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1.
Hist Psychiatry ; 22(87 Pt 3): 251-67, 2011 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22043660

ABSTRACT

Specific features characterized Italian psychiatry during Fascism (1922-45), distinguishing it from Nazi psychiatry and giving rise to different operational outcomes, so we have investigated the state of Italian psychiatry during this period. We review the historical situation that preceded it and describe the social and health policies that Fascism introduced following new legislative and regulatory acts. We examine the preventive and therapeutic role played by psychiatry (the electric shock was an Italian invention) and, thanks to the Enciclopedia Italiano published during those years, we are able to highlight psychiatry's relationship to psychology, psychoanalysis, philosophy and religion. The shortcomings of Italian psychiatric research and practice are also seen in terms of what the State failed to do rather than what it did.


Subject(s)
Health Policy/history , Political Systems/history , Psychiatry/history , Public Policy/history , History, 20th Century , Humans , Italy
2.
Med Secoli ; 21(3): 1181-203, 2009.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21563394

ABSTRACT

The different models of mental illness which have followed one another in Italian psychiatry have been linked to the history of psychiatric legislation and its various attempts at reform. The first law of the newly United State which unified legislations and former procedures, whose prevalent psychiatric theories were those that referred to degeneration, was the law 36/1904 that set up the asylums. Accordingly psychiatric praxis was focused on social protection and custody, given that the mentally ill was seen as incurable; Fascism added the inmate's obligation to be enrolled in the judicial register. Afterwards numerous attempts to reform the psychiatric legislation were made that eventually gave rise to law 431/1968 which paved the way to territorial psychiatry. Law 180/1978 changed the organization of Italian psychiatry abolishing asylums and the concept of dangerousness, including psychiatry in the National Health Service but adopting an idea of mental illness as simply social unease.


Subject(s)
Psychiatry/history , Psychiatry/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Italy
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