anatomy of Melancholia was written in

1621

The National Institutes of Metal Health was organized in

1946

The need for reform in psychiatric hospitals was a prominent concern of many professionals and laypersons alike during the

1950s and 1960s

Dorthea Dix is credited with establishing

32 mental hospitals

The first mental hospital was established in

Baghdad in AD 792

St. Mary of Bethlem became called

Bedlam

The brain is described probably for the first time in history in the

Edwin Smith Papyrus

Our efforts to understand psychological causation of mental disorder starts with

Franz Anton Mesmer

Erik Kraepelin (1856-1926)

German psychiatrist who played an enormous role in the development of methods for classifying different types of abnormal behavior

Wilhelm Griesinger (1817-1868)

German psychiatrist who wrote the textbook The Pathology and Therapy of Psychic Disorders

In 1547 the monastery of St. Mary of Bethlem in London was officially made into an asylum by

Henry VIII

Chung Ching

Hippocrates of China; wrote two well-known medical works around AD 200

In 1784, the French physician Philippe Pinel (1745-1826) was placed in charge of

La Bicetre

On the Deceits of the Demons contained a step by step rebuttal of the

Malleus Maleficarum

The systematic treatise on psychiatry in America that came out in 1812 and was written by Benjamin Rush is the

Medical Inquires and Observations upon Diseases of the Mind

In 1583 Johann Weyer published

On the Deceits of the Demons

Freud and Breuer's joint paper

On the Psychical Mechanisms of Hysterical Phenomena

Aristotle was the pupil of

Plato

The Anatomy of Melancholia was written by

Robert Burton

In 1879 Wilhelm Wundt established the first experimental psychological laboratory at the

University of Leipzip

Johann Weyer (1515-1588)

a German physician and writer who wrote under the Latin name of Johannes Wierus and was ahead of his time

Paracelsus (1490-1541)

a Swiss physician and early critic of superstitious beliefs about possession

Richard von Krafft-Ebing

a Viennese psychiatrist that conducted experiments showing that exposing patients with paresis to matter from syphilitic sores did not lead to the development of syphilis, which suggested that they must already have been infected

Clifford Beers (1876-1943)

a Yale graduate who described his own struggle with mental illness and the mistreatment he received in three different institutions and wrote the nook A Mind That Found Itself in 1908

References to abnormal behavior in early writings show that the Chinese, Egyptians, Hebrews, and Greeks often attributed such behavior to

a demon or god who had taken possession of person

The Hill-Burton Act of 1946 and the Community Mental Health Act of 1963 helped to create

a far-reaching set of programs to develop outpatient psychiatric clinics, inpatient facilities in general hospitals, and community consultation and rehabilitation programs

Philippe Pinel's work at La Bicetre Asylum was

a great success

La Bicetre Asylum

a hospital in Paris

After approximately 200 years of inhumane treatment in asylums, several leading physicians in Europe began to make reforms that proposed

a much more humanitarian treatment of patients

Hippocrates considered dreams to be important in understanding

a patient's personality

York Retreat

a pleasant country house where patients with mental illness lived, worked, and rested in a kindly, religious atmosphere

Hill-Burton Act of 1946

a program that funded community mental health hospitals

Henry Cotton

a psychiatrist at a New Jersey hospital who developed a theory that mental health problems such as schizophrenia could be cured by removing the infections that he believed caused the condition

Lobotomies

a surgical procedure that disconnects the prefrontal area from the rest of the brain

Mesmer believed that the planets affected

a universal magnetic fluid in the body, the distribution of which determined health or disease

The National Institutes of Metal Health provided

active support for research and training through psychiatric residencies and (later) clinical psychology training programs

Sanguine

active, optimistic

The treatment techniques for patients with mental illness in the United States were

aggressive

Choleric

agitated, irritable

The Pathology and Therapy of Psychic Disorders insisted that

all mental disorders could be explained in terms of brain pathology

In attempting to find cures for mental disorders, Mesmer concluded that

all people possessed magnetic forces that could be used to influence the distribution of the magnetic fluid in other people, thus effecting cures

Franz Anton Mesmer (1734-1815)

an Austrian physician who further developed the ideas of Paracelsus about the influence of the planets on the human body

