Adventures in Psychiatry: Narrating and Enacting Reform in Post-War Mental Healthcare

Vicky Long
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Abstract

The development of psychiatry owed much to the establishment of pauper lunatic asylums throughout Britain in the second half of the nineteenth century. However, the low status of these institutions, combined with psychiatrists' failure to devise effective treatment methods, meant that psychiatry did not enjoy a prestigious reputation in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The post-war era, however, is commonly viewed as a period of rapid change in British mental healthcare. Mental hospitals were brought within the provisions of the new National Health Service in 1948, and this development provided psychiatrists and other mental health care workers with an opportunity to raise the status of psychiatry by reframing the profession as just another branch of medicine. Yet there was little consensus as to how progress was to be achieved, for psychiatrists were developing seemingly antithetical therapeutic models, premised on divergent understandings of the etiology of mental disorders. Some psychiatrists were convinced that mental illnesses had biological causes, just like other illnesses. They developed and applied new physical therapies such as electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) and leucotomy, which they hoped would target the physical origins of mental disorders while also aligning psychiatry to developments in general medicine (Shorter ch. 6). Other psychiatrists were interested in their patients' psychological symptoms, and the ways in which patients' psychosocial environments influenced their mental wellbeing. These psychiatrists developed a model of social psychiatry and sought to establish therapeutic communities within their hospitals, building on wartime experiments in the use of group treatment methods for soldiers displaying psychological symptoms (Harrison and Clarke 698-708; Mills and Harrison 22-43; Whiteley 233-48). In so doing, they hoped to counter institutionalization by transforming mental hospitals into actively therapeutic environments. This article examines how psychiatrists who subscribed to different therapeutic approaches narrated their efforts to transform psychiatric practice within their memoirs. It focuses on accounts authored by William Sargant, an advocate of the physical therapies, and Denis Martin and David Clark, both associated with social psychiatry and the therapeutic community approach. Temporally located views of the space and place of mental healthcare underpinned all three narratives, for the authors premised the need for reform on the legacy of therapeutic pessimism and authoritarianism, physically embodied within Britain's antiquated psychiatric hospitals. However, while Martin and Clark sought to transform the lives of chronic patients within the old psychiatric hospitals, Sargant attempted to relocate psychiatric care within general medicine, discarding chronic patients and psychiatric hospitals as unsalvageable relics from the past. Undeniably, the authors' divergent views on the nature and treatment of mental illness partially account for differences in the ways they represent change. Yet this article argues that we also need to examine how psychiatrists represented their own role in enacting change within their narratives, for this helps account for the varying ways in which each writer represented psychiatry, mental hospitals, mental illness, patients, and the roles played by other parties in reforming mental healthcare. BIOGRAPHY An examination of the background and career of each author provides an insight into each doctor's views of mental illness, while also providing clues as to the personality of each writer, which would in turn shape their narratives. Of the three, Sargant arguably achieved the most prominence within the profession. Born in 1907, Sargant studied medicine at Cambridge University and obtained his MB degree in 1933. Aged twenty-five, he was appointed medical superintendent of St. Mary's Hospital where he undertook research into the treatment of anemia. …
精神病学的冒险:战后精神保健改革的叙述和制定
精神病学的发展很大程度上要归功于19世纪下半叶英国各地建立的乞丐疯人院。然而,这些机构地位低下,再加上精神科医生未能设计出有效的治疗方法,这意味着精神病学在19世纪和20世纪初并没有享有盛誉。然而,战后时期通常被认为是英国心理健康快速变化的时期。1948年,精神病院被纳入新的国家卫生服务的范围,这一发展为精神科医生和其他精神卫生保健工作者提供了一个机会,通过将精神病学重新定义为医学的另一个分支来提高精神病学的地位。然而,对于如何取得进展,几乎没有达成共识,因为精神科医生正在发展看似对立的治疗模式,其前提是对精神障碍病因的不同理解。一些精神病学家相信,精神疾病和其他疾病一样,也有生物学上的原因。他们开发并应用了新的物理疗法,如电痉挛疗法(ECT)和白质切开术,他们希望这些疗法能够针对精神障碍的物理根源,同时使精神病学与普通医学的发展保持一致(short ch. 6)。其他精神科医生对患者的心理症状以及患者的社会心理环境影响其心理健康的方式感兴趣。这些精神病学家发展了一种社会精神病学模型,并试图在他们的医院内建立治疗社区,以战时对表现出心理症状的士兵使用群体治疗方法的实验为基础(Harrison和Clarke 698-708;米尔斯和哈里森22-43;怀特利233 - 48)。通过这样做,他们希望通过将精神病院转变为积极的治疗环境来对抗制度化。这篇文章考察了采用不同治疗方法的精神病学家如何在他们的回忆录中讲述他们为改变精神病学实践所做的努力。这本书的重点是物理疗法的倡导者威廉·萨金特(William Sargant),以及与社会精神病学和治疗社区方法有关的丹尼斯·马丁(Denis Martin)和大卫·克拉克(David Clark)撰写的文章。这三种叙述都是基于对精神卫生保健的时空定位观点,因为作者假设需要对治疗悲观主义和威权主义的遗产进行改革,这些遗产在英国陈旧的精神病院中得到了具体体现。然而,当马丁和克拉克试图改变旧精神病院中慢性病患者的生活时,萨金特试图将精神病护理转移到普通医学中,将慢性病患者和精神病院视为过去不可挽回的遗迹。不可否认,作者对精神疾病的性质和治疗的不同观点部分解释了他们代表变化的方式的差异。然而,这篇文章认为,我们还需要研究精神科医生如何在他们的叙述中表现他们自己在制定变革方面的角色,因为这有助于解释每个作者以不同的方式表现精神病学、精神病院、精神疾病、患者,以及其他各方在精神保健改革中所扮演的角色。对每位作者的背景和职业生涯的考察,可以让我们深入了解每位医生对精神疾病的看法,同时也为了解每位作者的个性提供了线索,而这些个性反过来又塑造了他们的叙事。在这三人中,萨金特可以说是业内最杰出的。萨金特出生于1907年,在剑桥大学学习医学,并于1933年获得理学硕士学位。25岁时,他被任命为圣玛丽医院的院长,在那里他进行了贫血治疗的研究。…
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