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It's a classic paper. I have to say that things have changed since 1973 when it was published, largely because of introduction of DSM-III approach to diagnosis.Nope but someone today told me there's been a study by a psychiatrist that took like normal people and told them to pretend to be insane and they were admitted into inpatient units then when the people stopped acting insane they weren't discharged so it showed the psychiatrists are bad at telling the sane from insane and in a way discrediting the field since it seems so arbitrary...anyone know about this study/thoughts?
Nope but someone today told me there's been a study by a psychiatrist that took like normal people and told them to pretend to be insane and they were admitted into inpatient units then when the people stopped acting insane they weren't discharged so it showed the psychiatrists are bad at telling the sane from insane and in a way discrediting the field since it seems so arbitrary...anyone know about this study/thoughts?
Well, maybe not that interesting. Today it's very hard to remain hospitalized for 2 weeks when actively symptomatic, but not so back then. Also, the ability to fake symptoms isn't so unique to psychiatry. You could fake your way to a pair of glasses. You could fake all sorts of pains and neurological symptoms that would lead to extensive testing.Wow so they were kept over two weeks while not showing any symptoms?? That's very interesting...