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Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: UMLS:C0277787 (
stigma
)
13,352
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The Lunatic Reception House at Darlinghurst operated between 1868 and 1961. Established to remove the
stigma
of criminality from the care of the insane, it operated as an observation ward and was for most of its time the sole portal of entry into metropolitan psychiatric hospitals in Sydney. An account of its inception and notable aspects of its history, with particular reference to
lunacy
legislation, is presented.
...
PMID:A history of the Lunatic Reception House, Darlinghurst. 164 25
The objective of this study was to assess the knowledge and attitudes of people living in two French counties. The data were collected from 1777 adults in the general population who were interviewed. Knowledge of and attitudes toward epilepsy in these French samples proved largely favorable: 90.6% identified epilepsy as different from a mental disorder or
lunacy
, and 79.2% correctly identified epilepsy as a brain disorder. The majority agreed with the statements that people with epilepsy should have the opportunity to get married and that children with epilepsy should be allowed to go to school with others. However, gaps in knowledge and erroneous beliefs prevailed, notably among men, old people, and individuals with low levels of education. This study yielded encouraging results. However, further studies are needed to confirm these findings and gain a better understanding of the contribution of French public knowledge to the causative factors generating
stigma
in France.
...
PMID:Knowledge of epilepsy in the general population based on two French cities: implications for stigma. 1991 Feb 62
Dying insane provoked 'great fear, and apprehension' in the minds of men and women. Death as a lunatic disrupted deathbed performance and rendered the victim incapable at law. This article examines
lunacy
as a cause of death in the metropolis between 1629 and 1830. It draws on new material from the admission registers of St Luke's Hospital, existing data from Bethlem and the London Bills of Mortality and unique biographical data on pauper lunatics dying in the parish of St Martin in the Fields. The article argues that
lunacy
being ascribed as a cause of death had a distinctive chronology in this period. Those most vulnerable to the
stigma
of
lunacy
at death were those dying as parish paupers and those who inhabited metropolitan institutions.
...
PMID:'Those, that die by reason of their madness': dying insane in London, 1629-1830. 2270 25