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Eastern State Hospital (Kentucky) : ウィキペディア英語版
Eastern State Hospital (Kentucky)

Eastern State Hospital, located in Lexington, Kentucky, is the second oldest psychiatric hospital in the United States, operating today as a psychiatric hospital with 239 beds providing exclusively inpatient care.
The facility has been known, variously, as Fayette Hospital (from 1817 until 1822), Lunatic Asylum (1822-1844), The Kentucky Lunatic Asylum (1844-1849), Lunatic Asylum of Kentucky (1850-1852), The Lunatic Asylum (1850-1852), The Eastern Lunatic Asylum (1852-1855), The Eastern Lunatic Asylum of Kentucky (1855-1858), The Kentucky Eastern Lunatic Asylum (1858-1864), Eastern Lunatic Asylum (1864-1867), The Kentucky Eastern Lunatic Asylum (1867-1873), The First Kentucky Lunatic Asylum (1873-1876), Eastern Kentucky Lunatic Asylum (1876-1894), Eastern Kentucky Asylum for the Insane (1894-1912), and Eastern State Hospital (from 1912 onwards).
==History==

From 1792 until 1824, the mentally disturbed residents of Kentucky were boarded out with individuals at public expense, or a few were sent to Eastern State Hospital at Williamsburg, Virginia. In 1816, a group of public-spirited citizens in Lexington, banded together to establish a hospital to be called the Fayette Hospital. It was to be for the poor, disabled and "lunatic" members of society. A building was started that year and, in 1817, Henry Clay gave an oration at the dedicatory ceremony; however, the building was neither finished nor occupied. On December 7, 1822, the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Kentucky passed an "Act to Establish a Lunatic Asylum". Ten acres of land, along with the unfinished building of the Fayette Hospital, were purchased and thus the second oldest state mental hospital in America was established. The first patient was admitted May 1, 1824.
Samuel Theobald, M.D., a physician on the hospital staff and a member of the faculty of Transylvania University Medical School here in Lexington, wrote, in 1828, a dissertation titled Some Account of the Lunatic Asylum in Kentucky, that the goal was "the custodial care of the insane and the protection of society. Most of the lunatics admitted were incurable cases, as non-violent insane were to be maintained in private homes, being sent to the hospital when no longer tame enough to be kept at home…" In these early years, even the custodial treatment was less than ideal and barely met the minimal needs of the residents. There was no medical staff directly associated with the hospital at this time. Any severe medical problems were treated by physicians in the community, or by faculty and students of Transylvania College School of Medicine.In 1844, Eastern State Hospital welcomed its first medical superintendent, John Rowan Allen, M.D.: Eastern State Hospital has been under a full-time director ever since. With this change began an era of "moral treatment" during which the hospital staff strived to treat the residents humanely("Moral treatment" meant compassionate and understanding treatment.). Dorothea Dix, one of America's great philanthropists interested in better treatment of the insane, visited the hospital in 1847, and again in 1858. Restraints including strait jackets, leather cuffs, chains, etc. were originally used and were accepted treatment for the mentally ill. Beginning with Dr. Allen's administration, the use of such measures was largely eliminated.
Following the discontinuance of Transylvania University Medical School, around the end of the Civil War, fortunes declined. The patient population increased, there was much over-crowding, and the use of restraints was re-activated.During the late 1800s and the early 1900s, modes of treatment changed often, usually as a direct reflection of the degree of interest and support provided by the public. In general, hospital staff attempted to give the best treatment possible with the current knowledge and with the resources made available by the public.In its first years, because of its being the only facility of its kind in the area, Eastern State Hospital admitted people from all over Kentucky and from nearby states. The census of the hospital has varied over the years.
Throughout the years, deletions, improvements, and additions have been made in the physical facilities and in the treatment programs. Metrozal-shock therapy and electric-shock therapy were introduced in the 1940s. Metrozal-shock was used for a very short period. In the early 1950s, insulin therapy was used. In 1954, when tranquilizing drugs (used in conjunction with other therapies) were introduced, there was a decrease in insulin therapy; and by 1957, it was discontinued.
In 1945, the hospital was very crowded with a population of 2,000; as late as 1967, there were over 1,000 Eastern State Hospital residents. Eastern State Hospital was an isolated institution, separate from the community around it. Many employees lived on the grounds in cottages, dormitories, separate rooms in the main hospital building, or on wards with the residents. Residents did most of the work required to operate the hospital. Among the many jobs performed by the residents were farm work; grounds and building maintenance; custodial work; cooking, serving, and dishwashing; laundry, sewing, and mending service. The hospital grew and prepared most of its foodstuffs on the hospital grounds. At one time, Eastern State Hospital grounds consisted of 400 acres, and most of this acreage was farm land. In 1956, over 300 acres were sold to IBM; at present, 88 acres make up the Eastern State Hospital grounds.
Then, in 1993, the non-profit organization Bluegrass Regional Mental Health-Mental Retardation Board, Inc. became concerned about the possible closing of the hospital. Many states had implemented health care reform that included cost containment and/or cost reduction features that were realized by rapid closing of inpatient facilities. It appeared that Kentucky could soon be faced with too few inpatient options and limited alternatives to inpatient care. Bluegrass Regional MH-MR pursued the possibility of taking over management of the hospital. Planning sessions with consumers and family members, community members, staff, state officials and other concerned parties provided information that was integral to the development of a hospital management plan. In September 1995, Bluegrass Regional MH-MR took over management of Eastern State Hospital under a contact with the Commonwealth of Kentucky. Negotiations had taken nearly two years and implementation occurred in just over two months.

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