The Rosenhan Experiment
I haven’t seen any links to this on Lesswrong yet, and I just discovered it myself. It’s extremely interesting, and has a lot of implications for how the way that people perceive and think of others are largely determined by their environmental context. It’s also a fairly good indict of presumably common psychiatric practices, although it’s also presumably outdated by now. Maybe some of you are already familiar with it, but I thought I’d mention it and post a link for those of you who aren’t.
There’s probably newer research on this, but I don’t have time to investigate it at the moment.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosenhan_experiment
Conducting an important scientific experiment, teaching a painful lesson to those who challenge your authority, and showing your good sense of humor. Without any work whatsoever. It must have felt good.
A good post to raise a toast to the recently departed Dr. Thomas Szasz.
Note that 1973 was a long time ago, and that the deinstitutionalization movement got a significant boost in support from the Rosenhan experiment. I imagine things are different now, although diagnostic criteria for mental illness are still primitive at best.
Things are not entirely different.
Here’s another one
(Note that the main thing you’ll find when you search for replications is Lauren Slater’s book. Don’t trust it; she won’t share any evidence and has a history of lying).
First link: Patients were psychiatric nurses, faking specific illnesses during their whole stay. (Rosenhan had various people faking atypical symptoms until admission.) Doctors believing them aren’t to blame.
Agrees with my experience. A computer for patients and access to Crazy Meds help, but I don’t know an easy fix for less geeky patients.
Second link: That’s a pretty good test. However, the doctors were shown patients who had been treated and were doing well. It’s harder to diagnose short-sightedness if your patient is wearing contact lenses.
So neither of these tests are nearly as stringent as Rosenhan’s.
Things may in fact be better now; however, based on an experience I had approximately ten years ago, they are not substantially better, and certainly not good enough. The patient in my anecdotal evidence was only freed upon the same conditions as those in the Rosenhan experiment, and the behaviour of the staff and doctors was spot on. If anything, the patient left the institution with more problems than she entered with.
Staff behavior is easiest to judge (patients can’t see hospital notes, and if you’re not faking you can’t judge the diagnosis much). Here’s my experience in the acute psychiatric wing of a Swedish public hospital:
I am not psychotic (as far as I know, ha) but had a symptom a few years back that I mentioned when asked. (I think they screen everyone for psychosis.) They focused on that a lot, but did not medicate me for it.
I was voluntarily hospitalized. I don’t know if demanding to leave would have worked. I was able to get day permissions and then released basically by being visibly happy then telling doctors so.
Nobody asked me to self-diagnose!
That one’s true—medication (not antipsychotics in my case) was not optional.
Taking meds is the only time we were actively watched (except for patients on suicide watch).
Nuh-uh.
30 minutes every weekday morning with two doctors and a nurse, in a private room. I think this is standard procedure in Sweden.
They have to be better along the “how long were they detained?” axis because for decades there were about 40% less asylum beds than there had been previously. I think it’s likely that the underlying thought processes and biases- i.e. normal people looking crazy enough to diagnose if you already think they’re crazy- are not significantly different, and that’s what most people care about anyway. (Being able to convince a doctor that I’m sane is more important to me than whether it takes 2 days or 19!)
Why is that? That’s the case if you need psychiatric certification for a job or a medical procedure or something. But generally, being locked up somewhere people can make you take arbitrary medication is bad, and grows worse over time (medication kicking in and unsafe to quit too quickly, effects of detention, damage to your outside life), whereas a piece of paper telling you to take some medication can be ignored. Is there something I’m missing, like insurance premiums?
My preference ordering:
Declared sane and released after 2 days > declared sane and released after 19 days > declared insane and released after 2 days > declared insane and released after 19 days.
I agree that some people might switch the ordering of the second and third outcomes.
I understand that’s your preference ordering, I’m asking why you find being declared insane worse than 17 days of captivity.
