Mental diseases: a public health problem. James Vance May
Читать онлайн книгу.not insane." It also provided that a clinical pathological laboratory should be maintained for the benefit of the state hospitals. During a period of eleven years it admitted an average of 168.82 patients per year. Twenty-four per cent of these were voluntary cases. The psychoses represented were: manic-depressive insanity, twenty-four per cent; dementia praecox, seventeen per cent; paranoid conditions, two per cent; hysteria, seven per cent; psychopathic personality, two per cent; alcoholic psychoses, four per cent; morphine intoxication, one per cent; imbecility, two per cent; general paralysis, eight per cent; cerebral syphilis, one per cent; epilepsy, two per cent; senile psychoses, one per cent; cerebral arteriosclerosis, three per cent; unclassified conditions, five per cent; and not insane, two per cent. Seventy-four per cent of all the cases admitted were discharged after a residence of three months or less and eighty-two per cent after a residence of four months or less. Fourteen and eight-tenths per cent of all cases were discharged as recovered and 32.7 per cent as improved. Owing to the fact that it has only sixty-two beds at its disposal, the number of admissions is necessarily limited and cases are carefully selected.
The Psychopathic Hospital in Boston, the first institution of the kind established in this country as a department of a state hospital (The Psychopathic Department of the Boston State Hospital), was opened for the reception of patients in 1912. The purposes of the institution were very clearly shown by the Twelfth Annual Report of the Massachusetts State Board of Insanity (1910):—"The psychopathic hospital should receive all classes of mental patients for first care, examination and observation, and provide short, intensive treatment of incipient, acute and curable insanity. Its capacity should be small, not exceeding such requirement. An adequate staff of physicians, investigators and trained workers in every department should provide as high a standard of efficiency as that of the best general and special hospitals, or that in any field of medical science. Ample facilities should be available for the treatment of mental and nervous conditions, the clinical study of patients on the wards, and scientific investigation in well-equipped laboratories, with a view to prevention and cure of mental disease and addition to the knowledge of insanity and associated problems. Clinical instruction should be given to medical students, the future family physicians, who would thus be taught to recognize and treat mental disease in its earliest stages, when curative measures avail most. Such a hospital, therefore, should be accessible to medical schools, other hospitals, clinics and laboratories. It should be a center of education and training of physicians, nurses, investigators, and special workers in this and allied fields of work. Its out-patient department should afford free consultation to the poor, and such advice and medical treatment as would, with the aid of district nursing, promote the home care of mental patients. Its social workers should facilitate early discharge and after care of patients, and investigate their previous history, habits, home and working conditions and environment, heredity and other causes of insanity, and endeavor to apply corrective and preventive measures."
The building has a capacity of one hundred and ten beds. The institution may be said to differ from other psychopathic hospitals in being an establishment essentially of the temporary care type, not designed primarily either for the reception or for the care and custody of obviously committable cases, but rather for the observation and treatment of incipient mental disorders as well as psychopathic conditions not properly coming within the scope of the state hospitals. It has been as a rule the policy of the court to commit directly to other institutions for the insane all cases showing clearly the necessity of an extended hospital residence. The fact that only forty per cent of the temporary care cases have been committed shows that a preliminary period of observation before these cases are definitely disposed of is unquestionably warranted. The legal status of cases admitted may be described as follows:—1. Temporary care (not to exceed ten days); 2. Boston Police cases (Persons suffering from delirium, mania, mental confusion, delusions or hallucinations, or who come under the care or protection of the police); 3. Observation cases (for a period of thirty-five days, pending commitment); 4. Cases pending examination and hearing; 5. Emergency commitments (not more than five days); 6. Voluntary admissions; 7. Cases held under complaint or indictment.
