The highest development perhaps of occupational therapy has been in its application to strictly reeducational work in dementia praecox. This consists in a graduated and systematized reeducation of interests in apparently deteriorated individuals. The success of these efforts depends largely on the fact that very simple lines are followed at first. The patients are interested in marching to music, simple drills, calisthenics, games, basketball and purely physical exercises. Some can be induced to sort out raffia and ultimately take part in basket making. Others cut out pictures or put puzzles together. The women sometimes are willing to do plain sewing or make paper flowers. They progress by easy stages to more advanced and elaborate undertakings leading eventually to occupational work in the wards or possibly in the industrial rooms. Some of the apparently most hopeless cases have, as a result of these reeducational efforts, been able to return to their homes greatly improved. The mental improvement goes hand in hand with a resumption of their interests in their former work or some new occupational venture which may have proved attractive.
Every effort should be made to avoid the possibility of long hours of idleness in the wards. When not actively employed in occupational work, ward games, reading, etc., the patients should be taken out of doors for fresh air and exercise. This, of course, suggests the necessity and importance of attractive surroundings. Nothing can be more depressive or detrimental to the welfare of the patient than a prisonlike appearance either inside of the buildings or on the grounds. The successful operation of a hospital is dependent in no small measure on the amount of attention devoted to the preparation of food. There must be a general dietary for the active ablebodied class, one for the working patients, an entirely different one for the tuberculous and epileptic cases and a special diet for the strictly hospital wards. In an institution of any size this requires the constant supervision of several dietitians.
The advances of recent years in our knowledge as to the etiology and nature of general paresis have led to the introduction of highly specialized therapeutic methods in the treatment of that disease and of cerebro-spinal syphilis. This is an important feature of the work of our hospitals at the present time. The interest recently shown in the study of the endocrine system has already brought about a new line of therapy which is destined to receive much attention in the future.
Even the amusements necessary for the individual are given special attention in the treatment of mental diseases. This refers not only to methods of recreation and diversion in the wards day by day but includes moving picture shows, dances and various other special entertainments. Not the least important consideration is the patient's bodily health. This is often a determining factor in bringing about a restoration of mental integrity. It very often happens that there are diseases of the eye, ear, nose, throat, skin, nervous system, etc., which may require attention. Dental, surgical, gynecological and other special treatments sometimes prevent ordinarily acute and recoverable psychoses from terminating unfavorably.
In a word, the modern hospital treatment of mental diseases may be said to consist of a direct personal supervision of the mental and physical hygiene of the patient, supplemented by such specialized therapeutic procedures as may be indicated in the individual case.
CHAPTER VI
THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE PSYCHOPATHIC HOSPITAL
As has already been shown, the modern hospital treatment of mental diseases in this country is a development which represents the progress of nearly two centuries. Satisfactory as this has been in many respects, it nevertheless leaves much to be desired. All indications point to much greater accomplishments in the future. We are emerging from an era of custodial care and entering one of prevention, scientific investigation, and highly specialized treatment along entirely different lines. The interest of the public has been aroused in a subject which has heretofore been one to be avoided by common consent. Mental hygiene societies are no longer viewed with suspicion and curiosity. We are approaching a time when mental diseases can be dealt with, as other conditions are, without prejudice or unjust discrimination. Psychiatric wards promise to become integral parts of a completed medical organization. Psychopathic hospitals will soon be found in all of our great centers of population. The outlook for specialized institutes for purely research purposes, unfortunately, is not so encouraging at this time.
At last there is some evidence of progress in the teaching of psychiatry in medical schools, hospitals and clinics, although only a beginning has been made as yet. More noteworthy advances have been made in other countries. The appointment of Heinroth as a professor of psychiatry at Leipsic in 1811 promised developments which did not materialize to any great extent for many years. According to Sibbald,[33] psychiatric wards or clinics were established at Würzburg in 1833, Jena in 1848, Vienna in 1853, Berlin in 1865 and at Göttingen in 1866. Scholz made provision for observation wards in a general hospital in Bremen in 1875. Fürstner opened a psychiatric clinic at Heidelberg in 1878. Hitzig accomplished the same thing at Halle in 1891 and Siemerling at Kiel in 1901. The inception of the modern psychiatric clinic has generally been attributed to Griesinger.[34] In his preface to volume one of the "Archiv für Psychiatrie und Nervenkrankheiten" in 1868 he advocated the establishment of small hospitals in cities for the intensive treatment of acute and recoverable mental cases. He recommended a large staff of physicians and accommodation for from sixty to eighty patients, according to the needs of the community, but not to exceed one hundred and fifty under any circumstances. "In close connection with the organization of such institutions there is a crying need and a new, most important interest—the question of psychiatrical instruction. This is absolutely indispensable." This he proposed to accomplish by establishing a highly specialized clinic to be maintained largely by the teaching staff of a university. Griesinger's ideas were eventually carried out in full by Ziehen in Berlin, Sommer in Giessen and Bleuler in Zurich. Perhaps nothing has had more to do with the development of psychopathic hospitals in the United States than the well-known clinic established by Kraepelin at Munich in 1905. It occupies a three-story building accommodating one hundred patients and cares for between fifteen hundred and two thousand cases annually. Hydrotherapeutic and electrical treatments are used extensively.