William Tuke (1732-1822)

an English Quaker who established the York Retreat

Most possessions were considered to be the work of

an angry god or an evil spirit

Dorthea Dix (1802-1887)

an energetic New Englander who became a champion of poor and "forgotten" people who had been consigned to prisons and mental institutions for decades during the nineteenth century

Robert Burton (1576-1640)

an enlightened scholar who wrote The Anatomy of Melancholia

he typically accused witch during the Middle Ages was

an impoverished woman with a sharp tongue and a abd temper

Hypnosis

an induced state of relaxation in which a person is highly open to suggestion, first came into widespread use in late-eighteenth and early-nineteenth- century France

Trepanation

ancient practice of drilling holes in skull to release evil spirits

Mesmer gained a broad following in Paris in 1778 when he opened a clinic in which he treated all kinds of diseases by using

animal magnetism

Beginning in the sixteenth century, societies began to put people determined to be suffering from mental illness into

asylums

Four major advances in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries that changed the way that abnormal behavior was viewed and treated are

biological discoveries, the development of an agreed-upon classification system for mental disorders, the emergence of scientifically informed views about the causes of abnormal behavior, and the emergence of experimental psychology

The four elements of the material world combined to form the four essential fluids of the body which are

blood (sanguis), phlegm, bile (choler), and black bile (melancholic)

Chung Ching's treatments utilized

both drugs and the regaining of emotional balance through appropriate activities

Hippocrates believed that mental disorders were due to

brain pathology

The Snake Pit

called attention to the plight of patients with mental illness and helped to create concern over the need to provide more humane mental health care in the community in place of the overcrowded mental hospitals

Phlegmatic

calm, relaxed

Hippocrates believed that the brain was the

central organ of intellectual activity

Erik Kraepelin noted that

certain symptoms occurred together regularly enough to be regarded as specific types of mental disease

During the latter part of the Middle Ages and the early Renaissance the superstitious beliefs that had hindered the understanding and therapeutic treatment of mental disorders began to be

challenged

Management of people who were mentally disturbed in the Middle Ages were left to the

clergy

Chung Ching based his views of physical and mental disorders on

clinical observations

Hippocrates relied heavily on

clinical observations

Residents of early asylums lived and died amid

conditions of incredible filth and cruelty

When people were thought to be possessed by a good spirit or god they were often treated with

considerable awe and respect

In The Anatomy of Melancholia those physically possessed were

considered mad

Lightner Witmer (1867-1956)

considered to be the founder of clinical psychology

Emil Kraepelin (1856-1926)

credited with paving the way for the modern view of psychiatry; his classification schema is still cited today; and he identified manic depression as a major category of depression

Mesmerism was

debunked

St. Mary of Bethlem became widely known for its

deplorable conditions and practices

A.L.J. gave a complete and accurate

description of the symptom pattern of paresis and convincingly presented his reasons for believing paresis to be a distinct disorder

One of Aristotle's most lasting contributions to psychology are his

descriptions of consciousness

Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)

developed a comprehensive theory of psychopathology that emphasized the inner dynamics of unconscious motives (often referred to as psycho dynamics) that are at the heart of the psychoanalytic perspective

Sigmund Freud and Josef Breuer

directed patients to talk freely about their problems while under hypnosis

Catharsis

discharge of emotional tension associated with something, such as by talking about past traumas

Erik Kraepelin saw each type of mental disorder as

distinct from the others and thought that the course of each was as predetermined and predictable as the course of measles; so the outcome of a given type of disorder could presumably be predicted even if it could not yet be controlled

Plato shared the belief that mental disorders were in part

divinely caused

Although the development of antipsychotic medications is rightly seen as an enormous development in research and clinical practice, they

do not work for all patients and still come with some serious side effects

Alienists

early term for psychiatrists

Public perceptions of mental health began to change in the

early twentieth century

The four elements of the material world were thought to be

earth, air, water, and fire

Moral management achieved a surprisingly high degree of

effectiveness

Aristotle believed that "thinking" as directed would

eliminate pain and help to attain pleasure

Elementa Physoologiae Corporis Humani

emphasized the importance of the brain in psychic functions and advocated postmodern dissection to study the brains of the insane

At St. Mary of Bethlem the more violent patients were

exhibited to the public for one penny a look

Benjamin Rush (1745-1813)

father of American psychiatry and one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence and was the first American to organize a course in psychiatry

