The Mental Hospital: A Pattern for the Future
- 1 August 1967
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Royal College of Psychiatrists in The British Journal of Psychiatry
- Vol. 113 (501) , 857-864
- https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.113.501.857
Abstract
The great changes that have occurred in mental hospitals over the last fifteen years due to improvements in treatment of both acute and chronic psychiatric illnesses are reflected in the dramatic running down of the long-stay patient population. The Ministry of Health (1961) and Tooth and Brooke (1961) envisaged a continuing fall in the number of beds for psychiatric patients, so that by the mid 1970s these would have been reduced by nearly 50 per cent. from their 1960 figure (3·4 to 1·8 per thousand population). This prediction has been criticized because it was considered too optimistic, while the implication that the mental hospital, as we know it today, might cease to exist has provoked controversy.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- “No Fixed Abode”: A Survey of Mental Hospital AdmissionsThe British Journal of Psychiatry, 1966
- Some Changes in the Composition of a Mental Hospital PopulationThe British Journal of Psychiatry, 1965
- THE MENTAL HOSPITAL EFFECTS OF AN ALTERNATIVE PSYCHIATRIC SERVICEThe Lancet, 1965
- A RATIONAL PLAN FOR INTEGRATION OF PSYCHIATRIC SERVICES TO AN URBAN COMMUNITYThe Lancet, 1963
- SURVEY OF A LONG-STAY MENTAL HOSPITAL POPULATIONThe Lancet, 1961
- Evolution in the Mental HospitalBMJ, 1961
- PSYCHIATRY IN GENERAL HOSPITALS Manchester's Integrated SchemeThe Lancet, 1961
- BREAKING UP THE MENTAL HOSPITALThe Lancet, 1958