Therapeutic Response and Length of Hospitalization of Psychiatrically III Veterans

2017 
Some special features of veterans have already attracted psychiatric attention. Adler and Gates1 concluded that the veteran patient perceives and exploits the collective guilt of the community over "sacrificing its sons" which is reflected in the compensation system, and that he becomes the "querulous recipient of benevolent care." Brown 2 described the Veterans Administration as a "protective parent figure," encouraging dependency and lengthy hospitalization, and reported that non-service-connected patients recover more rapidly and in greater numbers than those receiving compensation. In the hospital which was the locus of the present investigation, patients tended to use their selfgovernment organization as a means of organizing defensive hostility to protect themselves against the threat of losing some passive-dependent gratifications.3 The present investigation grew from the observation that patients on the open psychiatric wards of a Veterans Administration general hospital could be roughly divided into two groups : the chronic complainers, who were often involved in crises, and the good hospital citizens. It was aimed at answering two questions : 1. Can the length of the patient's hospitalization or his response to treatment be related to his membership in one of these groups or to other identifiable items of past history or current behavior? 2. Does veteran's status and all that it implies influence the course of a patient's hospitalization?
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