<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></SPAN>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
<p class="center"><span class="large">THE CARE OF THE HOMICIDAL, SUICIDAL, AND THOSE INCLINED TO ACTS OF VIOLENCE.</span></p>
<p> </p>
<p class="dropcap"><span class="caps">Patients</span> with Delusions of Suspicion demand special care, and are properly
classed with those inclined to commit acts of violence, because they are
frequently fully under the control of delusions, which make them dangerous
and difficult to manage.</p>
<p>Many patients have ideas that make them suspicious of those about them;
these may relate to the patients, but more frequently to the attendants
and physicians, and they may arise from delusions, hallucinations or
illusions. This class of patients is apt to be morose, cross, and
irritable; they sit brooding over their fancied wrongs; repulse advances
and friendly intercourse; they refuse to employ themselves, and do not
respond willingly to the requirements of the attendants.</p>
<p>Our most trifling and unmeaning acts may give rise to the most intense
suspicions and hatred. A look, a shrug of the shoulder, the manner of
shaking the head, a cough, the squeaking of our boots, are frequently
enough to arouse, these feelings.</p>
<p>Suspicious patients often think they are the subjects of ridicule; that
their thoughts are read and proclaimed to the ward; that their virtue,
truth, or honor is called<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54"></SPAN></span> in question, and the accusations openly told to
others, or that they are called vile and insulting names. They often have
delusions of conspiracy to do them or their families harm, and connect the
attendants and physicians with them, thinking, as they keep them locked in
the asylum, they are associated in the conspiracy. Sometimes these
patients think themselves some great persons, perhaps that they are a
member of the Deity, or a ruler, or prophet, or that they have some great
mission to perform, and that they are deprived of their rights, or their
work interfered with, by being kept in the asylum, and that those in
authority are imprisoning and persecuting them. Such persons may be, on
account of their fancied wrongs, very suspicious, and even violent towards
those who care for them.</p>
<p>Other patients have suspicions and fears of bodily harm. They may think
they are to be tortured, that they are to be burned alive, or that some
one is trying to kill them. To-day, as I wrote these lines, a patient told
me she did not sleep last night for fear the night-watch would kill
her—saying that God told her the watch was armed with a knife for that
purpose, and she threatened homicidal violence in defending herself.</p>
<p>Many patients mistake ordinary sensations of pain and bodily discomfort,
and have delusions that they are being injured. The feelings of dyspepsia
may make patients think they have been poisoned; ordinary pains or aches,
that they have been shot, stabbed, or pounded; women may, for some such
causes, think they have been violated or are pregnant. Peculiar sensations
of various kinds<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55"></SPAN></span> may make patients think some one is affecting them by
electricity or mesmerizing them.</p>
<p>It is very easy to trace from such ideas of persecution and suspicion, the
origin of homicidal, suicidal, incendiary and other violent tendencies and
acts.</p>
<p><i>Homicidal Patients.</i>—Patients are sometimes both homicidal and suicidal,
and sometimes they are inclined to only one of these forms of violence.
Homicides are not of frequent occurrence in an asylum. The better the care
the less is the liability to homicide. But there are always a great many
homicidal patients, and many more who have delusions and ideas that may
cause such tendencies to arise.</p>
<p>Many patients are homicidal merely from violence and frenzy, and without
any settled plan, any fixed delusion, or intense suspicion. They may
attack others suddenly and furiously; they may commit the act while trying
to escape, or it may be the result of the violence of acute mania. Other
patients become homicidal under the desire to protect themselves from
supposed assaults. They may think a person who is approaching them is
coming to kill or torture them. Others are homicidal from any of the ideas
of persecution and suspicion that have just been spoken of. Sometimes
patients hear voices telling them to commit the act, perhaps it is God’s
voice commanding a father to offer up his only son as a sacrifice, or a
mother to kill her little children to save their souls, or keep them from
some misery or crime that awaits them. Patients may think themselves God,
or a king, or ruler, and therefore have a right to take life. Homicidal
patients are often among the quietest, and are found in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56"></SPAN></span> the quiet wards.
They frequently lay careful plans, are secretive, and only try to commit
the act when they feel sure it will succeed.</p>
<p>Patients who are homicidal should be especially watched. They should, if
possible, be kept employed, but never given tools that may become weapons.
