Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
history

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Maudsley Hospital

Psychiatric hospital in London, England


Summary

Psychiatric hospital in London, England

FieldValue
nameMaudsley Hospital
org_groupSouth London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust
imageMaudsley Hospital Main Building.jpg
captionMaudsley Hospital
locationDenmark Hill, London, England, United Kingdom
healthcareNational Health Service
typeSpecialist
specialityPsychiatric hospital
emergencyNo
affiliationKing's College London
beds250
founded1923
closed
website
other_links
pushpin_mapUnited Kingdom London Southwark
pushpin_map_captionLocation within Southwark

The Maudsley Hospital is a British psychiatric hospital in south London. The Maudsley is the largest mental health training institution in the UK. It is part of South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust, and works in partnership with the Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London. The hospital was one of the originating institutions in producing the Maudsley Prescribing Guidelines. It is part of the King's Health Partners academic health science centre and the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Centre for Mental Health.

History

Early history

The Maudsley story dates from 1907, when once leading Victorian psychiatrist Henry Maudsley offered London County Council £30,000 (apparently earned from lucrative private practice in the West End) to help found a new mental hospital that would be exclusively for early and acute cases rather than chronic cases, have an out-patients' clinic and provide for teaching and research. Maudsley's associate Frederick Walker Mott had proposed the original idea and he conducted the negotiations, with Maudsley remaining anonymous until the offer was accepted. Mott, a neuropathologist, had been influenced by a visit to Emil Kraepelin's psychiatric clinic with attached postgraduate teaching facilities in Munich, Germany. The Council agreed to contribute half the building costseventually rising to £70,000and then covered the running costs which were almost twice as high per bed as the large asylums. The hospital also incorporated the Central Pathological Laboratory, transferred from Claybury Hospital, run by Mott. Construction of the hospital was completed in 1915. An Act of Parliament had to be obtained, that year, to allow the institution to accept voluntary patients without needing to certify them as insane.

However, before it could open, the building was requisitioned to treat war veterans.

In the interwar period the Maudsley Hospital engaged in widespread experimentation with animal hormones, both in small doses to rectify supposed deficits and in overdoses as a shock therapy. Numerous psychoactive drugs and procedures were tried out, in what has been described as 'unconstrained experimentation'. One of those involved, as a trainee and then junior doctor, was the controversial William Sargant.

The Maudsley Hospital Medical School was established in 1924 and eventually became a well-respected teaching centre. In 1932, Mapother described it as "the main postgraduate school of mental medicine in England." The Maudsley Hospital had initially struggled to secure funding from the Medical Research Council, and, to undertake further research and develop the Medical School, but a substantial grant was obtained in 1938 from American charity the Rockefeller Foundation. Originally, there was no provision for the treatment of children and the rapid growth in this patient population was unforeseen. A child guidance clinic was set up under the directorship of Dr William Moodie, the deputy medical superintendent, in 1928. The late 1920s and 1930s saw a rapid growth in the number of patients treated: this growth led to an ongoing building programme including a secure unit, completed in 1931, and an out-patients department, completed in 1933.

Both Mapother and then deputy Aubrey Lewis supported involuntary eugenic sterilisation, unequivocally recommending it to the Brock Committee in 1932. Lewis was a member of the Eugenics Society and a 1934 chapter he authored is "remarkable for its total admiration for the German work and workers". With the spread of National Socialist (Nazi) laws in Germany from 1933, however, they decried the Nazi conflation of therapy and punishment, a move partly attributed to political and funding expediency. The Maudsley maintained its links with Germany, taking on both pro-Nazis and Jewish émigrés through fellowships provided by the Commonwealth Fund and, after 1935, large scale funds from the American Rockefeller Foundation. Eliot Slater continued to visit Munich through the 1930s and contributed to academic festivities honouring Nazi eugenicist Ernst Rudin. During this time, Maudsley psychiatry developed a distinctive combination of practical experimentation and intellectual scepticism. Influential psychiatrist Aubrey Lewis became clinical director of the Maudsley in 1936.

At the outbreak of the Second World War, and with the threat of air-raids, the Maudsley Hospital closed and staff dispersed to two locations: a temporary hospital at Mill Hill School in north London and Belmont Hospital in Sutton, Surrey. Staff returned to the Maudsley site in 1945 and three years later the Maudsley joined up with the Bethlem Royal Hospital to become partners in the newly established National Health Service (NHS).

Post-war

In the 1960s a group from the Maudsley Hospital attacked the use of lithium for mood disorders. The head, Aubrey Lewis, called it "dangerous nonsense", and colleagues published that it was therapeutically ineffective. Their objections have recently been described as 'poorly grounded' and having steered practitioners away from a beneficial agent. In 1999, the Maudsley Hospital became part of the South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust ("SLaM"), along with the Bethlem Royal Hospital.

Services

The trust manages one of the UK's few biomedical research centres specialising in mental health. The centre, managed in partnership with the Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London, is based on the Maudsley Hospital campus and funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR).

Media

In 2013 South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust (‘SLaM’) took part in a Channel 4 observational documentary entitled Bedlam. The final programme, "Breakdown", focused on older adults, including those admitted to the Older Adults Ward at Maudsley Hospital.

Notable staff

  • Annie Altschul pioneer of mental health nursing in the UK.
  • Trevor Clay General Secretary of the Royal College of Nursing
  • Felix Post pioneer of Geriatric psychiatry.

References

References

  1. "Who we are". slam.nhs.uk.
  2. "Welcome". Maudsley Biomedical Research Centre.
  3. "Maudsley Hospital".
  4. (2007). "The Maudsley Hospital: design and strategic direction, 1923–1939". Med Hist.
  5. "Mary Barkas (1889–1959)". Psychoanalytikerinnen.
  6. (2012). "Organ extracts and the development of psychiatry: hormonal treatments at the Maudsley Hospital 1923-1938". J Hist Behav Sci.
  7. "Our history:1900-2000". South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust.
  8. (1991). "Acute regional cerebral blood flow changes caused by severe head injuries". J Neurosurg.
  9. Mazumdar, Pauline. (2005). "The Eugenics Society, Its Sources and Its Critics in Britain". Routledge.
  10. (2010). "Chapter 4: Germany and the Making of "English" Psychiatry: The Maudsley Hospital, 1908–1939". Boydell & Brewer, University of Rochester Press.
  11. (2013). "Baltic Eugenics: Bio-Politics, Race and Nation in Interwar Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania 1918–1940 : 3. Eliot Slater and the Institutionalization of Psychiatric Genetics in the United Kingdom". Rodopi.
  12. (2003). "Aubrey Lewis, Edward Mapother and the Maudsley". Med Hist Suppl.
  13. "Aubrey Julian (Sir) Lewis". Royal College of Physicians.
  14. (2009). "The history of lithium therapy". Bipolar Disord.
  15. "Welcome to Bedlam on C4". South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust.
  16. (8 January 2002). "Annie Altschul". The Guardian.
  17. (26 April 1994). ""Trevor Clay."". The Times.
  18. "Felix Post {{!}} RCP Museum".
  19. C, Hilton. (2007). "The life and work of Felix Post (1913-2001): pioneer in the psychiatry of old age". Journal of Medical Biography.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Maudsley Hospital — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report