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Clinical
Psychology (PSY401)
VU
LESSON
04
HISTORICAL
OVERVIEW OF CLINICAL
PSYCHOLOGY
INTRODUCTION
The
history of clinical psychology,
like that of many fields, is
typically presented as a collection
of
names
and dates. It is important to understand the
individuals who have shaped the
field of clinical
psychology
and to know when landmark
events in the field occurred. Tracing the
progression of the
development
of the field and the individuals who have
influenced it provides an important
perspective
on
the roots of clinical psychology as it exists
today. However, the primary
significance of clinical
psychology's
relatively short history does
not lie in names and
dates. Rather, its
historical importance
comes
From an understanding of the factors that
have shaped the field into
its current form and
the
forces
that are likely to influence
its development in the
future.
Three
things are striking about
the history of clinical psychology.
First, many of the significant
events
and
forces that have influenced
its development have come
from outside rather than
from within
psychology.
Second, there have been significant
advances in the science of clinical
psychology, in some
instances
represented by breakthrough pieces of
research, but most often
through the slow and
gradual
accumulation
of knowledge across many
studies. And third, clinical
psychology has emerged as
a
profession
only recently and is still
working to define its
identity. More fundamental
than the questions
of
how and when clinical
psychology developed is the question of
why the science and profession of
clinical
psychology developed so rapidly
during the second half of the
twentieth century.
The
field came into being
for two reasons. First,
throughout history there has
been a need to
provide
care
and services for individuals
who are experiencing
psychological problems, and clinical
psychology
emerged
in part to help meet this
need. The needs of
individuals with psychological problems
had been
addressed
in very different ways over the
course of history before
clinical psychology stepped in to
help
fill
this role. Second, some of
the founders of scientific psychology in
the late 1800s and early
1900s felt
that
one objective of their new
science should be to contribute to the
welfare of others. William
James,
G.
Stanley Hall. and other
founders of American psychology
shared a belief that one of
the
responsibilities
of the new field of psychology
was to benefit human welfare in a
broad sense. Thus, a
societal
need existed, and some
members of the psychological community
felt a responsibility to fill
this
need.
As
we will point out, however,
the greatest growth of clinical
psychology occurred during the
second
half
of the twentieth century, spurred by
events that began during the
First and Second World
Wars.
EARLY
APPROACHES TO MENTAL HEALTH
CARE
The
commitment to helping individuals in
psychological distress certainly
did not begin with the
field of
clinical
psychology. The major
functions that are served by
clinical psychologists today
(understanding
and
aiding individuals who are
suffering from psychological disorders or
are experiencing
significant
psychological
distress) were met by other
individuals and institutions in societies
for centuries before
the
emergence of psychology as a profession. In
various societies and at different
points in history,
who
has
been responsible for meeting the
psychological needs of individuals
has depended on how
mental
health
and mental disorder have been
viewed. Professions that have
taken responsibility for the
welfare
of
individuals who suffer from
psychological or psychiatric disorders have
included the clergy or
other
religious
groups, physicians, and individuals committed to
social /welfare. It is important to
recognize
that
psychologists have only recently joined
these other groups in the field of
mental health (Alloy,
acobson,
& Acocella, 1999, Nolen-Hoeksema,
1998).
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For
much of recorded history, treatment of
psychological problems was carried
out by religious
institutions.
The treatment of mental health problems
by religious methods is based in
demonology, the
view
that these problems are the
caused by forces of evil.
Writings from the Old
Testament refer to
madness
that is the result of punishment by God,
and through-out the Middle Ages in
Europe, the
church
was responsible for explaining the
causes of psychological disturbance and
providing treatment
for
it (most often in the form of
punishment). For example,
disturbed and disordered behavior that
today
is
considered evidence of psychosis (e.g..
hallucinations, delusions) used to be
interpreted as evidence of
possession
by the devil and was treated
through exorcisms, torture, or death by
burning at the stake.
An
alternative to demonology emerged in the
form of medical explanations of
psychological problems-
the
somato-genic perspective, during the Greek
period.
THE
GREEK PERIOD
Primitive
Greeks viewed mental aberrations in
magical and religious frame of reference. Several
Greek
thinkers
were pivotal in the early development of
integrative approaches to illness, and,
thus, were
precursors
to a bio-psycho-social perspective.
Although
he ancient Greeks felt that the
gods ultimately controlled
both health and illness,
these
thinkers
looked beyond supernatural influences and
explored biological, psychological
and social
influences
on illness.
The
earliest medical or biological
explanation of emotional and behavioral
disorders can be found in the
writings
of Hippocrates in the fourth century
b.c.
