00:01
Let's talk about historical efforts to improve mental health treatment.
00:07
So i'll write that out.
00:40
As we go along, the few examples that i have, we can discuss whether each attempt was a success or not and why.
00:51
So let's start with somebody in the 1700s.
00:59
His name was philippe pinal, and he was a french physician.
01:17
And he argued for humane treatment of the patients that he had admitted in his hospital.
01:47
For example, he said that patients shouldn't be chained and people should talk to the patients.
02:15
This might seem obvious right now, but back then, that's how they would treat people with mental illness.
02:21
They would literally shackle them and isolate them.
02:26
So we would consider philippe pennell's efforts successful because, although it didn't spark worldwide change, his patients did improve and some of them were able to leave the hospital.
02:45
My next example comes from the 1800s.
02:50
That's dorothea dix.
02:52
She led reform efforts for mental health care in the u .s.
03:19
After she saw how underfunded and unregulated the systems were in the u .s.
03:25
That were supposed to take care of those mental analysis, she lobbied with state legislatures and the u .s...