The Nightmares Behind Closed Doors Imagine being mentally lost and being sent away because no one wants to care after you. You are put into an insane asylum where you are beaten every day for no real reason. You are always confused and are being put through absolute misery. You are all alone with no one who loves you. All throughout history, mentally ill patients have been beaten, raped, and tortured by the employees who hide behind the walls of insane asylums. Patients who live behind these walls were, and still are, experimented on. These innocent patients had to endure the torture of Hydro Electric Shock Therapy, Insulin Therapy, Lobotomies, and so much more. Throughout history, mental asylums have used inhumane methods and tools to help …show more content…
This involved filling a tub with warm, or cool, water and sitting the patient in the tub for about 2 hours. In most hospitals this was used as a good source to relax and calm patients, but in London hydrotherapy was much worse. Dr. Charles pilgrim took hydrotherapy to the next level. He would change the temperatures to either scalding hot or freezing cold. After he had adjusted the temperature he would help the patient into the tub and then tie down a heavy sheet over the tub so the patient could not escape. The ill patient was not in the tub for two hours; Dr. Pilgrim would force the patients to stay in the tub for several days to weeks. This would cause severe pain to the body and could potentially ruin nerves in the patient's body. This was a harmless treatment turned into torture (The horrors of insane …show more content…
The original way to perform a Lobotomy consisted of cutting a small hole into the patients the skull and then injecting ethanol into the brain also. By doing this, the doctor would destroy the connection from the frontal lobe to other recievers of the brain. With time, doctors began to upgrade the procedure. They thought the original performance was not enough to help the patient. Eventually, Walter Freeman and James Watts invent their own way of performing the procedure. This involved reaching the frontal lobe through the patient’s eye socket, also known as a Transorbital Lobotomy. Freeman and Watts would take an orbitoclast, an ice pick, and jam it through the patient’s eye with a hammer. All of this is done without anesthetic. Freeman and Watts ruined at least 3,500 lives due to the Lobotomy (Lewis, T
Howard Dully wrote a book about his life, also about how he received a lobotomy. His book is called, “My Lobotomy.” A lobotomy is a surgical operation involving an incision into the prefrontal lobe of the bain. Howard should not have received a lobotomy for many reasons.
The Nazi atrocities of World War II are well documented – rightly so given the horrors they perpetuated and the scale at which they managed to commit their crimes. However, the level of the Nazi crimes often overshadow other atrocities that occurred throughout the war, such as those of Japanese Unit 731, but that wasn’t the only thing keeping Unit 731 out of the mainstream. Unit 731 was set up in 1938 in Japanese-occupied China with the aim of developing biological weapons.
The procedure the hospital takes is described as somewhat of a punishment
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks is much more unique than any other books I read before this. The books involves with the Henrietta Lacks who has cervical cancer that turns to be non operational. Henrietta eventually dies, until to be autopsy for research and finding a vaccine for polio. I wasn’t only surprised by what happened to Henrietta, but, only to find out what happened to her children, such as Elsie, Joe, and Deborah. I was shocked to read about how Elsie died and where she died.
Mentally ill prisoners in prison should be well taken care of. These offender need more care than those without a mental illness due to the illness they have they could hurting innocents civilian and guards or other prisoners like themselves or even themselves. Mentally ill offender need more medicines, Improve conditions, and the cost to keep them. Medicines Mentally ill offenders need as much more medicine than inmates without a mental illness,
Doctors used insulin to put the subjects into a coma. They thought it was good because it put the mind to rest. By the end of it all 44 people ended up dying from it, due to the procedure being unsafe (Mental: A History of the Madhouse). Another form of treatment was using tranquilizing drugs. Using tranquilizers was suppose to calm patients down, but instead it was giving subjects the effects of parkinson’s disease: hand tremors, muscle rigidness, and impaired speech (Mental: A History of the
Atul Gawande, surgeon, professor of surgery at Harvard and public health researcher, explores his view on the death penalty and the research that shook his views. Gawande’s personal view on the death penalty has been transformed by the research conducted for his story “Doctors of the Death Chamber”. In this story doctors and nurses give personal accounts of their controversial roles in prison executions. Gawande’s story about capital punishment raises the question: “Is medicine being used as an instrument of death?” Prior to 1982 the United States carried out executions through hanging, gas chambers, firing squads, and electrocution.
