Babini Valeria Paola
Department of Philosophy and Communication, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy.
J Nerv Ment Dis. 2014 Jun;202(6):428-31. doi: 10.1097/NMD.0000000000000140.
Italian psychiatry is usually renowned for the radical anti-institutional movement and the Reform Law of 1978, which requires a historical analysis to understand. In the 1960s, Italian psychiatric culture had reached a deadlock because of its obsolete biological, strictly neuroanatomical, explanatory approach (so-called organicism) postulated by academic institutions and awkwardly implemented in asylum practice. One prominent figure in shaping this philosophy was Cesare Lombroso, internationally known as the father of criminal anthropology. This attitude became sharper and more oppressive during the Fascist regime, where international exchanges and collaboration were discouraged when not repressed. Thus, anachronistic was the situation in the 1960s that the anti-institutional movement founded and led by Franco Basaglia swept professionals, politicians, and public opinion in its wake. What, in most countries, took the form of gradual reform became a radical reaction in Italy and, in less than 20 years, turned one of the most deprived institutional systems into the most radical community mental health care system in the world.
意大利精神病学通常因激进的反机构运动和1978年的改革法而闻名,这需要进行历史分析才能理解。在20世纪60年代,意大利的精神病学文化陷入了僵局,因为学术机构所假定的过时的生物学、严格的神经解剖学解释方法(所谓的有机主义)在精神病院实践中笨拙地实施。塑造这种理念的一位杰出人物是切萨雷·龙勃罗梭,他在国际上被誉为犯罪人类学之父。在法西斯政权期间,这种态度变得更加尖锐和压迫性,当时国际交流与合作即使不被压制也受到阻碍。因此,20世纪60年代的情况是如此不合时宜,以至于由弗朗哥·巴萨利亚发起并领导的反机构运动席卷了专业人士、政治家和公众舆论。在大多数国家以渐进改革形式出现的事情,在意大利却变成了激进的反应,并且在不到20年的时间里,将最匮乏的机构系统之一变成了世界上最激进的社区精神卫生保健系统。