Literature DB >> 17153160

The asylum, the Poor Law, and a reassessment of the four-shilling grant: admissions to the county asylums of Yorkshire in the nineteenth century.

Robert Ellis1.   

Abstract

In the mid-1870s, the British government introduced a grant that transferred a proportion of the cost of asylum care from local to central funds. Typically, this has been seen by contemporary and more recent commentators as part of the explanation for the therapeutic failure of the County and Borough Asylums, and for their degeneration into custodial institutions. Building on recent work on the Poor Law, the aim of this article is to reassess the impact of the grant using both quantitative and qualitative evidence. Contrasting the records of two County Asylums with the annual reports of the Lunacy Commissioners, it shows that there is little evidence to suggest that the grant was responsible for a change in either the size or composition of the asylum population. Ultimately, it argues that the admission of patients in general, and the admission and discharge of chronic cases in particular, rested with longer-term factors than simply the introduction of one fiscal incentive.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17153160     DOI: 10.1093/shm/hkj008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Hist Med        ISSN: 0951-631X            Impact factor:   0.973


  1 in total

1.  'A Burden on the County': Madness, Institutions of Confinement and the Irish Patient in Victorian Lancashire.

Authors:  Catherine Cox; Hilary Marland
Journal:  Soc Hist Med       Date:  2015-05       Impact factor: 0.973

  1 in total

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