471g4:questions:471g4--week_7_day_1
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2. On the opposite side of the spectrum is the story from Frances Farmer, who had been hospitalized in California and Washington state, 1943-1950 (Geller and Harris, 314-25). She opens her account by repeating four times that she “survived” her experience in mental hospitals (314). She goes on to describe the horrid conditions she was subjected to, including being tied up, tortured with ice baths and living in fetid conditions. When she was released, she says she was a broken person. The way she describes her experience was like she had been a POW, which makes me wonder if she suffered from what we call PTSD today. She doesn’t go into much detail about her post-release symptoms, but her statement that she “crawled out mutilated, whimpering and terribly alone” sounds like she suffered from the psychological trauma that former POWs and combat veterans suffer who are diagnosed with PTSD. | 2. On the opposite side of the spectrum is the story from Frances Farmer, who had been hospitalized in California and Washington state, 1943-1950 (Geller and Harris, 314-25). She opens her account by repeating four times that she “survived” her experience in mental hospitals (314). She goes on to describe the horrid conditions she was subjected to, including being tied up, tortured with ice baths and living in fetid conditions. When she was released, she says she was a broken person. The way she describes her experience was like she had been a POW, which makes me wonder if she suffered from what we call PTSD today. She doesn’t go into much detail about her post-release symptoms, but her statement that she “crawled out mutilated, whimpering and terribly alone” sounds like she suffered from the psychological trauma that former POWs and combat veterans suffer who are diagnosed with PTSD. | ||
+ | Submitted by Chris O' | ||
+ | 1. One of the things that really struck me about today' | ||
+ | 2. Going off a my previous question, would you consider Marion King's experience to be an exception to the rule? Or do we truly think she had reason for being in the asylum that may very well be affecting her account? | ||
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+ | 3. One of the things I noticed is the uncanny ability of these women to simply observe their surroundings. They appear to treat the asylum as if it is an experiment to be watched, hoping to see a particular outcome. Why do you think this is such a common theme found in this (and previous) readings? | ||
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+ | Submitted by Lyndsey Clark. I pledge… | ||
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+ | 1. From this reading it shows that the nurses had a lot more influence on the treatment and release of patients than it would seem on the surface level. At what point do you think this influence ends and where does it begin? | ||
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+ | 2. Lenore McCall talks about insulin treatments, how was this allowed and continued in the the asylum? I mean we knew the risks of insulin overdoses and over exposure by the 1930s. | ||
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+ | -Parker Siebenschuh I pledge... | ||
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+ | Question 1: How often did suicide occur at black moor or even other mental institutions in the 30s? | ||
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+ | Question 2: What groups were mental health attendants primarily hired from in the 1930s and 1940s? | ||
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+ | submitted by Griffin Nameroff | ||
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+ | 1. Why was conversation during meals considered taboo? Was it because the nurses and staff didn't want to hear patients talk or was it because of another reason? | ||
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+ | 2. Was there an increase of cancer in patients that drank formaldehyde and if so what did they believe caused the cancer if they didn't think it was the drink? | ||
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+ | Submitted by Audrey Schroeder. I pledge... | ||
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+ | 1. In Margaret Isabel Wilson’s account, why did the nurses insist that the other patient bathe Margaret? What was the purpose of doing this? | ||
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+ | 2. Why do you think that so many patients lost their appetites? Could this possibly be a way to rebel against the institution and the nurses? | ||
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+ | Submitted by Jack Kurz. I pledge… | ||
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+ | 1. During this period what were the qualifications needed to be hired as an attendant or nurse? Did the potential employee need previous experience and special training? | ||
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+ | 2. Lenore McCall wrote in her account after she left the institution that she was better after an insulin treatment. Could this be the Placebo Effect at work? How many patients, after their stays in mental institutions, | ||
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+ | Submitted by Jayden Jordan | ||
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+ | 1. Hydra or Hydro therapy was mentioned in several of the accounts in our reading today. It sounds like a dangerous type of therapy since they are exposed to severe cold for long periods of time. Besides putting the patients in a comatose kind of stupor, were there any real benefits to this type of treatment? Are there records of complications or death resulting from this type of treatment? | ||
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+ | 2. In Margaret McGarr' | ||
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+ | Submitted by Allison Love (I pledge...) | ||
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+ | 1) How does the scene that Francis Farmer describes on page 320 represent the state of mental asylums at the time? Do you believe her account of this to be true or fictionalized? | ||
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+ | 2) Many of the women use the word “inmate” or “prisoner” in their testimonies? | ||
+ | Submitted by Mallory Karnei (I pledge...) | ||
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+ | 1, This question may be controversial to ask, but do you think Virginia, from the (I think) fourth account, was of an entirely sound mind? Schizophrenic-presenting symptoms aside, we hear that doctors repeatedly used shock therapy on her. | ||
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+ | 2. One thing that stood out to me in the third reading was a quote from a suicidal patient who described her depression as ' | ||
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+ | Submitted by Theron Gertz (I pledge...) | ||
471g4/questions/471g4--week_7_day_1.1633305169.txt.gz · Last modified: 2021/10/03 23:52 by 173.44.67.2