The history of psychiatry began with asylums that confined dangerous or disruptive individuals. Over time, clinicians recognized that the asylum environment itself could have therapeutic benefits, giving rise to the field of psychiatry. Key figures included Pinel who introduced more humane treatment in France by abolishing restraints. The term "psychiatry" was coined in 1808. In the 19th century, therapeutic asylums employing "moral therapy" through work, routine, and kindness grew dramatically, though became overwhelmed without effective treatments. By the 1890s, psychiatry had lost touch with mainstream medicine.
The history of psychiatry began with asylums that confined dangerous or disruptive individuals. Over time, clinicians recognized that the asylum environment itself could have therapeutic benefits, giving rise to the field of psychiatry. Key figures included Pinel who introduced more humane treatment in France by abolishing restraints. The term "psychiatry" was coined in 1808. In the 19th century, therapeutic asylums employing "moral therapy" through work, routine, and kindness grew dramatically, though became overwhelmed without effective treatments. By the 1890s, psychiatry had lost touch with mainstream medicine.
The history of psychiatry began with asylums that confined dangerous or disruptive individuals. Over time, clinicians recognized that the asylum environment itself could have therapeutic benefits, giving rise to the field of psychiatry. Key figures included Pinel who introduced more humane treatment in France by abolishing restraints. The term "psychiatry" was coined in 1808. In the 19th century, therapeutic asylums employing "moral therapy" through work, routine, and kindness grew dramatically, though became overwhelmed without effective treatments. By the 1890s, psychiatry had lost touch with mainstream medicine.
The history of psychiatry began with asylums that confined dangerous or disruptive individuals. Over time, clinicians recognized that the asylum environment itself could have therapeutic benefits, giving rise to the field of psychiatry. Key figures included Pinel who introduced more humane treatment in France by abolishing restraints. The term "psychiatry" was coined in 1808. In the 19th century, therapeutic asylums employing "moral therapy" through work, routine, and kindness grew dramatically, though became overwhelmed without effective treatments. By the 1890s, psychiatry had lost touch with mainstream medicine.
John Cookson, in Core Psychiatry (Third Edition), 2012
The asylum and moral therapy The history of ‘psychiatry’ began with the custodial asylum – an institution to confine raging individuals who were dangerous or a nuisance. The discovery that the institution itself could have a therapeutic function led to the birth of psychiatry as a medical speciality. This notion can be traced to clinicians such as William Battie (St Luke's, 1751), Chiarugi (Florence, 1785) and Pinel (Paris, 1795), and lay people such as William Tuke (1796), a Quaker tea merchant who founded the Retreat in York. Such a development was in keeping with the style of thinking of the Age of Enlightenment (that ended with the French Revolution in 1789), with its religious scepticism and its quest for understanding. Pinel (at the Salpêtrière for women and the Bicêtre for men), in particular, anticipated several trends, abolishing the use of restraining chains and recognizing a group of ‘curable lunatics’ (mainly with melancholia or mania without delusions), for whom a more humanitarian approach in an ‘institution morale’ seemed to be therapeutic. The term ‘psychiatry’ was first used in 1808 by Reil, a professor of medicine in Germany, to describe the evolving discipline, although its practitioners were known as alienists (those who treated mental alienation) until the twentieth century. During the eighteenth century, there had been a growing trade in lunacy throughout Europe. In Britain, for example, the insane were confined to private madhouses, to which physicians had limited access and input. In 1788, King George III suffered a bout of mental illness for which eventually he received attention from Francis Willis, a ‘mad-doctor’ renowned for his piercing stare. The constitutional implications were considerable, and parliament subsequently instituted a committee to enquire into this and into the care of the mentally ill in general. The therapeutic asylums, which sprang up in the nineteenth century, had in common a routine of work and activity and an approach by the staff encompassed in the term ‘moral therapy’ and variously described as ‘a mildness of manner and expression, an attention to their narrative and seeming acquiescence in its truth’ (Haslam, Bedlam, 1809), ‘the soothing voice of friendship’ (Burrows, London, 1828) and ‘encouraging esteem … conducive to a salutary habit of self-restraint’ (Samuel Tuke, York, 1813). Uplifting architecture, as well as access to sunlight and the opportunity to work in the open air, were also valued. Many of these institutions had charismatic directors and employed attendants who could be trusted not to beat the patients. Reil (1803) described the qualities of a good psychiatrist as having ‘perspicacity, a talent for observation, intelligence, goodwill, persistence, patience, experience, an imposing physique and a countenance that commands respect’. These are recognizable ingredients contributing to a placebo effect, and most of the physical treatments at their disposal were largely that: purgatives, enemas, blood letting (advocated, e.g. for mania by Benjamin Rush, the founding father of American psychiatry, 1812) and emetics, aimed to ‘draw out’ nervous irritants (‘catharsis’). During the nineteenth century, the confining of patients to an asylum passed from an unusual procedure born of grave necessity to society's first response when dealing with psychotic illness. Therapeutic asylums were built on a vast scale as politicians responded to the claims of the early enthusiasts. Unfortunately, while the doctors had no effective treatments, the asylums were destined to accumulate more and more incurable patients, leaving the staff overwhelmed, demoralized, and with insufficient time or conviction to sustain their ‘moral’ approach. The situation was exacerbated by an increase in the numbers of mentally ill people, especially through neurosyphilis and alcoholism, and by the increasing reluctance of families in industrialized society to tolerate their mentally ill relatives. In 1894, the American neurologist Silas Weir Mitchell told asylum physicians that they had lost contact with the rest of medicine, and that their treatments were ‘a sham’. In Britain, apart from the Maudsley Hospital, which opened in 1923 for teaching and research and for the treatment of recently ill patients, asylum psychiatry remained virtually divorced from the rest of medicine until the 1930s.