19th Century Mental Health

Words: 473
Pages: 2

1.Provide a brief explanation of how the attitudes and societal views towards mental health (in general) and approaches to working with mental health have changed over time.
In ancient cultures insanity was believed to be the result is the physical afflictions an imbalance of the poor body fluids the brain was the organ of the mind and susceptible to disease but it was not until the middle ages that madness was proclaimed sign of the devil a punishment by God between 14-16 in 1680 tens of thousand a mentally ill mostly women were burned at the stake inhumane
Treatment persisted throughout renaissance victim mental illness were cast into silence and prisons shackled and chained and left to rot in their own ways. By the 19th century madness has become a subject signs >> still new techniques for study confinement and suppression using with a little more humane and no more productive than what had come before, with the 20th century and the birth of psychiatry for diseases paranoia withdrawal and hallucination was defined and named schizophrenia the affliction up the fragmented mind modern therapies like electro shock in the( bottom me could still )be abusive science subtract the night match the brain but man was still determined to cut it out. The first real breakthrough in treatment
…show more content…
Secondly, reduce the impact of MHP and mental illness, including the effects of stigma and discrimination, on person, families and the community. Thirdly, Support improvement from mental health problems and mental illness. Lastly, ensure the rights of people with mental health problems and mental illness, and to become strong to participate meaningfully in