The 'Red Plague' and General Paralysis of the Insane at Callan Park Hospital for the Insane in New South Wales, 1877–1920

IF 0.4 Q3 HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE Health and History Pub Date : 2022-08-24 DOI:10.1353/hah.2022.0005
David T. Roth
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Abstract

Abstract:From the mid-nineteenth century, state asylums throughout the western world began to play an ever-increasing role in welfare provision. Callan Park asylum in Sydney was required to perform multiple roles because people with behavioural difficulties or incurable neurological disorders were rejected by other welfare institutions and the penal system. These patients included persons suffering from a prevalent and severely disabling form of end-stage neurosyphilis, General Paralysis of the Insane (GPI). This article explains how and why GPI patients in New South Wales were almost exclusively cared for within asylums, making them major providers of care for terminal venereal disease. While GPI had been initially seen as a mental illness with physical manifestations, statistical analysis and new diagnostic technology brought about a radical change in the public perception of GPI patients from about 1910, which meant that they would now be further stigmatised as carriers of syphilis, the dreaded 'Red Plague'.
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1877年至1920年,新南威尔士州卡兰公园精神病医院的“红色瘟疫”和精神病患者的普遍瘫痪
摘要:从19世纪中期开始,西方国家的国家收容所开始在福利提供方面发挥越来越大的作用。悉尼的卡兰公园收容所被要求扮演多种角色,因为有行为困难或无法治愈的神经系统疾病的人被其他福利机构和刑事系统拒绝。这些患者包括患有一种普遍且严重致残的终末期神经梅毒,即一般性精神麻痹症(GPI)的患者。这篇文章解释了新南威尔士州GPI患者是如何以及为什么几乎完全在收容所内得到照顾的,使他们成为晚期性病的主要护理提供者。虽然GPI最初被视为一种有身体表现的精神疾病,但从1910年左右开始,统计分析和新的诊断技术彻底改变了公众对GPI患者的看法,这意味着他们现在将被进一步污名化为梅毒携带者,即可怕的“红瘟疫”。
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