Editing Thomas Story Kirkbride

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Despite the construction of this new facility in West Philadelphia by Pennsylvania Hospital, by 1853 all wards of the hospital were full. As a measure of restraint, all new admissions were declined and deferred to [[Friends Hospital]] to the northeast of Philadelphia. Dr. Kirkbride made an appeal to the Board of Managers to expand their operations yet again, and amend the chronic overcrowding at the hospital. In this year he wrote "An appeal for the Insane", as well as multiple clinical and newspaper articles, attempting to convince the general public of the need for facilities such as the one he was managing. From the fruits of these labors he was able to procure the funds for a construction of a separate male department a short distance from its female equivalent.
 
Despite the construction of this new facility in West Philadelphia by Pennsylvania Hospital, by 1853 all wards of the hospital were full. As a measure of restraint, all new admissions were declined and deferred to [[Friends Hospital]] to the northeast of Philadelphia. Dr. Kirkbride made an appeal to the Board of Managers to expand their operations yet again, and amend the chronic overcrowding at the hospital. In this year he wrote "An appeal for the Insane", as well as multiple clinical and newspaper articles, attempting to convince the general public of the need for facilities such as the one he was managing. From the fruits of these labors he was able to procure the funds for a construction of a separate male department a short distance from its female equivalent.
 
[[image:Dr Kirkbride Steroscope.jpg|250px|right]]
 
  
 
Kirkbride pioneered what would be known as the [[Kirkbride Planned Institutions|Kirkbride Plan]], to improve medical care for the insane, as a standardization for buildings that housed the patients.<ref name="cure">[http://www.trans-alleghenylunaticasylum.com/main/history3.html], Building as Cure, by Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum, TALA</ref> Kirkbride's influential work, ''On the Construction, Organization, and General Arrangements of Hospitals for the Insane with Some Remarks on Insanity and Its Treatment,'' was published in 1854. This volume was reprinted in 1880, 1874 and 2011.<ref name="story"/> Kirkbride had been influenced by the Quaker-founded [[York Retreat]] in England whose leader, [[Samuel Tuke]], had published an account entitled, ''Practical Hints on the Construction and Economy of Pauper Lunatic Asylums'' (York, England, 1815). The Tuke family had instituted in their hospital a "moral treatment" approach to care for patients, which centered upon humane and kindly behavior.<ref name="story"/> The Superintendents’ Association made efforts to institute this approach in their hospitals.<ref name="story"/>
 
Kirkbride pioneered what would be known as the [[Kirkbride Planned Institutions|Kirkbride Plan]], to improve medical care for the insane, as a standardization for buildings that housed the patients.<ref name="cure">[http://www.trans-alleghenylunaticasylum.com/main/history3.html], Building as Cure, by Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum, TALA</ref> Kirkbride's influential work, ''On the Construction, Organization, and General Arrangements of Hospitals for the Insane with Some Remarks on Insanity and Its Treatment,'' was published in 1854. This volume was reprinted in 1880, 1874 and 2011.<ref name="story"/> Kirkbride had been influenced by the Quaker-founded [[York Retreat]] in England whose leader, [[Samuel Tuke]], had published an account entitled, ''Practical Hints on the Construction and Economy of Pauper Lunatic Asylums'' (York, England, 1815). The Tuke family had instituted in their hospital a "moral treatment" approach to care for patients, which centered upon humane and kindly behavior.<ref name="story"/> The Superintendents’ Association made efforts to institute this approach in their hospitals.<ref name="story"/>

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