Bodmin Hospital, Bodmin, Cornwall, UK
Correspondence to: Dr S A Hill, Forensic Team, Top Floor, Bellingham House,Bodmin Hospital, Boundary Road, Bodmin, Cornwall PL31 2QT, UKE-mail: tarlyhill{at}hotmail.com
| INTRODUCTION |
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Asylum populations rose greatly through the 19th century. Whether this rise was mainly due to an increase in psychotic illness or to a decrease in tolerance of the mentally ill in the community is unclear. Many patients were admitted under the Poor Law and Lunacy Acts. After amending acts of 1853, the parish medical officer was required to visit all paupers in his areas four times a year. He was expected to notify the guardians or the overseers of those who seemed in need of mental treatment.1 If any were thought to need treatment in the asylum, admission was certified by the medical officer and the local justice of the peace.
| METHODS |
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| RESULTS |
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'Admitted 20th April 1872age 33 draper's assistant. FormMania. In a very melancholic conditionsays he is about to be married but has not work or money. Says he goes to Camborne churchyard and sits on the stones so as not to be a burden to his parents.
May 7th 1872 Suffering maniahas grandiose ideas, emotional and irritable says he is in love with the world. January 1873 Suffering from dementiasays he cannot remember things.
September 1873 Patient suffers from dementiaunable to concentrate his attention. Memory defects.'
Age at first episode
If mania and melancholia roughly equated with manic episodes and depression
respectively, and dementia was at least somewhat related to the modern term
schizophrenia, we would expect the age of the first episode to be similar to
those of today. Table 1 shows a
peak age of onset for mania in the 20s and 30s, with a very small percentage
of cases beginning in later life. First episodes of dementia occurred at
similarly young ages, whereas onset of melancholia was more evenly spread over
the lifetime.
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Duration of symptoms before admission
All admissions were compulsory and the system seems to have led to speedy
admissions for the mentally ill in Cornwall, particularly those with mania. Of
those admitted with mania, 70% were admitted within two months of the onset of
symptoms, compared with 51% for dementia and 55% for melancholia.
Outcome
The admission register records whether, at discharge, patients had
'recovered', were 'relieved', had 'not improved'
or had died. The trustworthiness of these data may be doubted, but clearly a
substantial number of admissions lasted only a few weeks or months, the
patient being discharged fully recovered
(Table 2).
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Perceived aetiology of illness
In his annual report of
18772 the medical
superintendent, Dr Adams, divides the causes of illness into moral and
physical (Table 3). The meaning
of moral seems to be equivalent to the modern 'emotional'. 14
patients were diagnosed as having general paralysis of the insane, all of whom
died in the asylum.
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| DISCUSSION |
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Use of the term dementia is more confusing. By the 18th century dementia described a state of acquired intellectual deficit, at any age and of any cause.7 So a young adult with serious head injuries, for instance, might have been labelled as having dementia. The label was also applied to severe psychotic illnesses, which were thought of as dementing processeshence Kraeplin's 'dementia praecox', the forerunner of schizophrenia. However, the term dementia praecox was not coined until 1891, 20 years after the period studied here. By the end of the 19th century there was a tendency to confine diagnosis of dementia to patients with loss of cognitive ability. Senile dementia was not described until the turn of the century. The term dementia also had a behavioural connotation: Henry Munro,8 writing in 1856, stated that 'dementia should always be applied to a passive rather than an active state'. Our impression of the Cornwall records is that the term applied to a huge variety of cases, including both patients with cognitive difficulties from any cause and psychotic patients who were not behaviourally overactive enough to be described as manic. Irreversibility was also becoming part of its meaning by the 1870s, so chronic psychosis would presumably have been so labelled.
The data on age of first attack are consistent with bipolar disorder9 and schizophrenia. The very young age at first episode of dementia resembles modern data for schizophrenia; the cases presenting in later life may have been senile dementia or acute medical illnesses presenting as confusion.
The melancholia data show an even spread of first episode with a small peak in the late 50s. Modern data show a peak age onset of 5070 years for psychotic depression, and 3040 years for unipolar depression.10
If the data on 'duration of existing attack' are to be trusted, 21% of people with mania were admitted within a week or less of the episode starting and 70% within two months. Contemporary results11 on duration of symptoms before admission are known for a private psychiatric clinic in Vienna, where 68% of patients with mania were admitted less than a month after the onset of symptoms. In Britain today, as in the 1870s, patients with mania get admitted faster than those with other psychiatric diagnoses.12
It was not true that, once a patient was admitted to an asylum, there was no way out other than death. The high discharge rate at Bodmin was mirrored in the Buckinghamshire Asylum, where half of those admitted were discharged, most of them within the first year.6,13 Discharge of a patient could be initiated by the medical superintendent or at the request of the family, but also needed the signature of a magistrate. Medical superintendents were required to inform the 'visiting committee' if a patient had recovered and, when discharge had not occurred within 14 days, they would have to explain why to the Commissioners in Lunacy.
A very poor outcome in those resident for over a year has been reported in that era from the Buckinghamshire Asylum6 and also from a private institution in Ticehurst, Sussex.4 Our results show a much higher mortality than the private asylum in the first year after admission (34% versus 12%) but similar rates of death for those resident for more than 5 years (85% versus 83%).
Regarding causation, a substantial minority of the Bodmin admissions were recorded as being caused by 'organic' illness such as epilepsy, head injury, fever or general paralysis. Some of the patients who died soon after admission probably had acute medical illnesses, with psychiatric symptoms a secondary effect.
One reason proposed for the increase in asylum populations during the 19th century was the rising prevalence of syphilis, with consequent general paralysis of the insane. However, only 14 cases were recorded in Bodmin during the period examined. Since the end-stages of the disease are very characteristic, we can be fairly sure that these diagnoses were correct. This disease tended to affect middle-aged men of higher socio-economic class, perhaps because of their ability to pay for sex.14 The low level in Cornwall may reflect the poverty of the county and an undeveloped sex trade, though rates in the richer Buckinghamshire differed little. By contrast, in the private Ticehurst asylum between 1850 and 1889, nearly 18% of patients were diagnosed as having general paralysis.4
St Lawrence's Hospital is no more. The name was changed to Bodmin Hospital last year, perhaps partly because of the stigma attached to the old asylum. In the 1870s the great majority of patients were diagnosed with mania, melancholia or dementia. In most of these, the cause of the illness was recorded as unknown. In 2003, the most common diagnoses in the 1865 age group are bipolar affective disorder, depression and schizophrenia. The causes of these are likewise unknown.
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