Hippocrates
believed
that psychological problems, like
physical illnesses, were caused by
imbalances
in
the four bodily fluids
(black bile, yellow bile,
blood, and phlegm). Furthermore,
Hippocrates felt that
the
relationship between these bodily
fluids also determined
temperament and personality.
Plato
felt
that mental illness resulted
from sickness in the part of the
soul that operates the
head,
controlling
reason.
Aristotle
maintained
a scientific emphasis and felt
that certain distinct
emotional states including
joy,
fear,
anger and courage impacted the functioning of human
body.
Galen
also
used the humoral theory of
balance between the four bodily
fluids discussed previously as
a
foundation
for treatments. He thought
that humans experienced one of two
irrational sub souls, one
for
males
and one for females. He felt that the
soul was the slave and not the
master of the body, and
that
wishes
of the souls in the body resulted in
health and illness.
THE
MIDDLE AGES
During
the Middle Ages (500-1450A.D),
earlier notions regarding the
relationship among health,
illness,
mind, and body reemerged.
The focus on supernatural influences to
explain events became
commonplace.
Spiritual matters such as the
influence of demons, witches and sins
caused diseases and
"insanity",
many believed. So healing and treatment
became, once more, a spiritual rather
than a
medical
issue.
Not
every one during the middle
Ages believed that good or
evil spirits and demons, sorcery
and
witchcraft
contributed to mental illness.
Some thinkers, such as
Saint
Thomas Aquinas felt
that there
were
both theological and scientific
reasons of abnormal
behavior.
The
late 14th century French
bishop Nicholas
Ores-me' felt
that abnormal behavior and
mental illness
were
due to diseases such as
"melancholy" (today's depression).
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Clinical
Psychology (PSY401)
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A
Swiss physician, Paracelsus,
popularized the notion that
various movements of the stars,
moon, and
planets
influenced mood and behavior. He
also focused on the biological
foundations of mental
illness
and
developed humane
treatments.
THE
RENIASSANCE
During
the renaissance, renewed interest in the physical and
medical worlds emerged,
overshadowing
previously
supernatural and religious viewpoints.
Interest in the mind and soul were
considered
unscientific.
Morgagni
discovered
through autopsy that a diseased
organ in the body could
cause illness and death.
Andreas
Vesalius emphasized
scientific observation and
experimentation rather than
reason,
mythology,
religious beliefs, and dogma.
Rene'
Descartes argued that the
mind and body were separate.
This dualism of mind and
body then
became
the basis for Western
medicine until
recently.
As
biological explanations for
psychological problems emerged, medical
professionals became involved
in
the identification and treatment of such disorders.
Unfortunately, from the 1500s
through 1800s,
medical
treatment of psychological problems primarily
took the form of placement of individuals
in
psychiatric
hospitals and asylums that offered
little if anything in the way of
treatment. Patients were
held
as prisoners in horrible conditions,
little care or treatment was
available, and even humane
treatment
was often lacking.
In
contrast to these early
approaches, more recent developments in
biological explanations of
psychopathology
have led to major advances in diagnosis
and treatment.
THE
NINETEENTH CENTURY
The
nineteenth century experienced numerous
advances in understanding mental and
physical illness,
and
allowed for a more sophisticated
understanding of the relationship between
body and mind in both
health
and illness.
IMPORTANT
FIGURES INCLUDE
Louis
Pasteur: He believed
that disease and illness
could be attributed to dysfunction at the
cellular
level.
Benjamin
Rush: He authored the
first American text in
psychiatry, positing that the
mind could cause a
variety
of diseases.
Franz
Mesmer: He noticed
that many people
experiencing paralysis, deafness, and blindness had
no
biomedical
pathology, leaving psychological
causes suspect. He also
promoted the idea of
"animal
magneticism"
(also known as Mesmerism) the view
that animals possess some
kind of magnetic force
within
their bodies that can help
in the treatment of various physical and
mental disorders. He believed
that
by directing or "Re-directing" these
fluids, a physician could treat the
mental illness of a
person.
Philippe
Pinel: He did
much to improve the living
conditions and treatment approaches
used by mental
hospitals
during the nineteenth century. He
wrote a book on the classification of
diseases, which
served
as
a standard medical textbook
for schools of thought on
clinical medicine.
In
1793, Pinel had been
appointed chief physician to
Bicetre, the men's "insane"
asylum in Paris. What
he
saw there horrified him.
Many of the patients were restrained to the walls by
chains. Some had
been
in
restraints this way for 30 or 40
years. He removed the chains
from the patients who
responded
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Clinical
Psychology (PSY401)
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favorably
without violence. He also
stopped purging, bleeding
and blistering and replaced
these with
simple
psychological treatments.
