2012
DOI: 10.4997/jrcpe.2012.316
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The most deadly disease of asylumdom: general paralysis of the insane and Scottish psychiatry, c.1840–1940

Abstract: General paralysis of the insane (GPI) was one of the most devastating diseases observed in British psychiatry during the century after 1840, in terms of the high number and type of patients diagnosed, the severity of its symptoms and, above all, its utterly hopeless prognosis. With particular reference to the physicians and patients of the Royal Edinburgh Asylum, this article explores the diagnostic process and the social and medical significance of the 'death sentence' that accompanied the GPI diagnosis.Keywo… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Most patients were referred to the VvGI because of behavioral problems that were too difficult to manage at home or at a general hospital ward, that is, aggression and challenging behavior. The majority of patients were middle-aged men, an observation also made by other investigators [5,6,14,17,18] . The finding that all patients were from the lower working class is in accordance with the results of the study by Slijkhuis and Oosterhuis [14] on GPI patients in Dutch psychiatric hospitals in the period 1870-1920.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 58%
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“…Most patients were referred to the VvGI because of behavioral problems that were too difficult to manage at home or at a general hospital ward, that is, aggression and challenging behavior. The majority of patients were middle-aged men, an observation also made by other investigators [5,6,14,17,18] . The finding that all patients were from the lower working class is in accordance with the results of the study by Slijkhuis and Oosterhuis [14] on GPI patients in Dutch psychiatric hospitals in the period 1870-1920.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 58%
“…Although exact figures are unknown, asylums throughout the world reported, in the first decades of the 20th century, an increase in admission rates up to 20% [2,13] . At the Royal Edinburgh Asylum, Scotland's largest asylum, up to 17% of admissions and 34% of deaths concerned the patients with GPI [6] . Death from GPI in all Scottish asylums increased from 8.9 to 12.5 per 1,000 resident patients [5] .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The course of GPI was one of steady, progressive mental and physical deterioration, ending in death. The disease resulted in muscular incoordination and paralysis along with the development of degenerative dementia; hence, the disease's pseudonym “dementia paralytica.”[ 3 ] It was only in the early twentieth century that the “syphilitic hypothesis” began to achieve widespread acceptance, when, in 1913, Hideyo Noguchi demonstrated the presence of the organism, then called Spirochaete pallida , in the brain of a patient who had died of GPI. [ 4 ]…”
Section: Syphilis and General Paralysis Of The Insanementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Davis (24) informa que la PGP constituía el 17% de los ingresos al Royal Edinburg Asylum (Escocia) a fines del siglo XIX.…”
Section: Factores Culturales Y Genéticos En El Consumo De Opio Y El Cunclassified