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B1 Intermedio Inglés 10:09 Educational

Psychological Disorders: Crash Course Psychology #28

CrashCourse · 4,225,835 vistas · Añadido hace 3 días

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Subtítulos (135 segmentos)

00:10

Way back in 1887, a journalist named Elizabeth Cochran assumed the alias Nellie Bly and feigned

00:16

a mental illness to report on the truly awful conditions inside psychiatric hospitals in

00:22

the US, which were known as asylums at the time. She found rotten food, cold showers,

00:27

prevalent rats, abusive nurses, and patients being tied down in her famous expose "Ten

00:33

Days in a Mad House". What she documented had been pretty standard mental health treatment

00:38

for centuries, but her work led the charge in mental health reform.

00:42

It's been a long battle.

00:43

Nearly a century later in 1975, American psychologist David Rosenhan published a paper called "On

00:49

Being Sane in Insane Places" detailing the experiment that he conducted on psychiatric

00:54

institutions themselves. The first part of his experiment involved sending pseudopatients

00:58

- a group of eight totally mentally sound associates, including David himself - to knock

01:03

on institution doors and falsely report that they'd been hearing voices. Once admitted,

01:08

the fake patients abandoned their fake symptoms and behaved as they normally did, waiting

01:12

for administrators to recognize them as mentally healthy.

01:15

Like Cochran, Rosenhan and his team learned that it's easy to get into a mental institution,

01:20

but it is much, much harder to get out. The participants were kept in the institution

01:24

for an average of 19 days, one of them for 52 days. They were forced to take psychotropic

01:28

medication (which they sneakily spit out) and were eventually discharged with a diagnosis

01:33

of paranoid schizophrenia in remission. Of course, being dubbed in remission isn't exactly

01:38

the same thing as being labeled sane, and that was just one of Rosenhan's criticisms

01:42

of the system. It viewed mental illness as an irreversible condition, almost like a personality

01:48

trait, rather than a curable illness.

01:49

Part two of his experiment came later when Rosenhan shared his results with a teaching

01:54

hospital and then told the staff that he'd be sending more pseudopatients their way in

01:59

the next few months, and challenged them to detect the imposters. With that in mind, out

02:03

of 193 new patients, 41 were ferreted out as likely or suspected pseudopatients. The

02:09

thing is, Rosenhan never actually sent in any pseudopatients. In the end Rosenhan concluded

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