In March 1841, a 38-year-old woman, Dorothy Dix, volunteered to teach the Sunday class for female prisoners, and then arrived at East Cambridge Prison. People with mental illness lived in jail in a hot, cold, dirty, narrow condition. . "At present, people with mental illness are often imprisoned for various reasons, they depend on care of their families.
Reformer Dorothea Dix changed the prison living environment and founded a mentally disabled facility in 20 states and Canada ("DIX"). Through her fair treatment of spiritual insanity, Dorothy Dix exemplifies her ideal of time - protecting the rights of all people regardless of their age, ethnicity or spiritual ability. On April 4, 1802, Dorothea Lynde Dix was born in Joseph and Mary Dix in Hampden, Maine. Background Dorothea Orem - A theorist who invented the theory of self-health disorder was born in Baltimore, Maryland in 1914. In addition to his Bachelor of Science degree, Orem also got a Bachelor of Science degree. I got my master's degree in nursing. Diploma of nursing and nursing (Johnson & Weber, 2010). She was a lecturer and dean of American Catholic University in Washington, DC.
Dorothea Dix Born in 1802, Dorothea Dix played an important role in altering the perception of people with mental illness and disability. These patients have always been considered 'punishable by God'. She believes that those with this position will not be left behind, but will be better thanks to love and care. - Thereafter, women volunteered through domestic or regional associations or with the permission of the commander ("nursing care"). In April 1861, Dorothea Dix gathered a group of volunteer female nurses marched in Washington and asked the government to distinguish the desire to help soldiers who were injured in league.
Dorothea Dix (1802-1887) is mainly a social reformer for treatment of mental disorders and the most visible humanitarianism of the 19th century. Through a long and powerful plan to work with the Legislature and the US Congress, Dix created the first generation of American psychiatric hospitals. During the Civil War, she served as an army head nurse at EFF. Dorothea Lynde Dix was born on 4th April 1802 in Hampden, Maine. She is the first of three children born in Mary Bigelow Dix and Methodist missionary Joseph Dix. During the major part of Dorothy's infancy, her mother suffered from depression and was bedridden. Her father is an insulting drunkard. After her mother gave birth to two other children, Joseph and Charles, Dorothia took on their responsibility for nursing.