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Lunatic Asylums??
Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
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Christine | Report | 25 Oct 2008 01:31 |
What were the sorts of reasons people were in lunatic asylums back in the day? Thank you in advance :) |
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AnnCardiff | Report | 25 Oct 2008 01:33 |
many were placed in asylums for things they certainly wouldn't today |
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Christine | Report | 25 Oct 2008 02:10 |
thanks Ann. |
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SylviaInCanada | Report | 25 Oct 2008 04:06 |
"hysteria" |
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Fairways3 | Report | 25 Oct 2008 08:15 |
My G.G.Grandmother was put in to an asylum in 1911 because she was senile at the age of eighty nine by her eldest daughter. She died five years later and was recorded as being a tough, hardworking ,old Scots woman who was in the best of health. Luckily we were able to get fifty six pages of her medical history whilst she was there which included letters from her son who wrote regularly enquiring about her welfare and requests for her family to supply clothes. as well as regular health check reports. Not many clothes just two of everything and one shawl. Poor old soul she must have frozen in winter with just a blouse and skirt and shawl over her |
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Battenburg | Report | 25 Oct 2008 08:22 |
Just read an account of a nurse who worked in Storthers Hall assylum in Bradford from 1968. She was asked if there were long term patients sent there because the family didnt want them or couldnt cope. |
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Sheila | Report | 25 Oct 2008 10:14 |
My great grandmothers sister killed herself in an asylum at the age of 32. in 1888 |
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AnnCardiff | Report | 25 Oct 2008 11:02 |
Thank God people are more understanding about mental illness these days but there is a long way to go yet - there is still stigma and sadly mental illness is at the bottom of the pile as far as the NHS coffers go - I worked in a psychiatric hospital for almost thirty years and speak from experience!! |
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Janice | Report | 25 Oct 2008 12:16 |
I believe some women were admitted when suffering from post-natal depression too. |
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SJR | Report | 25 Oct 2008 13:38 |
I have some one who died in an asylum. She was pregnant and had Eclampsia. |
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Janet 693215 | Report | 25 Oct 2008 14:35 |
My Grandfathers first wife died in an asylum. She had always been a bit "odd" She was bullied by her family and my Grandad felt sorry for her. He thought that he would be able to offer her a better life. |
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nuttybongo | Report | 25 Oct 2008 17:19 |
If you get the chance, but you do have to preorder, you can look at the asylum books from Bracebridge Heath Asylum in Lincoln Archives and they are amazing, they also smell clinical. People were put in for all sorts of reasons, one thought he was the King of England, Things which were quite normal part of married life, locked up for that. Autism, depression, blind, and the list goes on. It was quite facinating as i was looking for a relative who was arrested and i found the original record from the police in 1888. If you get the chance go and read them, it made me and my sister gasp at some of things, and wondered if we could possibly have a bed for the weekend, as we looked at some of the things you were put in there for lol. |
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snowfairy | Report | 25 Oct 2008 17:19 |
Believe it or not I was almost ashamed to ask for help in my search to find details of my Gt Gran.First of all I didn`t know her proper name name only that she had died when my Grandfather was 8 in 1888. It was a load of codswallop she was put in a mental home at the age of 36 suffering from PM. after the death of my grandfather`s younger brother and didn`t die `Til she was 81!!!!! Can you imagine how horrified we all were. I have to say that we had lots of friendly help from the Devizes Archives, Wiltshire and have since been able to obtain all her notes etc.I am still searching for her roots as ofcourse the family seemed so embarrassed about it that noone really knew her background.Roll on monday, I hope to have her Birth Certificate at long last. |
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sox1 | Report | 25 Oct 2008 18:21 |
I had sent for a certificate, dismayed to find he had ended his days in an asylum. but found out as I'd read on he was paralised, I presume a stroke, lived for a yr in there. |
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Robert | Report | 25 Oct 2008 20:46 |
It is interesting to read all these comments and I agree with everyone. Many people who were put in the asylums should never have even got as far as the front door. However, I am a learning disability nurse and many of my clients/patients I care for today would have been placed in an asylum many years ago because their parents were unable to cope with them. Let’s just pause for a minute though, in the 1800s and before and up to fairly recently, we did not have the understanding of the conditions that we do today, we also did not have the skills and training of the carers we have today and most of all they did not have the drugs we have today, in order for my client group to control their conditions and lead reasonable normal lives. In the past the client group I care for were treated in the possible the best way that was know at the time YES it was cruel and should not have happened, but since the current thinking is care in the community and the closure of all the asylums many of the people who are in these asylums are in a way even more isolated now living in the community, it is also I believe a little know fact that many of the individuals that had lived in the asylums for almost all their lives, very quickly died when they had to live in the community. Today many young people with learning disabilities end up in prison - which is where I work as a LD nurse, as the services are not out there for them once they leave school. Who's to say that in 50 -100 years’ time people will be condemning us for the way we treated this client group today - just a thought. |
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Battenburg | Report | 25 Oct 2008 23:15 |
Adding to Sarah's comments. I too worked in a care home for 27 years. Biggest problem was the ratio of staff to residents. The dementia patients needed more time and their behaviour could be very "difficult". It meant you had less time for the frail residents. |
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AnnCardiff | Report | 25 Oct 2008 23:34 |
the sad fact is that we are all living longer and there will be more and more need for care homes as the years go by - something has to be done about it - care in the community as you say is a joke - lovely on paper but in reality a nightmare. The psychiatric hospital where I worked for nearly thirty years is due for closure shortly - existing patients are slowly being moved into the community. The majority of them have lived in the hosptal for years and although they are being moved to more modern premises it is an area they are not familiar with, there are no shops they can walk to and the main worry for me is will the local residents accept them or will they become the target of these feral gangs that seem to roam the streets these days. The hospital is in our village and has been here for over a hundred years - patients are accepted as an everyday part of life here but will they be so fortunate where they are going. I'd like to think so but doubt it very much. |
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Janet 693215 | Report | 25 Oct 2008 23:50 |
In times passed there was very little expertise in mental health and those given the task to care for patients were badly equipped to deal with the task in hand. Whose to say that suppressing behaviour with alcohol is any different to using valium or largactil. |
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sandbach99 | Report | 26 Oct 2008 00:07 |
A friend of mine had a sister in an asylum she was admitted because she was sitting on the front doorstep of a terraced cottage when a local coucillor walked past, no-one really knew what actually happened but he insisted the young girl had deliberately tripped him up so he arranged for her to be admitted to the local asylum. |
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Battenburg | Report | 26 Oct 2008 00:13 |
Keith and Ann I do agree taking people out of a place they know as home and putting them into the community is upsetting. |