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1

Barron, David. A price to be born: My childhood and life in a mental institution. Harrogate: Mencap Northern Division, 1996.

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2

Barron, David. A price to be born: My childhood and life in a mental institution. Harrogate: Mencap Northern Division, 1996.

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3

Lord, John. Return to the community: The process of closing an institution. Kitchener, Ont: Centre for Research & Education in Human Services, 1987.

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4

Bolnick, Jamie Pastor. Winnie: "my life in the institution" : a memoir of a special woman. New York, NY: St. Martin's/Marek, 1985.

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5

Kabakov, Il'ya. Mental institution, or Institute of Creative Research =: Das Irrenhaus, oder Institut für Kreative Forschungen = L'asile d'aliénés, ou l'Institut de Recherches créatives. [USA]: I. Kabakov, 1992.

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6

Huibrecht G. van den Doel. Het mallegat in de branding: Bewogen zorg op de Willem van den Bergh (1924-2024). Noordwijk: Willem van den Bergh, 1999.

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7

Services, Maryland Dept of Public Safety and Correctional. Review of Patuxent Institution's mission and function in the Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services: A report to the Budget Committees of the Maryland General Assembly. [Jessup, MD]: Dept. of Public Safety and Correctional Services, 1998.

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8

Wheatley, Thelma. "And neither have I wings to fly": Labelled and locked up in Canada's oldest institution. Toronto, ON: Inanna Publications, 2013.

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9

Hospital, Massachusetts Working Group on Bridgewater State. Report of the Working Group on Bridgewater State Hospital. Boston: Massachusetts Executive Office of Human Services, 1987.

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10

Bürgerschaft, Hamburg (Germany), ed. Spiegelgrund und der Weg dorthin: Holocaust in Hamburg ; fünf szenische Lesungen. Hamburg: Dölling und Galitz, 2003.

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11

Trudel, Gilles. Étude sur les réactions du personnel face à la sexualité des personnes présentant une déficience intellectuelle ou un trouble psychiatrique séjournant en institution, et sur les besoins des bénéficiaires en matière de sexualité: Rapport de recherche présenté au Conseil québécois de la recherche sociale. [Montréal]: G. Trudel, 2000.

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12

Santi, Giovanni. Convivere con la storia: La nuova destinazione del complesso di Santa Petronilla. Pistoia: Gli ori, 2006.

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13

United States. Congress. Senate. A bill to amend title XIX of the Social Security Act to permit states to obtain reimbursement under the Medicaid program for care or services required under the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act that are provided in a nonpublicly owned or operated institution for mental diseases. Washington, D.C: U.S. G.P.O., 2007.

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14

The state boys rebellion. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2004.

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15

D'Antonio, Michael. The state boys rebellion. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster, 2003.

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16

Kabakov, Ilya. Mental Institution, or Institute of Creative Research (Mental Institution). Harry N Abrams, 1993.

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17

Winnie: My Life in the Institution. St Martins Pr, 1985.

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18

Thompson, Mark. The Complete Crumb: Mr. Natural Committed to a Mental Institution! Fantagraphics Books, 1995.

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19

Crumb, R. The Complete Crumb: Volume 11, Mr. Natural Committed to a Mental Institution! Fantagraphics Books, 1995.

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20

Lurigio, Arthur J., and Dan A. Lewis. The State Mental Patient and Urban Life: Moving in and Out of the Institution. Charles C Thomas Pub Ltd, 1996.

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21

Groesbeck, Mary Jeanne Vellela. STAFF AND PATIENT OPINIONS ON VARIABLES RELEVANT TO DISCHARGE FROM A MENTAL INSTITUTION (DEINSTITUTIONALIZATION). 1990.

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22

A, Lewis Dan, and Lurigio Arthur J, eds. The State mental patient and urban life: Moving in and out of the institution. Springfield, Ill., U.S.A: Charles C. Thomas, 1994.

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23

Lurigio, Arthur J., and Dan A. Lewis. The State Mental Patient and Urban Life: Moving in and Out of the Institution. Charles C Thomas Pub Ltd, 1996.

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24

Hanʼguk Noesŏng Mabi Pokchihoe 20-yŏnsa. [Seoul]: Hanʼguk Noesŏng Mabi Pokchihoe, 1999.

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25

Hobbs, A. T. d. 1931., ed. The Homewood Sanitarium, Guelph, Ont.: A private institution for the care and treatment of mental and nervous diseases, A.T. Hobbs, M.D., medical superintendent. Toronto: Echlin Studios, 1996.