Hippocrates

father of modern medicine

Paracelsus insisted that mania should be treated as a

form of a disease

Asylums by Erving Goffman

further exposed the inhumane treatment of patients with mental illness and provided a detailed account of neglect and maltreatment in mental hospitals

Novel Targets

going after something other than dopamine activity

If a person's speech or behavior appeared to have a religious or mystical significance, it was usually thought that he or she was possessed by a

good spirit or god

The four elements of the material world had attributes of

heat, cold, moistness, and dryness

Hippocrates emphasized the importance of

heredity and predisposition

Asylums

historically, these were institutions mean solely for the care of the mentally ill

In the first mental hospitals individuals with mental disturbances received

humane treatment

The movement that began during the latter part of the Middle Ages and the early Renaissance, a movement began emphasizing the importance of specifically human interests and concerns is called

humanism

Avicenna frequently referred to

hysteria, epilepsy, manic reactions, and melancholia

With animal magnetism, it turns out that those who believed that they were exposed to magnetized objects

improved regardless of whether the objects actually were magnetized or not

Samuel Hitch's innovations

improved the care of patients and changed public attitudes toward people with mental disturbances

Animal Magnetism (Mesmerism)

in a dark room, patients were seated around a tub containing various chemicals, and iron rods protruding from the tub were applied to the affected areas of the patients' bodies. Accompanied by music, like a stage magician he appeared in a lilac robe, passing from one patient to another and touching each one with his hands or his wand. By doing this he was purportedly able to remove hysterical anesthesias and paralyses

Unconscious

in psychoanalytic theory, a major portion of the mind, which consists of a hidden mass of instincts, impulses, and memories and is not easily available to conscious awareness, yet plays a important role in behavior

After deinstitutionalization rates of hospitalization decreased as rates of this increased

incarceration

The Ebers Papyrus relies more on

incarnations and magic for explaining and curing diseases with unknown causes

The Lunacy Inquiry Act of 1842

included a requirement that asylums and houses be effectively inspected every 4 months to ensure proper diet and the elimination of the use of restraints

With the emergence of experimental science in the early 1700s, knowledge of anatomy, physiology, neurology, chemistry, and general medicine

increased rapidly

In The Republic, Plato emphasized the importance of

individual differences in intellectual and other abilities

Over time alienists became

influential as purveyors of morality, touting the benefits of Victorian morality as important to good mental health

Dorthea Dix carried a zealous campaign between 1841 and 1881 that aroused people and legislatures to do something about the

inhumane treatment accorded to people with mental illness

The Ebers Papyrus covers

internal medicine and the circulatory system

The treatment techniques for patients with mental illness in the United States were designed to

intimidate patients

Julius von Wagner-Jauregg

introduced the malarial fever treatment of syphilis and paresis after realizing that the high fever associated with malaria seemed to kill off the syphilis bacteria in 1917

Philippe Pinel

introduced the pre-modern view of melancholia as a disorder without the taint of demonic possession or ancient Greek humor and advanced our scholarly understanding of mental disorders by improving a classification scheme and examining the causes of the disorder

Samuel Hitch

introduced trained nurses into the wards at the Gloucester Asylum in 1841 and put trained supervisors at the head of the nursing staffs

Tranquilizing Chair

invented by Benjamin Rush and was used to temporarily restrain and treat violent patients by strapping down their limbs an restricting the movement of their head

In The Anatomy of Melancholia those spiritually possessed were

likely to be considered witches

The three general categories Hippocrates classified all mental disorders into are

mania, melancholia, and phrenitis (brain fever)

China was one of the earliest developed civilizations in which

medicine and attention to mental disorders were introduced

Aristotle (384-322 B.C.) wrote extensively on

mental disorders

Johann Weyer was one of the first physicians to specialize in the study and attempted treatment of

mental disorders

The Anatomy of Melancholia considered demonic possession a potential cause of

mental disorders

Johann Weyer argued that those accused of witchcraft were really

mentally ill and not deserving of persecution

Free Association

method for probing the unconscious by having patients talk freely about themselves, their feelings, and their motives

Dream Analysis

method involving the recording, description, and interpretation of a patient's dreams