The
results of these kinds of
humane reforms were startling. Before
Pinel, 60 percent of the mental
patients
at Bicetre died of disease,
suicide or other causes
within the first two years
of admission. This
number
went down to 10 percent under
Pinel (and went down even
further as reforms continued.)
In
1795, he joined Le Salpetriere, a
female asylum, where he fired the
keepers who were cruel
and
ignorant
and replaced them with personnel who were
compassionate and enlightened.
Also,
while there he began the practice of
keeping case histories of
all the patients, thereby
improving
their
long treatment and also serving as a
basis for study of the
course of mental illness
well into the
next
century.
Under
Pinel, the place of residence for the
mentally ill converted from a
madhouse to a hospital.
His
reforms
were soon copied all over
Europe.
Clause
Bernard: He was a
prominent physician who argued
for recognition of the role of
psychological
factors
in physical illness.
William
Tuke and Dorothea
Dix worked
for more humane treatment approaches in
mental hospitals in
United
States.
Franz
Alexander: He also
studied the association between psychological factors
and both physical
and
mental
illnesses.
ADVANCES
IN MENTAL HEALTH CARE
Only
recently, and only in some cultures
around the world, have psychological
problems come to be
viewed
at least partly as the result of
disturbances and problems in behavior
(the psychogenic
hypothesis)
and, as a result, have come within the
purview of psychology.
One
major change in thinking
about and treatment of psychological problems occurred
with the advent
of
moral treatment in the 1800s, Led by physicians and
others concerned with social
reform in the
United
States and Europe (e.g., Philippe
Pinel in
France and Benjamin
Rush in the United
States).
The
moral treatment movement was based on the
conviction that individuals
with psychological
problems
deserved humane care and treatment. As
part of the moral treatment movement,
efforts were
made
to improve the inhumane conditions and
methods that characterized asylums and
mental hospitals
at
that time.
One
of the most dramatic changes in the
conceptualization and treatment of psychological
problems
occurred
late in the nineteenth century
with the emergence of truly
psychological explanations of
these
problems.
French physicians Jean
Charcot, Hippolyte
Bemheim, and Pierre
Janet began
to
experiment
with the use of hypnosis in the treatment
of some psychological problems and
introduced
the
notion that psychological
methods of treatment could be an
alternative to medical and
religious
approaches.
Their theories led to the pioneering
work of Sigmund
Freud, an Austrian
neurologist, who
is
perhaps the best-known proponent of
psychological explanations for disorders
of behavior and
emotion.
Freud's work has served as a
base line in clinical
psychology for research on the treatment
of
psychological
problems and the actual clinical application of
this research.
THE
BIRTH OF PSYCHOLOGY
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Clinical
Psychology (PSY401)
VU
IN
1860, Theodor
Fechner published
The
Elements of Psychophysics while
Wilhelm
Wundt
published
The
Principles of Physiological Psychology in 1874.
These publications were the first
to
indicate
clearly that technique of
physiology and physics could be used to
answer psychological
questions.
The
first
laboratory of psychology was subsequently
developed by Wundt
at
the University of
Leipzig;
Germany in 1879 and with it,
psychology was born.
FOUNDATION
OF AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL
ASSOCIATION
In
1892, the American Psychological
Association (APA) was
founded, and G.
Stanley Hall was
elected
as
its first president. During the
beginning months and years of
its roots APA was more interested
in
experimental
psychology as compared to Applied
Psychology.
THE
EMERGENCE
OF
CLINICAL
PSYCHOLOGY
WITHIN
THE
FIELD
OF
PSYCHOLOGY
As
reflected in this brief
history of the conceptualization and treatment of
psychological problems, the
origins
of clinical psychology cannot be tied to
a single person or event.
Instead, a number of
individuals
responding to a variety of forces were
involved in the emergence of the field in
the United
States
and Europe in the late
nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries. Because clinical
psychology
involves
the application of knowledge from the
scientific study of human behavior, it is
noteworthy that
the
science of psychology preceded the
profession of psychology. This order is
in contrast to many
other
professions
in which professional practice began
before the science of the field.
Training in the practice
of
law, for example, was
carried out through apprenticeship to a
practicing attorney long
before formal
training
programs in law were established in
universities (Routh,
1994).
Similarly,
medicine was practiced for centuries
before the scientific basis of the
field was fully
developed.
The nature of medical education and
training, and indeed the entire
field of medicine,
was
reshaped
in 1910 by an influential report by
Abraham Flexner (Regan-Smith,
19.98). The Flexner
Report
called for the introduction of
training in basic science as a component
in all medical training
and
education.
