mental health introduction

21
Psychiatric-Mental Health Nurses Association of the Philippines, Inc. (PMHNAP) Chapter 1 Introduction to Psychiatric Nursing

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Page 1: mental health introduction

Psychiatric-Mental Health Nurses Association of the Philippines, Inc. (PMHNAP)

Chapter 1 Introduction to Psychiatric

Nursing

Page 2: mental health introduction

Keltner’s Psychiatric Nursing – Philippine edition

Learning Objective

• Explain the history of psychiatry in the

Philippines as a foundation for current psychiatric nursing practice.

Page 3: mental health introduction

Keltner’s Psychiatric Nursing – Philippine edition

The Pre-Spanish Regime

• Concept of physical or mental illness was based on the belief in such material and spiritual worlds.

• The treatment relied heavily on valid and authentic

rituals and ceremonies. • The Filipinos relied on their faith in healers like the

babaylan (shaman) and sorcerers of healing.

Page 4: mental health introduction

Keltner’s Psychiatric Nursing – Philippine edition

The Spanish Rule

(1565 to 1898)

• Filipinos believed that mental illness was caused by an act of sorcery.

• Santiago (1995) wrote that the mangkukulam (or the

witches) pricked the heads of the antigua (voodoo dolls) with their magic pins, while the manggagaway (the devil men) solicited satanic powers that can cause the mental illness.

Page 5: mental health introduction

Keltner’s Psychiatric Nursing – Philippine edition

The Spanish Rule

(1565 to 1898)

• Unwell individuals were treated by herbolarios (herbmen). They were also brought to the church for exorcism or purification. Some patients were wrapped with mats and whipped by bamboo sticks or the tail of buntot pagi (stinger fish). Those who suffered from hysteria were unexpectedly thrown into the river.

Page 6: mental health introduction

Keltner’s Psychiatric Nursing – Philippine edition

• The concept of mental illness as biological and psychological entities was acknowledged during this era.

• In the early nineteenth century, the Hospicio de

San Jose established after the Spanish naval authorities requested for a place of confinement of their mentally ill sailors.

The Spanish Rule

(1565 to 1898)

Page 7: mental health introduction

Keltner’s Psychiatric Nursing – Philippine edition

The American Era (1898 to 1942)

• The concept of mental illness was founded on the biomedical phenomenon.

• Treatments were scientific and mechanistic in approach. Also, the discovery of somatic therapies strengthened the biological explanation of psychiatric illness.

• Several treatment centers for mentally ill individuals in the Philippines were established.

Page 8: mental health introduction

Keltner’s Psychiatric Nursing – Philippine edition

The American Era (1898 to 1942)

Early 1900s: Two American physicians provided treatment for mentally ill patients of the Civil Hospital located on Calle Iris (now known as Claro M. Recto Avenue).

1904: The Insane Department at San Lazaro Hospital was opened for mentally ill patients, with Dr. Elias Domingo as its head unit. He was assisted by Filipino and American nurses who were trained in psychiatric nursing care.

Page 9: mental health introduction

Keltner’s Psychiatric Nursing – Philippine edition

The American Era (1898 to 1942)

1918: The City Sanitarium was erected in order to provide psychiatric treatment solely for Manila residents.

1928: The Insular or National Psychopathic Hospital (NPH) was erected in Mandaluyong, Rizal. This was the first hospital that catered exclusively to the treatment of mentally ill patients in the Philippines.

• Manic patients were treated with fever therapy, metrazole shock, insulin shock therapy, prolonged narcosis, R1651 hyoscine injections (bromides), and hydrotherapy.

Page 10: mental health introduction

Keltner’s Psychiatric Nursing – Philippine edition

The American Era (1898 to 1942)

• Schizophrenic patients were also given Lock’s sol or insulin injections.

• Patients with general paresis, a syphilitic dementia, were given fever therapy, tryparsamide, and neo-salversamized serum.

• Patients who had epilepsy were given phenobarbital, magnesium sulfate, spinal drainage, and ketogenic diet.

• Depressed patients were given Lock’s Sol, barbiturates and electroshock treatment.

Page 11: mental health introduction

Keltner’s Psychiatric Nursing – Philippine edition

The Japanese Occupation (1942 to 1945)

• The NPH continued to operate though many of its patients were fetched and taken home by their families.

Unfortunately, a number of patients were left in small rooms and died from starvation and lack of medicines.

Page 12: mental health introduction

Keltner’s Psychiatric Nursing – Philippine edition

The Japanese Occupation (1942 to 1945)

• The Japanese Imperial Army before they left the NPH donated an electroshock apparatus. This apparatus was a big help to the patients and it was a real breakthrough in their treatment. Since then, the electroshock treatment became the principal and famous treatment modality.

