Historical Perspective
Human Services
Chapter Three
Burger & Youkeles, (2003)
Introduction
n When people need help to whom should they turn?
n Who, in society should be “my brother’s keeper”?
n Who should be helped and who should be left to their own devices?
Prehistoric Civilizations
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n Evil spirits were given credit for anything that could not be easily explained.
n Animism: spirits inhabit inanimate objects.
n KEY POINT: Deviant behavior is a product of what is the norm for behavior at a given point in time.
Early Civilizations
n Pythagoras: brain is center of intelligence
n Hippocrates: Natural explanation
¨ diseases were primarily physiological or organic in origin.
¨ Developed psychiatric labels: melancholia, mania, epilepsy
¨ Treatment: vegetable diets, exercise, and tranquil lifestyle
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n Even as early physician and philosophers shape views on human nature, practice remained cruel and isolating. Family & wealth often determined fate.
n Then Christianity emerged and the spiritual explanation returned to the forefront of understanding.
The Middle Ages
n Exorcism re-emerged as the prevalent treatment.
n As the Church gain power it also became sanctuaries for poor and infirmed.
n Church espoused belief that the wealthy should provide for the poor.
n Social roles of “rich and poor” became ingrained.
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n Power struggles between Church and state ensued (tithes).
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The Renaissance
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n Tradespeople became the middle class.
n Contemporary human services roots: social welfare needs means feeding and sheltering needy people.
Since the Renaissance
n 16th century: The Elizabethan Poor Law
¨ A system for providing shelter and care for the poor.
¨ Really a system for controlling social structure
n Could work: workhouses
n Could not work: almshouse
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¨ Early forerunner of _________________
Industrial Revolution
n 1800’s brought human's mastery of machines.
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n Protestant Work Ethic: hard work, thereby accumulation of wealth led to a virtuous life.
n Calvin: God punishes the poor, leave them to suffer.
n Spencer: Social Darwinism: let them die off in natural order
n Most helping programs still have controlling the masses as a core reason for helping.
Early Reform Movements Late 1800/Early 1900’s
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n Settlement House movement: Responsibility of society to help, and held the human services perspective: attitude it was the environmental circumstances rather than personal inadequacy.
n Hull-house, Chicago, Jane Adams: birth of contemporary social work
¨ Using Hull house as the hub, she created a comprehensive network of services in the neighborhood.
n Progressive or Social Justice Movement: Change through political action and legislative reform.
¨ Liberal ideas, minimum wage, pension systems, six day work week, unemployment and child labor laws.
The Depression and WWII
n 1930’s
¨ Stock market crash
¨ Relationship between circumstance and human problems became clearer.
¨ FDR’s New Deal
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¨ Social Security Act
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n 1940’s
¨ Conservatism emerged
¨ “too much help robs incentive”
¨ World War II veterans needed help
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¨ Family structure changed
Social Unrest: 1960-1980
n Civil unrest: war, poverty, social oppression, women’s rights
n War on Poverty increased opportunity but did not eliminate poverty and discrimination.
n 1970-1980 Massive programs across the lifespan
Human Services and Mental Illness
n Human Services:
¨ Assistance based on socio-economic needs
¨ Issued based:
n Poverty
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n
n Work skills
n Mental Health Services
¨ Largely based on pathology model
n Biological origins
n Environmental Influences
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Mental Health Services Since the Renaissance
n Mental health is directly influenced by social conditions, adequacy of shelter food and income.
n Mental health is also influenced by individual life experiences, biology and individual/family coping.
Early Asylums
n Asylum
¨ A place for protection and shelter
¨ FOR WHOM?
n The mentally ill person?
n Society?
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¨ Sometimes these were people who held views different from the government not necessarily those with a true illness.
The best and the worst
n 1409-current day
¨ Valencia, Spain
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¨ Admission was voluntary
n 1547: St. Mary’s of Bethlehem (Bedlam)
¨ Good intention but in practice became a dungeon for the deviant.
¨ Locked up, cruel treatment, lack of food, long term periods of changing to walls.
Era of Humanitarian Reform
n In late 1770’s early 1780’s a brief era of reform occurred
n This movement was also called ______
n It started in Europe, Frenchman Pinel started unchaining some patients and tried to cure them through good care.
n Dorothy Dix was also a strong force in the reform movement. She gathered public support for the much need humanization.
n She helped to create 32 state mental hospitals where the emphasis was caring for sick people
The downside to the state mental hospital system
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n
n During 1900’s emphasis became the individual treatment plan but maintained need for hospitalization
Freud’s influence
n By the 1920’s and 1930’s his theories became so widely accepted that they were adopted as the treatment of choice by most institutions.
n The second mental health revolution began with ____________.
Deinstitutionalization & Decentralization
n Early 1950’s brought the development of ___________ and again changed who treatment was provided.
n ___________ was the policy that care should be given in familiar community settings.
n ____________ meant housing patients from the same communities in the same wards.
Community Mental Health Movement
n Traditional System
¨ Focus on treatment
¨ Distance created isolation from families
¨ Long term, individual therapy model
¨ Treatment provided by a short supply of psychiatrists
n Community System
¨ Focus on prevention
¨ Family becomes a resource and focus of the treatment
¨ Innovative methods, family therapy, crisis hotlines, outreach programs
¨ Treatment provided by psychologist, social workers, counselors, and various paraprofessional staff
Pros and cons
n Advocates of the community mental health system point to:
n Critics counterpoint to :
Advent of the Generalist Human Services Worker
n Original term (1960’s) _____________
n Common characteristic of the role:
¨ Direct and frequent contact
¨ Variety of work settings
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¨ Multi-technique
Activities of a General Human Service Worked
n In home/In community services
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n Development of community support and programs
The Future
n While social problem have remained the same across the ages, contemporary society has become far more complex.
n Technology adds to our lives yet often increases anxiety (e.g. replaced workers, and the knowledge of nuclear war)
n Funding is being reduced and agencies must find news ways to provide services.
n Human services in one of the largest growing job classifications.
n Newest challenges are to provide multi-ethnic and culturally aware services.
Chapter Review
n Please read and review the chart on pages 148 and 149 in the Burger and Youkeles Text (6th edition)
n Summarize what you have learned from the history of human and mental services as you form your answer to the essay question on helping.