The ambivalent role of the institution in the history of child and adolescent psychiatry: a case study of the Hawthorn Centre in Michigan, USA
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Published:2020-07-16
Issue:4
Volume:31
Page:440-454
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ISSN:0957-154X
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Container-title:History of Psychiatry
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Hist Psychiatry
Author:
Cesaro Robert1,
Hirshbein Laura2
Affiliation:
1. Henry Ford Health System, Detroit, USA
2. University of Michigan, USA
Abstract
Historians have examined the role of psychiatric institutions in the USA and addressed whether this form of care helped or harmed patients (depending on the perspective of the time period, historical actors, and historians). But the story for children’s mental institutions was different. At the time when adult institutions were in decline, children’s mental hospitals were expanding. Parents and advocates clamoured for more beds and more services. The decrease in facilities for children was more due to economic factors than ideological opposition. This paper explores a case study of a hospital in Michigan as a window into the different characteristics of the discussion of psychiatric care for children.
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health