American Decades
Psychiatry after World War II
Psychiatry and the War.
Psychiatry came to the attention of the government and the public during World War II, when more than a million men were rejected from military service because of mental or neurological disorders. Of those inducted into the army and later given medical discharges, 40 percent were dismissed for psychiatric reasons. During the war 850,000 soldiers were hospitalized for psychiatric disorders. Many conscientious objectors were assigned to serve in mental hospitals during the war years and brought back with them tales of neglect, overcrowding, and brutal treatment in the public mental hospitals. Psychiatrists and others blamed these problems on a great, unmet need for psychiatric services.
The Scandal of Neglect.
At the end of the war the scandal of public mental hospitals became the subject of Mary Jane Ward's best-selling novel in 1946, The Snake Pit. In another widely read book,...
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1940's Medicine and Health
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Allergy Relief: The Antihistamines
- Atomic Medicine
- The Center for Disease Control
- DDT—Before Silent Spring
- Discrimination in Medical Colleges
- Electroconvulsive Therapy
- Harry S Truman and the AMA
- Hospitals and the Hill-Burton Act
- It's Patriotic to Stay Healthy!
- Medicine and World War II
- Polio
- Psychiatry after World War II
- Psychosurgery
- Venereal Disease
- The Wonder Drugs: "Magic Bullets" Against Disease
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Medicine and Health, 1940–1949