My type 1 systems expect the total discounted long-term costs to be higher. My type 2 systems aren’t prepared to do the calculation themselves and are having trouble coming up with justifications, but it seems like self-image and social standing are the most visible concerns.
Some clippings from my personal document on the experiment:
http://frontierpsychiatrist.co.uk/the-rosenhan-experiment-examined/ (Counter-arguing the conclusions)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosenhan_experiment#Impact_and_controversy (The wikipedia article seems a bit biased in that it omits many of the counterarguments.)
(I’m staring a blog soon and the other portions of the document are quite cryptic at this point.)
Link the first:
Agree that if all Rosenhan had observed was “discharged with an ‘in remission’ diagnosis” that would prove hospitals can detect sanity well. But the stays were long—maybe psychosis is much sneakier than depression or hypomania and requires longer observation? And Rosenhan observed more—accepting treatment and agreeing with diagnoses as conditions for release, for example.
Not sure what difference that makes in practice.
Okay for the nurse report mentioning “engages in writing behaviour”, though I’d like to know what is reported in that weird style and what isn’t. But how about ” A group of bored patients waiting outside the cafeteria for lunch early were said by a doctor to his students to be experiencing “oral-acquisitive” psychiatric symptoms.”?
Yup. I don’t think that’s bad if beds aren’t scarce. It’s only bad if patients aren’t released easily.
How about referring the patient to someone who knows more about schizophrenia, and can decide if the diagnosis and hospital stay are needed?
Oh, excuse me, I didn’t realize the study was supposed to apply to faking experimenters. I thought it was about misdiagnosed patients who figure clamoring they’re sane won’t help, and might believe the diagnosis.
Good point, but no one’s criticizing admission, they’re criticizing
which pretty much implies that hospitals’ function is to lock away loonies, not treat them.
Again, if it’s not fulfilling its purpose in practice, who cares?
It’s not hard to describe those in terms of behavior. Most likely the benefit is that diagnosing patients would require actually examining them.
There wasn’t that much variation in outcomes, but fine, do a replication.
Overall, this picks some valid nits, but sweeps most interesting data under the carpet. An average of 19 days to notice someone has no symptoms is not negligible!
Link the second:
Also, doctors sometimes have to detect malingering outside of experiments.
Yvain does:
Thanks for spending the time to respond point by point. I’d love to do the same, but this thread would become a bit unwieldy. However, of all the argument mapping software I’ve looked at, this one seems to be the best: http://workflowy.com/
I transferred your points and counter-points into this and then responded to a few of them (I’ll finish responding when I’ve got a bit more time):
This document can be edited by anybody with this link, so please feel free to chime in. As I mentioned earlier, I’m starting a blog. The goal being to crowdsource ideas on how to make better argument mapping software from the LW community (rather than having discussion isolated to scattered posts). A huge part of this is sketching out example argument maps like the one aove.
For the most part, I agree with the sentiment expressed by Rosenhan. In fact, I agreed so much that I failed (I blame wikipedia :) ) to look at counter-arguments until recently as part of an effort to re-examine my old beliefs and formalize them into argument maps. Thanks for posting this. I wouldn’t have been motivated to formalize this into bullet points otherwise.
Did someone delete all of your arguments? I got there, and nothing was there. Maybe I’m doing something wrong and so I can’t see what you’re talking about?
I just checked, and nobody deleted all of my arguments. If you click on this link:
https://workflowy.com/shared/c9e57ddb-d684-ede5-0511-8b8d11c561e0/
I still see nothing.
Do you see the “meta” note that I made on there?
I do see your meta comment… I’m not sure what you mean by it though.
I mean that by separating the pro and con arguments it becomes more difficult to trace the lines of argument and counterargument. Rebuttals are harder to follow if you have to sort through a list of bullet points to find the one that’s relevant to them.
I also made the comment to test whether or not you could see my comments. You can. That probably means that I’m doing something wrong or that you’re writing in some equivalent of invisible e-ink. I can’t think what I might be doing wrong though. I’m not too concerned about seeing the site though, so don’t worry about it.