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Mental Health in Canada Historical Perspectives

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Page 1: Mental Health in Canada Historical Perspectives. Defining Words Mental Health Movement Mental HygienePatient Rights ExclusionWork Therapy MarginalizationShock

Mental Health in Canada

Historical Perspectives

Page 2: Mental Health in Canada Historical Perspectives. Defining Words Mental Health Movement Mental HygienePatient Rights ExclusionWork Therapy MarginalizationShock

Defining WordsMental Health Movement

Mental Hygiene Patient RightsExclusion Work TherapyMarginalization Shock TherapyInstitutionalization JailingMisunderstanding Pharmacotherapy Stigma PsychotherapyAdvocacy ProtectionSocial Policy Community Support

Page 3: Mental Health in Canada Historical Perspectives. Defining Words Mental Health Movement Mental HygienePatient Rights ExclusionWork Therapy MarginalizationShock

Mental Disorder

any illness with significant psychological or behavioral manifestations that is associated with either a painful or distressing symptom or an impairment in one or more important areas of functioning.

Page 4: Mental Health in Canada Historical Perspectives. Defining Words Mental Health Movement Mental HygienePatient Rights ExclusionWork Therapy MarginalizationShock

Mental Hygiene

The science of maintaining mental health and preventing the development of psychosis, neurosis, or other mental disorders.

Page 5: Mental Health in Canada Historical Perspectives. Defining Words Mental Health Movement Mental HygienePatient Rights ExclusionWork Therapy MarginalizationShock

Mental Health

a condition of mental well-being, balance, and resilience in which the individual can successfully work and function and in which the individual can both withstand and learn to cope with the conflicts and stresses encountered in life.

Page 6: Mental Health in Canada Historical Perspectives. Defining Words Mental Health Movement Mental HygienePatient Rights ExclusionWork Therapy MarginalizationShock

The ancient past…

918 (AD) Earliest known mental hospital establised in Baghdad.

The treatment of the mentally ill reflects society’s ideas, and what’s culturally acceptable.

Page 7: Mental Health in Canada Historical Perspectives. Defining Words Mental Health Movement Mental HygienePatient Rights ExclusionWork Therapy MarginalizationShock

Mental Illness as Deviance

Mental illness was often thought of as deviant to “regular” behaviour.

Those who did not conform to society’s expectations were marginalized and as the care for mental health patients rose so did the number of people placed in institutions.

Page 8: Mental Health in Canada Historical Perspectives. Defining Words Mental Health Movement Mental HygienePatient Rights ExclusionWork Therapy MarginalizationShock

Patients or Prisoners? Those with mental disorders were

admitted to mental hospitals and asylums but so too were those who didn’t fit society’s picture of a productive citizen.

People with Special Needs Criminals Women Homosexuals

Page 9: Mental Health in Canada Historical Perspectives. Defining Words Mental Health Movement Mental HygienePatient Rights ExclusionWork Therapy MarginalizationShock

18th Century

Bedlam (London 1247) and Bicetre (Paris) Known as mad houses or asylums. Inmates were often thought to be devoid

of human feeling and treatment was brutal.

Many sufferers were routinely shackled.

Page 10: Mental Health in Canada Historical Perspectives. Defining Words Mental Health Movement Mental HygienePatient Rights ExclusionWork Therapy MarginalizationShock

Change…

Dorothy Dix was a reformer and in 1840 led a personal crusade to change treatment of the mentally ill in Canada, the US, and Britain.

Her outrage was based in American experiences. She discovered that criminals and the mentally ill were detained and treated the same way.

Page 11: Mental Health in Canada Historical Perspectives. Defining Words Mental Health Movement Mental HygienePatient Rights ExclusionWork Therapy MarginalizationShock

Continued Issues…

Still for many generations the mentally ill were marginalized in society and largely misunderstood.

Institutionalization took the ill from their families and did not allow them to interact with the public and their community.

