We all have our own views on mental hospitals. Some people think that this is a terrible experience, others may think that it is a way to help those who can not control their state. The view of David Rosenhan caused his various problems. How do psychiatrist hospitals know whether patients are abnormal? How does it feel to be a patient being there? According to a study by Rosenhans, a psychiatric hospital can not truly understand the patient's madness, jumps on the label at once, and the patient loses his / her personality rather than spending time to observe his personality It was.
David L. Rosenhan conducted experiments that allowed healthy people to enter the mental facility, listened to the sound and confirmed whether the patient was completely reasonably released. Rosenhan raised questions as to whether the psychological diagnostic features are in the patient himself or whether the observer found the patient. Eight subjects, including Rosen, are devoted to eight different mental hospitals. Each subject is perfectly wise and perfect mental health. When they went to the hospital, they complained about the sound they heard, except for everyone who was recognized and recorded as schizophrenia. Upon admission, each patient was completely correct and did not show symptoms of schizophrenia, but it was deemed to have suffered from psychosis throughout the hospitalization. Give them medicines not treated as ordinary people
In 1973, Dr. David Rosenhan of Stanford University announced a research that "Become a crazy man in a crazy place". He wants to study the accuracy and effectiveness of psychiatric diagnosis in a mental hospital. To study the problem, Rosenhan and the other seven examined 12 different psychiatric hospitals and claimed that they were listening. All brave "fake patients" were brought to the hospital, and all were diagnosed with psychosis. That part is easy, the hard part is to quit
In the 1960s, Stanford University psychologist David Rosenhan sent seven healthy people to a mental hospital. Volunteers deceived doctors and administrators and claimed that they had an auditory hallucination. According to Rosenthan's instructions, they functioned properly when they entered. As the situation defines what other people think about you, you need to be cautious in certain circumstances. Otherwise, benign or harmless behavior or artificiality may enhance their view. These explanations may prove to be harmful to the influence of facilities such as psychiatric wards and prisons.
In the early 1970s, David L. Rosenhan, a professor of psychology at Stanford University, gathered painters, graduate students, pediatricians, psychiatrists, housewives, and three psychologists. In the case of alias he told them to check another psychiatric hospital and complained that they heard the sound. They were asked to say that their voices were unfamiliar and that the sounds heard were "sky", "砰" and "sky". In addition to the original story, the pseudo-patient was instructed to honestly answer all questions, act according to normal conditions, and talk to the hospital staff at every opportunity. Eight subjects were hospitalized for an average of 19 days. People are kept for nearly 2 months. Rosenhan wants to know if hospital staff will see through this trick. They never