ABPSY - Module-I-LESSON 2
ABPSY - Module-I-LESSON 2
UNDERSTANDING PSYCHOPATHOLOGY
INTRODUCTION
Extraordinary People
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MODULE I
UNDERSTANDING PSYCHOPATHOLOGY
Lesson 2
HISTORY OF
MENTAL ILLNESS
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3. The Middle Ages – 500 AD to 1500 AD. Mental illness was yet again
explained as possession by the Devil and methods such as exorcism,
flogging, prayer, the touching of relics, chanting, visiting holy sites, and
holy water were used to rid the person of his influence. In extreme cases,
the afflicted were exposed to confinement, beatings, and even execution.
Scientific and medical explanations, such as those proposed by Hippocrates,
were discarded.
Group hysteria, or mass madness, was also seen in which large
numbers of people displayed similar symptoms and false beliefs. This
included the belief that one was possessed by wolves or other animals and
imitated their behavior, called lycanthropy, and a mania in which large
numbers of people had an uncontrollable desire to dance and jump, called
tarantism. The latter was believed to have been caused by the bite of the
wolf spider, now called the tarantula, and spread quickly from Italy to
Germany and other parts of Europe where it was called Saint Vitus’s dance.
Near the end of the Middle Ages, mystical explanations for mental
illness began to lose favor and science and medicine were called upon to
explain psychopathology.
4. The Renaissance – 14th to 16th centuries. The most noteworthy
development in the realm of philosophy during the Renaissance was the rise
of humanism, or the worldview that emphasizes human welfare and the
uniqueness of the individual. This helped continue the decline of
supernatural views of mental illness. In the mid to late 1500s, Johann
Weyer (1515-1588), a German physician, published his book, On the Deceits
of the Demons, that rebutted the Church’s witch-hunting handbook, the
Malleus Maleficarum, and argued that many accused of being witches and
subsequently imprisoned, tortured, and/or burned at the stake, were
mentally disturbed and not possessed by demons or the Devil himself. He
believed that like the body, the mind was susceptible to illness.
The number of asylums, or places of refuge for the mentally ill where
they could receive care, began to rise during the 16th century as the
government realized there were far too many people afflicted with mental
illness to be left in private homes. Hospitals and monasteries were
converted into asylums. In 1547, the Bethlem Hospital opened in London
with the sole purpose of confining those with mental disorders. Patients
were chained up, placed on public display, and often heard crying out in
pain. The asylum became a tourist attraction, with sightseers paying a
penny to view the more violent patients, and soon was called “Bedlam” by
local people; a term that today means “a state of uproar and confusion” .
5. Reform Movement – 18th to 19th centuries. The rise of the moral
treatment movement occurred in Europe in the late 18th century and then
in the United States in the early 19th century. Its earliest proponent was
Francis Pinel (1745-1826) who was assigned as the superintendent of la
Bicetre, a hospital for mentally ill men in Paris. Arguing that the mentally ill
were sick people, Pinel ordered that chains be removed, outside exercise be
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subscriber wants it to be; the greater the flexibility, the greater the cost.
Managed health care takes three forms:
Multicultural psychology. As our society becomes increasingly
diverse, medical practitioners and psychologists alike have to take into
account the patient’s gender, age, race, ethnicity, socioeconomic (SES)
status, and culture and how these factors shape the individual’s thoughts,
feelings, and behaviors. Additionally, we need to understand how the
various groups, whether defined by race, culture, or gender, differ from one
another. This approach is called multicultural psychology.
In August 2002, the American Psychological Association’s (APA)
Council of Representatives put forth six guidelines based on the
understanding that “race and ethnicity can impact psychological practice
and interventions at all levels” and that there is a need for respect and
inclusiveness. They further state, “psychologists are in a position to provide
leadership as agents of prosocial change, advocacy, and social justice,
thereby promoting societal understanding, affirmation, and appreciation of
multiculturalism against the damaging effects of individual, institutional,
and societal racism, prejudice, and all forms of oppression based on
stereotyping and discrimination.”
THINK IT THROUGH!
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References:
American Psychiatric Association. (2022). Diagnostic and statistical manual of
Mental Disorders. (5th ed.-TR). American Psychiatric Publishing.
Comer, R. J., Comer, J.S. (2015). Abnormal Psychology. (9th ed.). Worth
Publishers,
Inc.
Demme, J. (1991). The Silence of the Lambs (Film). Strong Heart Productions.
Morrison, J.R. (2014). DSM-5 Made Easy: The Clinician’s Guide to Diagnosis. (1st
ed.) The Guilford Press.
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