Nineteenth-century psychiatrists ascribed to a model of health that was predicated on the existence of objective and strictly defined laws of nature. The allegedly "natural" rules governing the production of consumption of food, however, were structured by a set of distinctively bourgeois moral values that demonized over-indulgence and intemperance, encouraged self-discipline and productivity, and treated gentility as an index of social worth. Accordingly, the asylum acted not only as a therapeutic instrument but also as a moral machine that was designed to remake lazy, indolent transgressors into useful, "decorous" citizens. Because the theory and mechanics underlying this machine seemed straightforward and self-evident to psychiatrists, they were confounded when the asylum failed to translate its ideals into reality. While psychiatrists tended to blame this failure on the intractable immorality and weakness of individual patients, particularly paupers and immigrants, a review of the various meanings and uses of food in the hospital reveals the fault lines that ran through the asylum's ideological structure.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10912-019-09603-8 | DOI Listing |
We examine the impacts of a sanitation program designed to eliminate open defecation in at-scale randomized field experiments in four countries: India, Indonesia, Mali, and Tanzania. The programs - all variants of the widely-used Community-Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) approach - increase village private sanitation coverage in all four locations by 7-39 percentage points. We use the experimentally-induced variation in access to sanitation to identify the causal relationship between village sanitation coverage and child height.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
May 2021
Escuela de Psicología, Pontificia Universidad Católica Madre y Maestra, Santiago de los Caballeros, Dominican Republic.
Fear to contamination is an easy-to-provoke, intense, hard-to-control, and extraordinarily persistent fear. A worsening of preexisting psychiatric disorders was observed during the COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) outbreak, and several studies suggest that those with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) may be more affected than any other group of people. In the face of worsening OCD symptoms, there is a need for mental health professionals to provide the support needed not only to treat patients who still report symptoms, but also to improve relapse prevention.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Med Humanit
March 2022
Anthropology Department, Brown University, Box 1921, Providence, RI, 02912, USA.
Nineteenth-century psychiatrists ascribed to a model of health that was predicated on the existence of objective and strictly defined laws of nature. The allegedly "natural" rules governing the production of consumption of food, however, were structured by a set of distinctively bourgeois moral values that demonized over-indulgence and intemperance, encouraged self-discipline and productivity, and treated gentility as an index of social worth. Accordingly, the asylum acted not only as a therapeutic instrument but also as a moral machine that was designed to remake lazy, indolent transgressors into useful, "decorous" citizens.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFood Chem
September 2016
I.U. Cinquima, Analytical Chemistry Group, University of Valladolid, E-47011 Valladolid, Spain.
An alternative method to quantify 40 volatile compounds in wheat bread crumb is proposed. It consists of a Soxhlet extraction with a mixture of dichloromethane and diethyl ether containing lipases and a subsequent concentration with Vigreux column. It is the first time that lipases are added to transform the fat into free fatty acids and glycerol, which elute at the end of the chromatogram after the analytes, avoiding problems in the chromatography due to fat residues, such as dirtiness in the injector, column clogging or overlapping peaks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Biol Rhythms
February 2004
Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, Washington University Medical School, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA.
The mouse has joined the fruit fly, bread mold, and cyanobacteria as a tractable genetic system for studying mechanisms of circadian rhythms. The circadian rhythms of "knock-out" mice for specific clock genes, however, have demonstrated significant variability between laboratories. In this brief review, the authors discuss possible sources of this variability, focusing particularly on questions of modifier loci of circadian rhythms that vary between inbred mouse strains.
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