They should sleep in a room by themselves. All persons against whom they
have delusions should be warned. Patients against whom they harbor
suspicious or homicidal ideas should be separated from them.</p>
<p>Attendants should remember that a mop, a pail, or a chair, may become a
dangerous weapon, or that a knife, scissors, or a sharpened piece of iron
or tin, may make a fatal wound.</p>
<p><i>Suicidal Patients.</i>—Patients with this tendency will generally talk
freely of their suicidal ideas, tell why they wish to commit it, what
provokes the idea, and how they would do the act. They are frequently
grateful for the care bestowed to help them resist the impulse, and will
sometimes tell the attendants when they feel the suicidal ideas coming on,
that they may be the more surely watched.</p>
<p>Melancholic patients are most inclined to suicide, but any insane person,
whatever the mental state, may commit the act. Delusions of depression
generally cause the suicidal ideas, but hallucinations sometimes play an
important part. Some persons are simply tired of life, and see no hope in
living; some think they are a burden to their friends, and that they are
taking food away from their children; others wish to die to escape from
their misery, which is generally a mental, and not a physical<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57"></SPAN></span> suffering;
others that by so doing they may get forgiveness of their sins; others
because they think they will save their children from a fate like theirs;
sometimes it is the result of hallucination, as a direct command from God,
telling them to commit the act.</p>
<p>But few patients are constantly determined to commit suicide. The
opportunity offered, as a bath-room door left open, a rope, a knife, often
prompts the desire and allows the accomplishment of the deed.</p>
<p>Attendants must remember that it takes but a few minutes to commit
suicide, by drowning or hanging—but a moment to cut the throat; that
persons can drown themselves in a pail of water, hang themselves by the
hem of the sheets, cut their throat with a piece of glass or tin.
Sometimes patients slyly save their medicine until they get enough to
poison themselves.</p>
<p>About dusk in the evening, or at early morning, is the time when patients
are most inclined to commit suicide. When patients are rising, going to
bed, or to their meals, when going to chapel, amusements, or to walk, when
all is busy and astir on the ward, are the times that offer the most
favorable opportunities for the act.</p>
<p>Often patients have a certain way by which they will commit suicide, and
they will do it in no other; one wishes to drown himself, another to hang,
and another to take poison. Sometimes patients will appear cheerful to
avoid suspicion and so find their opportunity, while others may suddenly
and while convalescent commit the act.</p>
<p>The only way to care for patients who are suicidal, is by constant
watchfulness day and night. During the day<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58"></SPAN></span> they should be employed and
kept with other patients, they should be especially looked after at those
times when opportunities for suicide are increased. At night it is better
to have them sleep in an associated dormitory with some one to watch them.
If a patient is found hanging he should at once be cut down, all
restriction about the neck removed and artificial respiration set up, or
if drowning, the mouth and lungs should be first emptied of water; if
there is hemorrhage compression should be made upon the artery, or if this
is not possible, then directly upon the wound. How to control hemorrhage
and do artificial respiration will be described in the chapter on
emergencies.</p>
<p><i>Patients Who Have Tendencies to Self-Mutilation.</i>—Some patients horribly
mutilate themselves. They may gouge out an eye, cut off a hand, pull out
their tongue, or even disembowel or dreadfully burn themselves. Some
patients persistently beat their heads against the wall or floor, others
scratch the skin, making large sores. Such patients frequently think
certain passages from the Scriptures apply to them, and they must obey the
application and command. They quote in justification of the acts, “An eye
for an eye,” “And if thy right eye offend thee, pluck it out,” “And if thy
right hand offend thee, cut it off.” Talk of this kind should make an
attendant very careful and watchful of the patient.</p>
<p>The origin of the ideas that lead to the attempts at self-mutilation is to
be found in delusions, and arise in the same way as do ideas of suicide
and homicide. These patients are all of the same class and need the same
character of care, attention, and watching.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59"></SPAN></span><i>Patients with Tendencies to Setting Things on Fire.</i>—Patients with these
tendencies generally desire to commit incendiary acts under the influence
of delusions or hallucinations; added to these there are frequently
suspicions and feelings of wrong treatment, and the patient takes this way
of showing revenge, or, as he may say, of repaying the wrong. Sometimes
patients are so feeble in mind that they light a fire because they think
it is a pretty sight to see it burn. There are some conditions
accompanying epilepsy where patients are liable to commit any of the class
of violent acts described in this chapter. The special care demanded by
these patients will be fully spoken of hereafter.</p>
<p>There are some patients whose minds are so distorted by disease that they
seem to take a pleasure in wrong-doing, and are much inclined to do great
mischief, and sometimes to commit acts against life or property.</p>
<p>The care demanded by patients who are inclined to acts of violence is
practically the same for all. The attendant should thoroughly know the
habits, peculiarities, and delusions of each person under his care; he
should exercise constant watchfulness, and remember that a moment of
thoughtless inattention may give the opportunity for a patient to commit
some violent act, that will cause him lasting regret. The mind of a
faithful attendant will, when upon duty, always be full of anxiety, and
there should be in the care of very troublesome patients of this class
frequent relief.</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
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