Difference between revisions of "Portal:Featured Article Of The Week"

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{{FAformat
|Title= Eastern Oregon State Hospital
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|Title= Dorothea Dix Hospital
|Image= Pendleton.jpg
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|Image= DDix_Hosp_Hist1.jpg
 
|Width= 150px
 
|Width= 150px
|Body= Eastern Oregon State Hospital was created by statute in 1909 and formally opened in Pendleton, Oregon, in January 1913. The functions of the hospital were to diagnose mental illness, provide treatment, and release patients who had satisfactorily responded to treatment; to investigate patients admitted and their family histories to determine the cause of a person's mental illness; to provide for humane custodial care to those for whom curative treatment was ineffective; to manage social and recreational programs for patients; to utilize patients for the maintenance and upkeep of buildings and grounds; and to assist in the protection of the patient's financial and business interests.  [[Eastern Oregon State Hospital|Click here for more...]]
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|Body= In the autumn of 1848, when Dorothea Lynde Dix came to North Carolina, attitudes toward mental illness in this state, like the scanty facilities, remained generally quite primitive. Nevertheless, the North Carolina Legislature was not unaware of the concept of a state hospital for the mentally ill. Earlier in 1825, a resolution had been passed requesting information needed to plan for the establishment of a "lunatic asylum". Nothing came of it then, and again in 1838-1839, action stirred in this regard with no concrete results. In 1844, Governor Morehead strongly recommended that the state build institutions for the unfortunate insane, blind, and deaf, but the issue died without positive action. So things stood still in the fall of 1848, with Delaware and North Carolina remaining the two states of the original thirteen that had no state institution for the mentally ill.  [[Dorothea Dix Hospital|Click here for more...]]
 
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Revision as of 10:16, 24 August 2025

Featured Article Of The Week

Dorothea Dix Hospital


DDix Hosp Hist1.jpg

In the autumn of 1848, when Dorothea Lynde Dix came to North Carolina, attitudes toward mental illness in this state, like the scanty facilities, remained generally quite primitive. Nevertheless, the North Carolina Legislature was not unaware of the concept of a state hospital for the mentally ill. Earlier in 1825, a resolution had been passed requesting information needed to plan for the establishment of a "lunatic asylum". Nothing came of it then, and again in 1838-1839, action stirred in this regard with no concrete results. In 1844, Governor Morehead strongly recommended that the state build institutions for the unfortunate insane, blind, and deaf, but the issue died without positive action. So things stood still in the fall of 1848, with Delaware and North Carolina remaining the two states of the original thirteen that had no state institution for the mentally ill. Click here for more...