Psychoanalysis

methods Freud used to study and treat patients

In the cae of witchcraft and mental illness, the confusion may be due, in part, to

misunderstandings about demonic possession

Johann Weyer's wide experience and progressive views justify his reputation as the founder of

modern psychopathology

Deinstitutionalization policy was considered

more humane and cost effective to treat those with severe mental illness in their own community

Benjamin Rush encouraged

more humane treatment of patients with mental illness

In early asylums inmates were treated

more like beasts than human beings

Over time alienists acquired

more status and influence in society

Mental Hygiene Movement

movement that advocated a method of treatment focused almost exclusively on the physical well-being of hospitalized mental patients

Deinstitutionalization

movement to close mental hospitals and treat people with severe mental disorders in the community

Edwin Smith Papyrus

named after its nineteenth-century discoverer; contains detailed descriptions of the treatment of wounds and other surgical operations

Hippocrates denied that deities and demons intervened in the development of illnesses and instead insisted that mental disorders had

natural causes and appropriate treatments

Chinese medicine was based on a belief in

natural rahter than supernatural causes for illnesses

Neurasthenia

nervous exhaustion

Since the development of chlorpromazine

no medications with novel targets have been developed for the treatment of psychotic disorders

Paracelsus insisted that mania was

not a possession but a form of disease

Dorthea Dix organized the nursing forces of the

nursing forces of the Union Army during the Civil War

The origins of much of the scientific thinking in contemporary psychology lie in early rigorous efforts to study psychological processes

objectively

Galen (AD 130-200)

one of the most influential Greek physicians who practiced in Rome

Chung Ching believed that stressful psychological conditions could cause

organ pathologies

By 1940 the public mental hospitals housed

over 400,000 patients, roughly 90% of whom resided in large state-funded hospitals; the remainder resided in private hospitals

The Country Asylums Act

passed in England in 1845 and required every county to provide asylum to "paupers and lunatics"

The Public Hospital in Williamsburg was the first in the United States devoted exclusively to

patients with mental illness

Early asylums were primarily modifications of

penal institutions

Melancholic

pensive, thoughtful

The Ebers Papyrus offers a

perspective on treatment

Galen took a scientific approach to the field, dividing the causes of psychological disorders into

physical and mental categories

During the early medieval period, "treatment" for people with mental disturbances consisted of

prayer, holy water, sanctified ointments, the breath or spittle of the priests, the touching of relics, visits to holy places, and mild forms of exorcism

Around 400 B.C.E. the ancient Greeks shifted the understanding of mental disorders from the work of supernatural forces to

problems in the human body

Mary Jane Ward

published The Snake Pit in 1946

Jean Delay and Pierre Deniker are two French psychiatrists who, in the 1950's, found that chlorpromazine, a drug originally developed for completely different purposes, was very effective at

rapidly reducing psychotic and manic symptoms

In the Middle Ages monasteries served as

refuges and places of comfort

Exorcism

religiously inspired treatment procedure designed to drive out evil spirits or forces from a "possessed" person

Asylums were initially created to

remove from the community troublesome individuals who could not care fore themselves

Plato viewed psychological phenomena as

responses of the whole organism reflecting its internal state and natural appetites

The treatment techniques for patients with mental illness in the United States aimed at

restoring a physical balance in the body and brain

Hippocrates believed that hysteria was

restricted to women and caused by the uterus wandering to various parts of the body pining for children and believed marriage was the best remedy

Hippocrates' emphasis on the natural causes of diseases, on clinical observation, and on brain pathology as the root of mental disorders was

revolutionary

The movement to change the mental hospital environment was enhanced significantly by

scientific advances in the last half of the twentieth century, particularity the development of effective medications for many disorders

During the latter part of the Middle Ages and the early Renaissance, this reemerged

scientific questioning

The Middle Ages in Europe were largely devoid of

scientific thinking and humane treatment for those with mental illness

Chinese medicine reached a relatively sophisticated level during the

second century

At St. Mary of Bethlem the more harmless inmates were forced to

seek charity on the streets of London

Hippocrates pointed out that injuries to the head could cause

sensory and motor disorders

During the latter decades of the twentieth century vigorous efforts were made to

shut down mental hospitals an return psychiatric patients to the community in order to provide more integrated and humane treatment