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26

Kabakov, Ilya. Ilya Kabakov: The Fly With the Wings/Mental Institution, or Institute of Creative Research/the Red Wagon/We Are Leaving Here Forever!/Limited Edition. Harry N Abrams, 1993.

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27

Gonaver, Wendy. The Peculiar Institution and the Making of Modern Psychiatry, 1840-1880. University of North Carolina Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469648446.001.0001.

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Though the origins of asylums can be traced to Europe, the systematic segregation of the mentally ill into specialized institutions occurred in the United States only after 1800, just as the struggle to end slavery took hold. This book examines the relationship between these two historical developments, showing how slavery and ideas about race shaped early mental health treatment in the United States, especially in the South. These connections are illuminated through the histories of two asylums in Virginia: the Eastern Lunatic Asylum in Williamsburg, the first in the nation; and the Central Lunatic Asylum in Petersburg, the first created specifically for African Americans. Eastern Lunatic Asylum was the only institution to accept both slaves and free blacks as patients and to employ slaves as attendants. Drawing from these institutions' untapped archives, this book reveals how slavery influenced ideas about patients’ rights, about the proper relationship between caregiver and patient, about what constituted healthy religious belief and unhealthy fanaticism, and about gender. This early form of psychiatric care acted as a precursor to public health policy for generations.
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28

Carmo, Leide Silva do, and Nelson Iguimar Valerio. Psicologia & saúde treino de habilidades de vida e saúde mental em universitários. Brazil Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.31012/978-65-87836-06-5.

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Several factors can cause damage to the mental health of university students, e.g. academic adaptation, housing change, distance from family and friends, and dealing with stressors regarding new requirements, which need some resources to cope with such situations. The content of this book, from the Master's Dissertation developed by the authors at the Stricto-Sensu Psychology and Health Post-Graduation Program at the Medical School of São José do Rio Preto - FAMERP, aims at describing the presence of mental disorders and demonstrating the implementation of a life-skills training in university students (Medicine and Nursing), randomly chosen in a teaching institution in a medium-sized city, interior of São Paulo state. The participants expressed high symptoms of anxiety, depression and stress in the initial evaluation, however, after the training of group life skills, they showed significant improvements with maintenance of these rates during the follow-up. This training can be stood out to improve the mental health and life skills of the students. It is likely that the intervention group may have helped these students to cope with negative pressures, avoiding risky behaviors, communicating effectively; moreover, coping with adaptations and changes in such academic process. It is worthwhile to point out that this study may encourage further research in relation to mental health and life-skills in university students, and that it will encourage the insertion of programs with these skills training, due to their effectiveness, low cost, the participants´ acceptance, improvement in mental health, and provide increasing academic performance.
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29

Summers, Martin. Madness in the City of Magnificent Intentions. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190852641.001.0001.

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This book is a history of the federal mental institution Saint Elizabeths Hospital and its relationship to Washington, DC’s African American community. Founded in 1855 to treat insane military personnel and the District’s civilian residents, the institution became one of the nation’s preeminent research and teaching psychiatric hospitals. From the beginning of its operation, Saint Elizabeths admitted black patients, making it one of the few American asylums to do so. The book charts the history of Saint Elizabeths from its founding to the late 1980s, when the hospital’s mission and capabilities changed as a result of deinstitutionalization and its transfer from the federal government to the District. The book makes two main arguments. First, ideas of racial difference figured prominently in how hospital officials understood the mission of the institution and subsequently designed and operated it, in how hospital officials understood mental disease and developed therapies to address it, and in how patients experienced their confinement. This history reveals the ways the American psychiatric profession engaged in an unarticulated project that conceptualized the white psyche as the norm. Second, this book argues that African Americans—both patients and nonpatients—were not powerless people acted on by large institutional forces. Black Washingtonians were active agents in their interactions with the hospital, from more overtly political and collective endeavors, such as calling for investigations of the mistreatment of black patients and advocating for the hospital’s integration, to the more individualized and quotidian attempts to manage their own or their loved one’s therapeutic experience.
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30

Blom, Henk J., Mirian C. H. Janssen, and Manuel Schiff. Cystathionine Beta-Synthase Deficiency or Classical Homocystinuria. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199972135.003.0019.

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Inherited homocystinurias have in common accumulation of homocysteine and encompass two distinctive entities: classical homocystinuria due to cystathionine β‎-synthase (CBS) deficiency and the rare inborn errors of cobalamin and folate metabolism. The natural history of CBS deficiency, the subject of this chapter, is well described compared to the other forms of homocystinurias. Untreated patients may be asymptomatic or have one or more of the following symptoms: severe mental handicaps, psychiatric disturbances, ectopia lentis, osteoporosis, Marfanoid habitus, or thromboembolic complications. Current treatment options are based on therapy with vitamin B6, folate, B12, or betaine and institution of a protein- or methionine-restricted diet.
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31

Coleborne, Catharine. Disability and Madness in Colonial Asylum Records in Australia and New Zealand. Edited by Michael Rembis, Catherine Kudlick, and Kim E. Nielsen. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190234959.013.17.