• The use of local medicinal plants and products

and the practice of self-denial and fortitude were also promoted.

Page 13: mental health introduction

Keltner’s Psychiatric Nursing – Philippine edition

The Liberation Period

and the Era of the Republic (1945 to 1960)

• With the return of the Americans to the Philippines,

the development and growth in the treatment of the mentally ill patients began.

They helped in providing the immediate needs for the rehabilitation, expansion of psychiatric facilities, and training of hospital personnel. Moreover, training in psychiatry for medical personnel and psychiatric care for patients were more facilitated and made available.

Page 14: mental health introduction

Keltner’s Psychiatric Nursing – Philippine edition

The Liberation Period

and the Era of the Republic (1945 to 1960)

• It was during this period when the National

Psychopathic Hospital (NPH) was renamed National Mental Hospital (NMH) with Dr. Jose Fernandez as the officer-in-charge from October 1946 to April 1961.

Recognizing the need to improve the basic services for patients, he required the development of infrastructure with the construction of an infirmary and additional building to house for nonpaying and paying patients.

Page 15: mental health introduction

Keltner’s Psychiatric Nursing – Philippine edition

The Liberation Period

and the Era of the Republic (1945 to 1960)

• Recognizing the growing need for the management

of mentally ill patients, other institutions and agencies in the country set up their own treatment centers and programs.

1946: The V. Luna General Hospital, which rendered

services to the Armed Forces of the Philippines, established a neuropsychiatry service. Electroconvulsive therapy, insulin therapy, and narcoanalysis were the initial modes of treatment.

Page 16: mental health introduction

Keltner’s Psychiatric Nursing – Philippine edition

The Liberation Period and the Era of the Republic

(1945 to 1960)

1947: The University of Santo Tomas opened a Section of Neurology and Psychiatry, with Dr. Leopoldo Pardo as its chief.

1947: The Philippine Mental Health Association was founded by Drs. Eduardo Krapf, Toribio Joson, and Manuel Arguelles.

1956: The University of the East Ramon Magsaysay Memorial Medical Center established a Department of Psychiatry headed by Dr. Jaime Zaguirre.

Page 17: mental health introduction

Keltner’s Psychiatric Nursing – Philippine edition

The Liberation Period

and the Era of the Republic (1945 to 1960)

1968: The Philippine General Hospital of the University

of the Philippines established its own neuropsychiatry section headed by Dr. Baltazar Reyes, Jr.

• The emphasis of treatment for the mentally ill was psychotherapy and chemotherapy.

• Psychoanalysis gained its popularity that the general public often equated it with psychiatry. However, despite this dominance of the psychoanalytic treatment, the biological orientation continues to maintain its position.

Page 18: mental health introduction

Keltner’s Psychiatric Nursing – Philippine edition

The Liberation Period

and the Era of the Republic (1945 to 1960)

• Insulin coma in schizophrenia and electric shock

in depression were commonly used. • Psychopharmacology changed the practice of

psychiatry in 1953. • The use of chlorpromazine has apparently

shortened the hospital stay of psychotic patients. Most importantly, its use facilitated the early discharge and early reintegration of patients to their families in the community.

Page 19: mental health introduction

Keltner’s Psychiatric Nursing – Philippine edition

Present Day Psychiatry

(1960 to Present) • The use of somatic therapies became most popular.

In the early 1960s, the following drugs for the treatment of mental disorders were introduced:

– Lithium, for mania – Benzodiazepines, for nonpsychotic anxiety – Imipramine-like drugs and monoamine oxidase

inhibitors, for depression and severe states of anxiety

– Serotonin-specific reuptake inhibitor and serotonin–norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors, for depression

Page 20: mental health introduction

Keltner’s Psychiatric Nursing – Philippine edition

Present Day Psychiatry

(1960 to Present) • During the same period, other forms of antipsychotic

agents known as atypical antipsychotics were introduced in the treatment of mental disorders.

These medications have the advantage of causing few side effects compared to other forms of medication being used.

In later years, other forms of somatic treatment were considered obsolete except electroconvulsive therapy.

Page 21: mental health introduction

Keltner’s Psychiatric Nursing – Philippine edition

Present Day Psychiatry

(1960 to Present) • The thrust in psychiatry’s movement and

attention have now focused on interventions for people who are not necessarily suffering from mental illness. The growing interest in psychiatry is geared toward assisting individual or group of individuals who are vulnerable to develop mental health disturbances. These are people who are victims of either domestic or nondomestic violence, victims of disaster, abandoned children, overseas workers, and others.