Page 12: Mental Health in Canada Historical Perspectives. Defining Words Mental Health Movement Mental HygienePatient Rights ExclusionWork Therapy MarginalizationShock

1899 British Columbia Population of people suffering mental

illnesses surpasses 300. In the absence of social services, the

hospital became a housing facility. Those who were there included: unwanted

children, physically handicapped children along with psychiatric patients.

Complaints are heard of serious overcrowding, poor hygiene and living conditions, and inadequate care.

Page 13: Mental Health in Canada Historical Perspectives. Defining Words Mental Health Movement Mental HygienePatient Rights ExclusionWork Therapy MarginalizationShock

Change in BC…

New site for Mental Institution are sought and a large hospital is built to accommodate patients.

Work therapy continues to be a major part of treatment.

Page 14: Mental Health in Canada Historical Perspectives. Defining Words Mental Health Movement Mental HygienePatient Rights ExclusionWork Therapy MarginalizationShock

Modern Mental Health Treatment

1908 Clifford Wittingham Beers wrote A Mind That Found Itself

Organized the Connecticut Society for Mental Hygiene

Continues to influence people Sought improvements for care of the

unwell and distribution of reliable information.

Page 15: Mental Health in Canada Historical Perspectives. Defining Words Mental Health Movement Mental HygienePatient Rights ExclusionWork Therapy MarginalizationShock

1918: In Canada…

Canadian National Committee for Mental Hygiene (CNCMH), founded by Dr. Clarence M. Hincks and Clifford W. Beers in January 26, 1918.

This organization has evolved and is now the Canadian Mental Health Association (with chapters all across Canada)

Page 16: Mental Health in Canada Historical Perspectives. Defining Words Mental Health Movement Mental HygienePatient Rights ExclusionWork Therapy MarginalizationShock

The World Wars

After WWII in Canada doctors were concerned with rehabilitation of their soldiers.

Post traumatic stress disorder and other illnesses continue to be a concern for soldiers serving overseas.

Page 17: Mental Health in Canada Historical Perspectives. Defining Words Mental Health Movement Mental HygienePatient Rights ExclusionWork Therapy MarginalizationShock

Continued Momentum

1946 Rise is Pharmacotherapy. Founding of the United Nations and in

1946 constitution of the World Health Organization (WHO) pushed health and mental health into the world’s view.

Page 18: Mental Health in Canada Historical Perspectives. Defining Words Mental Health Movement Mental HygienePatient Rights ExclusionWork Therapy MarginalizationShock

Ideas about Mental Health

1901  The psychiatric literature lists the principal causes of insanity as heredity, intemperance, syphilis and masturbation.

2009 Causes include Organic Causes (within the brain), Hereditary Factors, Drug and Alcohol Abuse, Stress, etc.

Page 19: Mental Health in Canada Historical Perspectives. Defining Words Mental Health Movement Mental HygienePatient Rights ExclusionWork Therapy MarginalizationShock

Be careful…

Very often the cause of a particular type of mental disorder is unknown or is understood only to a very limited extent.

Page 20: Mental Health in Canada Historical Perspectives. Defining Words Mental Health Movement Mental HygienePatient Rights ExclusionWork Therapy MarginalizationShock

Current Ideas for Treatment Include

Psychotherapy Community Supports Pharmacotherapy Patient Rights Creation of Mental Health Courts 1980’s saw the National Decline in

Institutionalization

Page 21: Mental Health in Canada Historical Perspectives. Defining Words Mental Health Movement Mental HygienePatient Rights ExclusionWork Therapy MarginalizationShock

New language for patients The term “consumer” refers to a person

who has used or is using services provided by the mental health system.

There is some debate within our community about the most appropriate term. While some organizations prefer the term “client”, CMHA has listened to and heard individuals who have used or are using the mental health system and many of them prefer the term “consumer”.

Page 22: Mental Health in Canada Historical Perspectives. Defining Words Mental Health Movement Mental HygienePatient Rights ExclusionWork Therapy MarginalizationShock

Where is this information coming from? (sources)

Encyclopaedia Britannica (online database)

Health Canada Website Canadian Mental Health Association BC Mental Health and Addiction

Services