An analysis of the work done by the Psychopathic Department from 1912 to 1920 shows a total of 14,922 admissions to the wards—an average of 1,865 per year. Of these, 59.77 per cent were temporary care (10 day) cases, 18.56 per cent "Boston Police" cases, 1.38 per cent observation cases (thirty-five days), .50 per cent emergency cases, .61 per cent committed "pending examination and hearing," 1.02 per cent under complaint or indictment and 16.96 per cent were voluntary cases. The entire temporary care group, including all of the above classes except the voluntary and criminal cases, constituted 81.34 per cent of the admissions. It is interesting to note that the principal psychoses represented by the cases coming into the hands of the Boston Police are dementia praecox, alcoholic psychoses and mental deficiency. The number of emergency cases is very small, as is the number committed by courts for observation. The number of voluntary admissions, an average of 316 per year, constituting 16.96 per cent of the total, is very significant as showing the response to be expected from the public to an opportunity for hospital treatment without the formality of any legal procedure. Of the 14,922 cases admitted between 1912 and 1920, 38.45 per cent were subsequently committed as insane and 3,797, or 25.44 per cent, were returned to the community as not requiring further hospital care or treatment.
It has been shown that the special field covered by the Boston Psychopathic Hospital consists of temporary care cases. The principal psychoses represented by 12,252 admissions of that class were as follows: alcoholic psychoses, 9.25 per cent; dementia praecox, 25.0 per cent; senile psychoses, 3.16 per cent; general paresis, 6.06 per cent; manic-depressive psychoses, 10.14 per cent; arteriosclerosis, 3.23 per cent; epilepsy, 1.85 per cent; and without psychoses, 20.63 per cent.
This latter class (without psychosis) is looked upon by some as constituting the most important field of a psychopathic hospital. It is exceedingly interesting to note the conditions which bring such individuals to the institution. An analysis of 1,430 cases shows the principal mental types represented to be as follows:—mental deficiency, thirty-four per cent; psychopathic personality, 15.17 per cent; hysteria, neurasthenia and other psychoneuroses, 11.2 per cent; epilepsy, 8.04 per cent; alcoholism, 6.08 per cent; conduct disorders, 4.2 per cent; syphilis, 2.03 per cent; organic brain diseases, 1.68 per cent; neurosyphilis, 1.26 per cent; drug addictions, 1.4 per cent; somatic conditions, 1.19 per cent, etc.
No less interesting and instructive is a study of the voluntary cases. An analysis of 1,807 admissions of this type shows the following distribution of psychoses: alcoholic psychoses, 5.64 per cent; dementia praecox, 18.43 per cent; manic-depressive, 6.81 per cent; involution melancholia, .99 per cent; senile psychoses, 1.11 per cent; general paresis, 7.9 per cent; epilepsy, 1.05 per cent; psychoneuroses, 3.59 per cent; and without psychosis, 34.64 per cent.
The work of the out-patient service includes in a general way the study of cases referred to that department from the wards of the hospital or by its social service staff; cases referred by courts, schools, social agencies, and other institutions, as well as those sent by practicing physicians and individuals coming on their own initiative. The response on the part of the public to the facilities offered by the out-patient department is shown by the fact that 9,273 new cases were reported during a seven-year period, an average of 1,324.7 per year. Fifty-seven and six hundredths per cent of these cases were adults, 17.8 per cent were classified as adolescents, 24.25 per cent as children and .89 per cent as infants. The source of origin of these cases is exceedingly interesting. Four and eighty-seven hundredths per cent were referred to the out-patient service by courts; 4.65 per cent, by schools; 11.77 per cent, by hospitals; 9.77 per cent, by physicians; and 3.55 per cent, by individuals. Fifteen and five tenths per cent came from the wards of the Psychopathic Hospital; 9.96 per cent, from the social service department and 13.3 per cent came on their own initiative. The question as to why these cases are sent to an institution of the psychopathic hospital type can now be answered. Fourteen and fifty-two hundredths per cent were examined solely for the purpose of determining the existence of probable mental diseases and 21.88 per cent on account of suspected mental defects. Four and fifty-two hundredths per cent were sex offenders. In 8.64 per cent the only question at issue was the possibility of a psychoneurosis and in 7.97 per cent the purpose of the examination was to ascertain whether or not syphilis was present. The diagnoses show the nature of the cases encountered in an out-patient mental clinic. Four