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Many behavioral scientists have explored the world of the mentally ill behind hospital walls. But Estroff, a post doctoral fellow in psychiatric anthropology at the University of Wisconsin, probed a different world. She is the first live-in scientific observer to spend an extended period with a growing new cadre of mental patients: those who have been, In psychiatric jargon, "deinstitutionalized." Now totaling as many as 500,000 across the U.S., these are mental patients who are regarded as sufficiently good risks to be allowed to dwell in the community at large, yet remain under professional care as psychiatric outpatients...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behavior: Two Years Among the Crazies | 1/22/1979 | See Source »

...study, Estroff joined 43 deinstitutionalized patients under a Madison, Wis., team led by Psychiatrist Leonard "itein and Psychologist Mary Ann Test at he Mendota Mental Health Institute. The ground rules she established put her in what she called a "triangular" position with both sides. But in fact she was closer to the patients, pledging to guard their confidences while sitting in on staff sessions. Almost immediately, even trivial questions became moral quagmires. Should she tell patients that she had gone to a staff party? (She didn't.) Should she let the doctors know when she had information they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behavior: Two Years Among the Crazies | 1/22/1979 | See Source »

...slipping rings onto drapery rods at 50? an hour) that they only underlined the crazies' alien status in the community. Many simply preferred to collect the special federal stipends available to them when they filled out forms that officially recognized their mental impairments -and further ostracized them. Says Estroff: "The system encourages people to get well, while at the same time showing them that the one way they can exist is to sell their craziness...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behavior: Two Years Among the Crazies | 1/22/1979 | See Source »

...Estroff saw similar contradictions in the use of such medications as lithium carbonate and Prolixin Decanoate. These "meds" soothe psychotic symptoms, but bring on strong side effects that work as badges of distinction between the patients and outsiders: a freezing of facial expressions, hand tremors, and jiggling of the legs when seated (known by the patients as "the Prolixin stomp"). Most patients knew they were taking "meds" because they were different from "normies"; yet when they tried to be normal by refusing medication, their behavior often became more bizarre. Estroff herself tried Prolixin to experience its effects, but quit abruptly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behavior: Two Years Among the Crazies | 1/22/1979 | See Source »

...back in the outside world feeling sane but "sadder" and "quieter," Estroff has vowed to keep studying the plight of deinstitutionalized mental patients, as well as that of the struggling psychiatric workers. But only under one condition. Says she: "I will not do this type of field work alone again...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behavior: Two Years Among the Crazies | 1/22/1979 | See Source »

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