In The Republic, Plato took into account

sociocultural influences in shaping thinking and behavior

Erving Goffman

sociologist who wrote in Asylums in 1961

The Pennsylvania Hospital in Philadelphia provided patients with mental illness with

some cells or wards

Plato (427-347 BC)

studied individuals with mental disturbances who had committed criminal acts and how to deal with them

The effects of animal magnetism were due to the power of

suggestion (hypnosis) rather than to animal magnetism

Chinese views of mental disorders regressed to a belief in

supernatural forces as casual agents

When people were thought to be possessed by a good spirit or god they believed they had

supernatural powers

In the 1920s through the 1940s, American psychiatrist Walter Freeman followed the strategies developed by Portugese psychiatrist Egas Moniz to treat severe mental disorders using

surgical procedures called lobotomies

Today we have penicillin as an effective, simpler treatment of

syphilis

Richard von Krafft-Ebing established the relationship between

syphilis (a biological connection) and general paresis (a mental disorder)

Benjamin Rush wrote the first

systematic treatise on psychiatry in America

According to the early writings of the Chinese, Egyptians, Hebrews, and Greeks whether the "possession" was assumed to involve good spirits or evil spirits typically depended on

the affected individuals symptoms

Galen made a number of original contributions concerning

the anatomy of the nervous system based on dissections of animals

The discovery of a cure for general paresis began in 1825 when the French physician A. L. J. Bayle suggested that

the collection of symptoms seen in those with general paresis are one specific type of mental disorder

Britain's policy of providing more humane treatment to people with mental illness was substantially expanded to

the colonies

One of the earliest known writings on the use of drugs to treat mental disorders is the work of the Roman physician Galen who describes

the concoction of various medications and the clinical use of drug therapy with patients experiencing mental disorders

The changing view of the relationship between witchcraft and mental illness points to the issue of

the difficulties of interpreting historical events accurately

Maher and Maher pointed out that the best known of the earlier paradigms for explaining personality or temperament is

the doctrine of the four humors, associated with Hippocrates and later with the Roman physician Galen

Psychiatrists in the nineteenth century thought that emotional problems were caused by

the expenditure of energy or by the depletion of bodily energies as a result of excess in living

In some monasteries and shrines in the Middle Ages exorcisms were performed by

the gentle "laying of hands"

During the latter part of the Middle Ages and the early Renaissance, a movement began emphasizing

the importance of specifically human interests and concerns

Johann Weyer was deeply disturbed by

the imprisonment, torture, and burning of people whose strange behavior led them to be accused of witchcraft

A major biomedical breakthrough came with the discovery of

the organic factors underlying general paresis-syphilis of the brain

Moral management in asylums emphasized

the patients' moral and spiritual development and the rehabilitation of their "character" rather than their physical or mental disorders

In the early part of the nineteenth century, mental hospitals were controlled essentially by laypersons because of

the prominence of moral managment in the treatment of "lunatics"

At La Bicetre Asylum Philippe Pinel instituted

the removal of chains from some of the patients as an experiment to test his vies that people with mental illness should be treated with kindness and consideration, as sick people

The earliest and long lasting views of personality "types"

the sanguine, the phlegmatic, the choleric, and the melancholic

In the Edwin Smith Papyrus the brain was recognized as

the site of mental functioning

Mesmerism

theory of "animal magnetism" (hypnosis) formulated by Anton Mesmer

Psychoanalytic Perspective

theory of psychopathology, initially developed by Freud, that emphasizes the inner dynamics of unconscious motives

In The Anatomy of Melancholia there were these two types of demonically possessed people

those physically possessed and those spritiually possessed

Hippocrates classified all mental disorders into

three general categories

Clues to the earliest treatments of diseases and behavior disorders are from

two Egyptian papyri from the sixteenth century B.C.; the Edwin Smith papyrus and the Ebers papyrus

Erik Kraepelin described and clarified

types of mental disorder, working out a scheme of classification that is the basis of the system that we still use today

Paracelsus experimented with

various chemicals as medications to treat human disorders

Moral Management

wide-ranging method of treatment that focuses on a patients social, individual, and occupational needs

The Malleus Maleficarum is a

witch-hunting book published in 1486

Albrecht von Haller (1708-1777)

wrote Elementa Physoologiae Corporis Humani in 1757


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