mental health
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Mental Health Treatment:
Methods and Evolution
By Zach Silver
What is a Mental Disorder?A mental disorder or mental illness is a
psychological or behavioral pattern associated with distress or disability that occurs in an individual and is not a part of normal development or culture.
Mental Health Treatment in The Ancient WorldAncient civilizations described and treated
a number of mental disorders.
The Greeks coined terms for melancholy, hysteria and phobia and developed the humorism theory.
Psychiatric theories and treatments developed in Persia, Arabia and the Muslim Empire, particularly in the medieval Islamic world from the 8th century, where the first psychiatric hospitals were built.
Mental Health Treatment in Europe: Middle AgesConceptions of madness in the Middle Ages in
Christian Europe were a mixture of the divine, diabolical, magical and humoral, as well as more down to earth considerations.
In the early modern period, some people with mental disorders may have been victims of the witch-hunts but were increasingly admitted to local workhouses and jails or sometimes to private madhouses.
Many terms for mental disorder that found their way into everyday use first became popular during the 16th and 17th centuries.
Mental Health Treatment in Europe: 18th Century By the end of the 17th century and into the
Enlightenment, madness was increasingly seen as an organic physical phenomenon with no connection to the soul or moral responsibility.
Asylum care was often harsh and treated people like wild animals, but towards the end of the 18th century a moral treatment movement gradually developed.
Clear descriptions of some syndromes may be rare prior to the 1800s.
Mental Health Treatment in Europe: 19th Century Industrialization and population growth
led to a massive expansion of the number and size of insane asylums in every Western country in the 19th century.
Numerous different classification schemes and diagnostic terms were developed by different authorities, and the term psychiatry was coined, though medical superintendents were still known as alienists.
Mental Health Treatment in Europe: 20th Century The turn of the 20th century saw the
development of psychoanalysis, which would later come to the forefront, along with Kraepelin's classification scheme.
Asylum "inmates" were increasingly referred to as "patients" and asylums renamed as hospitals.
Mental Health Treatment in the United States In the twentieth century in the United States, a mental
hygiene movement developed, aiming to prevent mental disorders.
Clinical psychology and social work developed as professions. World War I saw a massive increase of conditions that came to be termed "shell shock”
. World War II saw the development in the U.S. 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.
The term stress, having emerged out of endocrinology work in the 1930s, was increasingly applied to mental disorders.
Treatment in Us (Cont.)Electroconvulsive therapy, insulin shock therapy,
lobotomies and the "neuroleptic" chlorpromazine came to be used by 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.
A consumer/survivor movement gained momentum. Other kinds of psychiatric medication gradually came into use, such as "psychic energizers" and lithium.
Treatment in US (Cont.)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.
The DSM and then ICD adopted new criteria-based classifications, and the number of "official" diagnoses saw a large expansion.
Through the 1990s, new SSRI antidepressants became some of the most widely prescribed drugs in the world. Also during the 1990s, a recovery model
Turning Point in TreatmentDorthea Dix helped reform psychiatric
treatment completelyShe realized system was flawed
Many mentally handicapped people were put in insane asylums
She went to the Mass. Legislature to plead her caseShe won!