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  1. John Thomas Perceval (14 February 1803 – 28 February 1876) was a British army officer who was confined in lunatic asylums for three years and spent the rest of his life campaigning for reform of the lunacy laws and for better treatment of asylum inmates. [1] He was one of the founders of the Alleged Lunatics' Friend Society and ...

  2. 16 de may. de 2024 · John Thomas Perceval (1803–1876) was the fifth of 12 children of Spencer Perceval, Prime Minister of the UK. His memoirs of his admission and treatment for mental illness, first published in 1838 and in a revised version in 1840, gave an accurate and compelling account of his psychopathology as well as of the often abusive and ...

  3. John Thomas Perceval (1803 –1876) was confined first to Dr Fox’s private madhouse (asylum) in 1830 and transferred to Mr Newington’s madhouse at Ticehurst, Sussex, in 1832 until his release in 1834. His account of his incarceration and treat-ment was published in two versions, the first in 1838 and the second in 1840.

  4. www.bps.org.uk › psychologist › expert-experienceAn expert by experience - BPS

    16 de may. de 2008 · An expert by experience. Hugh Gault on John Thomas Perceval, a pioneer whose work for the mental health advocacy movement led to lasting improvements in mental health care. 16 May 2008.

  5. Tie an active limbed, active minded, actively imagining young man in bed, hand and foot, for a fortnight, drench him with medicines, slops, clysters; when reduced to the extreme of nervous debility, and his derangement is successfully confirmed, manacle him down for twenty-four hours in the cabin of a ship; then for a whole year shut him up from six a.m. to eight p.m. regardless of his former ...

    • Femi Oyebode
    • 2010
  6. Editorial. Listen to. Abstract. This is a moving and informative account by an intelligent patient of his 3 years of schizophrenia, together with his ideas about how he got that way and the happenings that contributed to his recovery.

  7. The concept of recovery can be traced back as far as 1830, when John Perceval, son of one of England’s prime ministers, wrote of his personal recovery from the psychosis that he experienced from 1830 until 1832, a recovery that he obtained despite the “treatment” he received from the “lunatic” doctors who attended him.