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Psychological Disorders: Crash Course Psychology #28
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Niveau CECRL
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Sous-titres (135 segments)
Way back in 1887, a journalist named Elizabeth Cochran assumed the alias Nellie Bly and feigned
a mental illness to report on the truly awful conditions inside psychiatric hospitals in
the US, which were known as asylums at the time. She found rotten food, cold showers,
prevalent rats, abusive nurses, and patients being tied down in her famous expose "Ten
Days in a Mad House". What she documented had been pretty standard mental health treatment
for centuries, but her work led the charge in mental health reform.
It's been a long battle.
Nearly a century later in 1975, American psychologist David Rosenhan published a paper called "On
Being Sane in Insane Places" detailing the experiment that he conducted on psychiatric
institutions themselves. The first part of his experiment involved sending pseudopatients
- a group of eight totally mentally sound associates, including David himself - to knock
on institution doors and falsely report that they'd been hearing voices. Once admitted,
the fake patients abandoned their fake symptoms and behaved as they normally did, waiting
for administrators to recognize them as mentally healthy.
Like Cochran, Rosenhan and his team learned that it's easy to get into a mental institution,
but it is much, much harder to get out. The participants were kept in the institution
for an average of 19 days, one of them for 52 days. They were forced to take psychotropic
medication (which they sneakily spit out) and were eventually discharged with a diagnosis
of paranoid schizophrenia in remission. Of course, being dubbed in remission isn't exactly
the same thing as being labeled sane, and that was just one of Rosenhan's criticisms
of the system. It viewed mental illness as an irreversible condition, almost like a personality
trait, rather than a curable illness.
Part two of his experiment came later when Rosenhan shared his results with a teaching
hospital and then told the staff that he'd be sending more pseudopatients their way in
the next few months, and challenged them to detect the imposters. With that in mind, out
of 193 new patients, 41 were ferreted out as likely or suspected pseudopatients. The
thing is, Rosenhan never actually sent in any pseudopatients. In the end Rosenhan concluded
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