For a Mental Health facility there are several factors that need to be considered. One’s safety is very important, but it can be hard to maintain within one of these places, as at times the place is actually just a church or another community building…
In the nostalgic memoir, “Girl Interrupted,” Kaysen’s imagery helps her share her experience with having to spend nearly two years in a mental hospital after being diagnosed with borderline personality disorder. The patients of Mclean Hospital spent their days in empty rooms, and some were even lucky enough to have the ability to look out of “ tiny, high, chicken-wire-enforced, security-screened, barred windows.” Some people glorify mental illnesses or mental hospitals, but they do not realize the horror behind having to suffer from an illness. Living in a mental hospital is like living in prison since patients cannot escape until they are given permission by a doctor. In addition, mental hospitals contain “little bare rooms with…
This article gives information about Ohio. There is a healthcare hospital for mentally ill in Cincinnati that has 291 beds. But, the interesting thing is in Franklin County jail in Columbus they can have 2,200 inmates, in Cuyahoga County jail in Cleveland holds 1,765 inmates, in addition to having 10 state prisons. So, therefore the jails hold more people than the state hospital. In northern who approximately 25% of inmates have some sort of mental illness.…
The elimination of state mental hospitals was not based on human need, but rather a political policy decision. The shortage of mental institutions creates a shift in the role of prison systems and presents several different issues for mentally ill inmates. The inmates are not medically treated in…
Before R.P. McMurphy arrives, the ward is your basic average mental institution. Men line up to receive their medication, they do puzzles and play cards, and the evil head nurse and her muscle, a group of big black fellows, carry patients off to be shaved or for electroshock therapy. The people can't do anything about it, though. After all, some of them are…
Saying psychiatric hospital facility policies need to improve significantly is an understatement. During my eight-day stay at Clarion Psychiatric Center, located in western Pennsylvania, was one of the worst experiences in my life. I know staying in a psychiatric center wasn’t a life or death situation but, the horrid experience was certainly a catalyst to my reoccurring nightmares. Hitherto, I still have nightmares of being sent back to the psychiatric center. While I was there, I could have almost nothing. No electronics whatsoever with the exception of hospital telephones designated for patient use which were turned off during “group time.” I was not allowed to have the supplies I needed to complete my school work thus, I had to withdraw…
From the opening of the first scene evidence of stereotyping and mistreatment of mental illness patients is shown. A contrast of dark and light is created from the stage direction at the opening of scene one, “It is day outside but pitch black inside the theatre.” This dark verse light theme is introduced and developed throughout the first scene. At a more figurative level, this contrast can be perceived to represent the insanity within the asylum and the sanity outside. A stereotypical view of the asylum as being filled with mad people is created.…
This thought of others assuming responsibility for those deemed ‘insane’ continued throughout the nineteenth century as well. However, the more populated and industrialized America became, the more accounts there were of insane people locked up and chained somewhere. Many families would do this in order to ‘protect’ the mentally ill from harming both themselves, and others. Unfortunately, along with this increase, the communities also increased in their general fear toward the ill, meaning that most became unwilling to support them as they had in the small communities of colonial America. Instead, many were sent to jail, where they were kept with both violent and minor criminals, debtors, and murderers (Brinkley). Those who were neither in jail, nor locked away at home, suffered in “hospitals” or institutions where they were most often abused as a form of ‘treatment’(Tomes). Before the reforms spurred by Dorothea Dix in asylum culture, not much headway was made on the subject of mental illness. Fortunately, throughout these reforms in the nineteenth century, the prior social traditions in America toward people with mental illnesses changed, allowing for…
Asylums such as The McLean Asylum for the Insane located in Boston, The Worcester Lunatic Asylum, and The Northampton Lunatic Hospital have been around for many years. Since the 1800s through the 1950s asylums have drastically changed in appearance, treatment, diagnosis and many aspects of the asylum such as the food patients are given to eat, and what work the patients get to do while being treated. The grounds and buildings of asylums have made significant improvements. Treatment has become more moral and orderly as the decades progress. Each asylum has different forms of recreation and work that the patients are allowed to do while being treated in the early asylums.…
Holden Caulfield is an insane person in a sane world. What is insanity? Insanity is when you’re in a state of mind that prevents normal perception, behavior or social interaction. This state is mental illness. Insanity is when you do things in deranged or outrageous ways that could frighten people, or make people feel uncomfortable when around you. It’s when you do things out of the ordinary; yet feel as if they are ordinary. Insanity could come about when you’re depressed, or after a traumatic event, and sometimes even by keeping all your feelings bottled up inside of yourself. Sane people are sensible, reliable, well-adjusted and practice sound judgment. It’s behavior that is expected in a society. By these definitions Holden Caulfield is an insane person in a sane world due to his inability to deal with the real world, his obsession with irrelevant details, and his overly judgmental and critical nature. Holden Caulfield is from the book The Catcher and the Rye. By J.D Salinger. Holden Caulfield is the protagonist in the novel and the narrator of the novel.…
I found out that most mentally ill people are placed in solitary confinement and they can go as long as nine months without taking the medication they need to keep them calmed down from doing harm to themselves. The cells are smaller than an average cell and it the prisoners in the cells gets little to no contact with family members and visitors. The mentally ill that are locked up in solitary cost the states about more than a regular inmate because of the medication and attention that the inmates need. Learning the fact that there is more violence in the solitary confinement than in the regular cells with other inmates. While watching the video you can see how some inmates interact with each other in the solitary confinement cell by sliding…
During the 1900s people viewed mental illness as a disease of individual weakness or a spiritual disease, in which the mentally ill were sent to asylums. This was a temporary solution in hope to remove “lunatics” from the community. This caused a severe overcrowding, which led to a decline in patient care and reviving the old procedures and medical treatments. Early treatments to cure mental illness were really forms of torture. Asylums used wrist and ankle restraints, ice water baths, shock machines, straightjackets, electro-convulsive therapy, even branding patients, and the notorious lobotomy and “bleeding practice”. These early treatments seen some improvement in patients, although today this eras method of handling the mentally ill is considered barbaric, the majority of people were content because the “lunatics” were no longer visible in society.…
The causes of these conditions were varied. Firstly, due to the large quantity of the mentally ill there was little to no room for cleaning and housing. Additionally, understaffing in institutions resulted in most patients suffering from diseases; many resulting in death (Canton asylum). Due to common prejudices regarding the mentally ill, staff behaviors were also a factor. The pain and suffering caused by the underpaid staff’s abuse took a toll on the health of the patients and subsequently hurt their chance of recovery (Mental illness). Overall early colonial and foreign insane asylums resulted in little recovery to patients and, in most cases, resulted in further illness and injury up until the early 1800s (Canton…
Once in prison, it is apparent that these inmates are in need of psychiatric attention and treatment. The inmates are then placed in the psychiatric ward of the prison. Where their prison psychiatric treatment begins. This is where the episode explains that prisons are becoming the modern day asylums. Where about 55,000 Americans are being treated in psychiatric hospitals, there are about 500,000 mentally ill people serving time in prisons. Those numbers are alarming, and such an indication of the lack of attention mentally ill people face in America.…
From overcrowding, various forms of violence, enforced solitude, lack of privacy, concerns about the future, and inadequate health services in prisons its no secret that the mentally ill are mistreated and have fallen through the cracks…