Tag Archives: Willard Asylum for the Chronic Insane

Asylums Were Economical

Exercise Yard at the Oregon State Insane Asylum, circa 1905, courtesy Mental Health Association of Portland

Exercise Yard at the Oregon State Insane Asylum, circa 1905, courtesy Mental Health Association of Portland

Besides the humanitarian reasons to create asylums–which included more success in curing insanity than any family attempts could hope to achieve–supporters could also point out solid savings for the states which funded them.

By the time asylums became popular for the care and treatment of insanity, states had accepted responsibility for citizens who had no means of support or who caused undesirable disruptions in society. Early on, many of the insane wound up in jails because they had no families or their families simply could not give them proper care. Violent cases, of course, were the most problematic for families to handle.

Willard Asylum Patients Working in the Sewing Room

Willard Asylum Patients Working in the Sewing Room

Asylums were able to hold costs down by using patient labor on a much wider scale than most city or county jails could. Many asylums grew their own food and made or manufactured necessities like clothes and shoes. Charities, clubs, and individuals were far more likely to provide amenities (newspapers and magazines, concerts, clothing, etc.) to asylums than to jails, and states generally could provide the insane better care at less expense in asylums than regional jails.

Central Lunatic Asylum

Central Lunatic Asylum

The Central Lunatic Asylum in Virginia had filled almost as soon as it opened, and after only four months of operation, its first Board of Directors pleaded for money to build additional wards so they could take in patients who had been turned away for lack of space. After making a case for more appropriations based on humanity and the higher quality of care found in asylums versus jails, the Board also said:

“Besides the plea of humanity, economy may be urged as a reason for granting the appropriation. It will cost less to support the colored insane at the Asylum than in the county jails, and the prospect of relieving the State of all expense in each case is increased by promptly affording the Patient the benefits of the Asylum.”

 

Overcrowding and the Attendants’ Plight

Agnews Insane Asylum Patients Eating Lunch, courtesy Detroit Public Library Digital Collections

Agnews Insane Asylum Patients Eating Lunch, courtesy Detroit Public Library Digital Collections

Overcrowding in asylums created miserable conditions for patients (see last post), but it also made attendants’ workload overwhelming and stressful. They had little time off compared to even today’s harried worker: usually a half day off a month, a couple of evenings off a week, and an entire Sunday off once a month. Additionally, attendants usually lived on-site and could seldom “get away” from their work atmosphere–long hours and stress just added to their own mental burden.

Attendants started their days early in order to get patients up, out of bed, and dressed at 6:00 a.m. or 7:00 a.m. each morning, and perhaps wash and change soiled patients the night shift had missed. They supervised patients’ daily activities, broke up altercations, noted their illnesses or other changing conditions, bathed and/or shaved them, and helped serve meals. Attendants cleaned incessantly, and kept constant watch over their wards for any dangerous conditions stemming from violent, suicidal, or delusional patients.

Male Attendants at Willard Asylum for the Chronic Insane

Male Attendants at Willard Asylum for the Chronic Insane

Attendants also needed to socialize with patients: they gently steered them from obsessive or disturbing thoughts, reassured them when they worried about family and friends, led them into constructive conversation, and so on. Ideally, they could be the trusted friend and mainstay that supplemented the efforts of the asylum’s medical staff.

Attendants at Pennsylvania Hospital for the Insane

Attendants at Pennsylvania Hospital for the Insane

Unfortunately, these important therapeutic tasks were usually the first to go when the work of physically caring for patients overwhelmed attendants. Even worse, their own stress and frustration could spill over into their interactions with patients, making a miserable environment even worse for them.