Prior to 1910, medical
practitioners were not required to be
trained in science.
Clinical
psychology
followed the opposite path-the
science of psychology was established
before the application
of
psychology began a precedent
that has led to considerable
conflict within the
field.
Most
historians mark the origins of
psychology with the development of
Wilhelm Wundt's laboratory
for
the study of perception and behavior in
Germany in the mid 1800s. Wundt
was trained as a
philosopher,
and research conducted in his laboratory
was novel in its attempt to
study observable
processes
of human sensation and perception under
relatively controlled and
experimental conditions.
Wundt
had a major effect on American
psychology through the relatively
large number of Americans
who
received their doctoral
training in his laboratory at the
University of Leipzig.
The
field of psychology that
began to emerge in the United
States in the latter part of the
nineteenth
century
was an academic discipline
committed to the scientific
study of human behavior. The focus
of
much
of the early research in psychology
(e.g., examination of the characteristics of
color vision) had
little
to do with the types of psychological problems
that are the focus of clinical
psychology today.
Nevertheless,
many pioneers of American psychology
recognized that one of the important values
of
psychology
would include its
application to the effort to solve human
problems.
One
of the doctoral students who
worked with Wundt was a
young American named
Lightner
Witmer.
Formal
training in psychology did
not exist in the United
States in the late nineteenth
century, and as a
result.
Witmer and others who were interested in
the scientific study of human behavior
had no choice
but
to leave the United States
and seek their education in
Europe. After receiving his
doctoral degree
with
Wundt, Witmer returned to the
United States to accept a
position in the psychology department
at
25
Clinical
Psychology (PSY401)
VU
the
University of Pennsylvania, where he
could continue to conduct his
research on processes of
perception.
The course of Witmer's work
took a different turn in the
spring of 1896, however,
when a
schoolteacher
asked for Witmer's
assistance in working with an
otherwise bright 14-year-old
boy who
was
having severe difficulty
with spelling and recognizing
written words (McRcynolds, 1987,
1997).
Witmer
conducted a careful evaluation of the boy's problems
and developed an intensive
treatment
program
to try to improve his
reading and spelling skills.
This case spurred Witmer to open the
first
Psychological
Clinic in 1896
at
the University of Pennsylvania, designed
specifically to treat children
with
learning difficulties. He called
for the founding of a new branch of
psychology dedicated to the
goal
of helping people and coined the term
clinical
psychology to describe
this new field.
That
same year, 1896, Witmer
presented his ideas about
the applications of psychology to the
treatment
of
human problems to the members of the newly
formed American Psychological
Association, and he
received
a cool rejection at best
(McReynolds. 1997; Riesman,
1976). The APA members'
negative
response
was due to several factors. Although there
was some support for the
application of
psychological
knowledge to solving human problems, the
majority of psychologists considered
themselves
to be scientists and did not regard the
role described by Witmer as appropriate
for them.
They
did not wish to endanger
their identification as scientists,
which was tenuous enough in
those early
years,
by moving their profession into
what they felt were premature
applications. Even if they
had
considered
his suggestions to be laudable,
few if any psychologists were trained or
experienced to
perform
the functions Witmer proposed.
The
chilly response from members
of the APA is somewhat surprising given
that Witmer
emphasized
that
clinical psychology should
involve the careful application of the
science of psychology.
Witmer
used
the term clinical psychology to
refer to a method of teaching and
research and not merely as
an
extension
of the word clinic, a place where persons
are examined. Witmer
persuaded the University of
Pennsylvania
administration to offer formal
training in clinical psychology, and
its 1904-05 catalog
announced
that students in clinical
psychology could take
courses for credit in
psychology and in the
medical
school.
By
1907, Witmer had been able
to raise sufficient funds to establish a
hospital school for the training
of
mentally
retarded children as an adjunct to his
clinic, and to found and
serve as the first editor of
a
professional
journal, "The
Psychological Clinic". For
his efforts, Witmer
is
now widely considered to
be
the founder
of clinical psychology.
In
understanding the origins of clinical
psychology, it is important to consider
that the first
psychological
clinic was dedicated to helping
children with learning problems,
which was a clear and
logical
application of the research on human
learning and memory that was
being conducted by
psychologists
at the time (e.g., Witmer, 1907/1996).
Thus, the field of clinical psychology
originated in
an
attempt to apply what was
being learned in the basic science of
psychology at the time.
Witmer's
work influenced and anticipated
future developments in clinical
psychology, including an
emphasis
on children's academic problems, the use
of active clinical interventions to
improve
individuals'
lives, and collaboration with
other professionals (such as physicians)
in providing treatment
(Routh,
1996).
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