The story of Ghouls of Mental Asylum follows Hector David Morgan, an Ex Green beret who now works in a mental asylum located on isolated island as Head of Security. All of a sudden some vaccination went wrong causing on the outbreak of Ghouls. Hector must find the way out of Island 7 stop these ferocious beasts to stop escaping the island. Game play
Whereas mental asylums in the 1870s focused on methodology, lunatic asylums in the early 1900s tackled the issue of sanitation and communicable diseases. Beginning in 1912, the Indian Government, under the influence of the Britain, passed the Indian Lunacy Act of 1912.14 This act specified guidelines for the management of mental asylums, including various procedures for admissions and standards of care.14 At this time, changes were also occurring structurally within the mental asylums in Britain.14 These changes were transforming the care of the mentally ill into a more professional setting.14 As a result, British India underwent similar transformations to the structure of their cells and the status of mental conditions. For instance, controlling
In the book Girl, Interrupted, by Susanna Kaysen, one of the biggest focal points is mental illness. Mental illness can be tough to talk about, simply because the phrase “mental illness” encompasses such a wide range of conditions and conjures up images of deranged people, but it is very important, especially in this book. There is a certain stigma that people who are put into mental hospitals because they have medical problems or are insane and a possible danger to society. While this is sometimes true, it is far more common for patients to need help for a disorder, but just don’t know where to go or what to do, and can end up putting themselves or someone else in danger.
In today’s society, when someone mentions a mental institution most people picture a dark, dirty, and horrendous hospital like structure. While this image may at times be accurate, this was not always the case. Mental institutions, otherwise known as asylums, have a past full of ups and downs. During different time periods standards for care in these facilities fluctuated from proper care to improper care. With more of an understanding of these mental abnormalities we have a better chance of finding solutions and resolving them.
This is one example how people took advantage of lobotomy. Another example of the misuse of lobotomy is the story of Warner Baxter who was an American actor during the 1930's. During the 1940's, people usually turned to lobotomy for constant pain such as chronic or severe backaches and agonizing headaches ("Top 10 Fascinating And Notable Lobotomies."). Baxter suffered a nervous breakdown in the early 1940's with a crippling arthritis as he grew older (Stang). Regardless of the ill-advice he received, he decided to undergo a lobotomy in hopes to ease his pain (Stang).
The prisoner can not scream, speak, or move as it takes effects, prisoner would be able to feel everything until the body succumbs, and the heart finally stops. The authors of the essay explain the way Georgia inmate, Roy Blankeship “gasped, grimaced, lurched, and jerked his head” when the injection was administered. This is evidence enough to support that execution can be painful. That might lead one to question whether executions are ethical or
When stepping inside a hospital to receive help, one should expect care, treatment, and respect. However, shown in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest and “Howl,” American society equates mental illness with inhumanity. In both texts, the characters are forced to live without basic human freedoms and a voice to change it. Society pressures the mentally ill into becoming submissive counterparts of the community by stripping away their physical freedoms, forcing inhumane treatment, and depriving them the freedom of expression. By pressuring confinement and treating the patients inhumanely, society strips away their freedom to express themselves.
Even of the patients are mentally disable and some cant express clearly, they still manage to form a strong social bond with the regular people. During the 1970’s President Kennedy passed a health reform act in which psychiatry was reevaluated, and insane asylums were shutting down. The given number 160,000 was lowest at the time as more asylums designed to isolate patients were converting to a therapeutic haling centers