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Case records examined here are those of inmates in two public institutions for the insane in colonial Victoria, Australia, and in Auckland, New Zealand, between 1870 and 1910. In the international field of mental health studies and histories of psychiatry, intellectual disability has been the subject of detailed historical inquiry and forms part of the critical discussion about how institutions for the “insane” housed a range of inmates in the nineteenth century. Yet the archival records of mental hospitals have rarely been examined in any sustained way for their detail about the physically disabled or those whose records denote bodily difference. References to the physical manifestations of various forms of intellectual or emotional disability, as well as to bodily difference and “deformity,” were part of the culture of the colonial institution, which sought to categorize, label, and ascribe identities to institutional inmates.
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32

Mordini, Emilio. Roman Catholic Perspectives on Psychiatric Ethics. Edited by John Z. Sadler, K. W. M. Fulford, and Cornelius Werendly van Staden. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198732365.013.43.

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The Roman Catholic Church is the oldest Western institution. Today, with more than 1.2 billion believers worldwide, it is the largest Christian community in the world. While Revelation in the other Abrahamic religions (Hebraism and Islamism) is chiefly law and social order (Torah, Shari’a), Revelation in Christianity is a creed in a person, Jesus Christ, a young Hebrew teacher, who used to live in Palestine about two thousand years ago, and was executed because of an accusation of blasphemy. That “marginal Jew,” for Christians, was God’s incarnation. Christians’ God is not then a ruler in human sense, on the contrary, he is someone unjustly put to death by his rulers. This has had deep influences on Christian moral teaching and psychiatric ethics. In this article, I will discuss specific Roman Catholic moral teaching concerning mental health. I will also illustrate a few cases in which Catholic moral perspectives may conflict with professional ethical standards.
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33

Dvoskin, Joel, and Melody C. Brown. Jails and prisons. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199360574.003.0006.

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There are many similarities between prisons and jails, especially in regard to the constitutional standard for mental health services. However, the differences are important to recognize in assuring that the unique needs of each kind of institution are met. Historically, jails have been used to hold defendants for trial, and to confine prisoners who have been sentenced for misdemeanors, typically for sentences of less than one year. In contrast, prisons are managed by state or federal governments and used for longer-term confinement of convicted felons, who generally serve sentences of one year or longer. Predominant among these differences is the very high degree of turnover in jail populations, resulting in dramatic increases in acuity of mental illness and substance misuse, significantly increased risk of suicide, and the increases in workload due to the much higher percentage of initial assessments. In contrast, prison mental health services are more often faced with the realities of serious and persistent mental illnesses, and the hopelessness that can come after years of incarceration and in the face of very long sentences. While prison mental health clinicians have more time with which to work, they also face significantly greater expectations for treatment that goes beyond crisis response and psychotropic medication. Distinctions between prisons and jails in terms of service delivery and the kinds of treatment challenges that exist in the long-term management of prisoners with serious mental illness are discussed.
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34

Roskes, Erik J., and Donna Vanderpool. Forensic issues. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199360574.003.0061.

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A range of forensic psychiatry issues frequently present themselves in correctional settings. Incompetency to stand trial is one such concern. In some states, defendants found incompetent to stand trial must be managed in jail. Litigation is another important issue. Psychiatrists working in correctional settings often have increased litigation risks regarding professional negligence and other forms of liability. Especially important is understanding whether their insurer covers correctional work. One common form of litigation is habeas corpus. For example, a habeas petition could be brought to seek medical interventions denied by the detaining institution, and as such, the medical staff could be named defendants. Many class actions have involved correctional mental health care. Often clinicians working in correctional settings welcome these litigations, as they focus the attention of the courts on deficiencies in care related to inadequate resources. While such lawsuits can be sensitive, especially in the earlier phases when the outcome is in doubt, correctional psychiatrists and other clinicians may also serve as sources of information for each party to the case and to the court. Another key topic is the correctional disciplinary process. Mental health input into the disciplinary process does not address issues of responsibility but is limited to identifying mitigating factors related to mental illness when present, dispositional recommendations when clinically appropriate, and competency-to-proceed issues in the context of the disciplinary hearing. This chapter reviews key issues of relevance to correctional psychiatrists, such as competency restoration, court collaboration, and litigation related concerns.
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