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The Ridges,Lobotomy Experiments In Ohio

Taosman

Your Cousin In New Mexxico
Recently, a friend told me of her seeing lobotomized people in southern Ohio while she worked for VISTA in southern Ohio (Athens area) in the 60s.
I had never heard of this and was shocked. According to her, poor families pimped their family members who had a mental disability or were just troubled kids, out to The Ridges for a price. There they were "experimented" upon.

The Ridges, Athens Mental Health Center
http://www.forgottenoh.com/Ridges/ridges.html
 
Taosman;2171385; said:
Recently, a friend told me of her seeing lobotomized people in southern Ohio while she worked for VISTA in southern Ohio (Athens area) in the 60s.
I had never heard of this and was shocked. According to her, poor families pimped their family members who had a mental disability or were just troubled kids, out to The Ridges for a price. There they were "experimented" upon.

The Ridges, Athens Mental Health Center
http://www.forgottenoh.com/Ridges/ridges.html


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosemary_Kennedy
Very common during the late 50's-70's. There just wasn't the therapy to train and assist those individuals.
 
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A description of a lobotomy:

The Straight Dope said:
Finally, there's "-otomy," (or "-tomy"), which means to slice it up, i.e., an operation in which cutting is involved. Thus we can distinguish a lobectomy, in which a lobe, typically of the brain, is removed, from a lobotomy, in which they merely jab an ice pick in there and chop things up.

I'm not kidding, either. You might want to read an engrossing volume entitled Great and Desperate Cures: The Rise and Decline of Psychosurgery and Other Radical Treatments for Mental Illness, by Elliott Valenstein (1986). Valenstein quotes a letter written in the mid-1940s by one prominent lobotomist, Walter Freeman:

Walter Freeman said:
I have also been trying out a sort of half-way stage between electroshock and prefrontal lobotomy [to treat mental patients]. ? This consists of knocking them out with a shock and while they are under the 'anesthetic' thrusting an ice pick up between the eyeball and the eyelid through the roof of the orbit [the bony cavity that contains the eye] actually into the frontal lobe of the brain and making the lateral cut by swinging the thing from side to side. I have done two patients on both sides and another on one side without running into any complications, except a very black eye in one case. There may be trouble later on but it seemed fairly easy, although definitely a disagreeable thing to watch. It remains to be seen how these cases hold up, but so far they have shown considerable relief of their symptoms, and only some of the minor behavior difficulties that follow lobotomy. [That is, prefrontal lobotomy, which typically involved boring holes through the front of the skull. The ice pick operation is called a "transorbital lobotomy."] They can even get up and go home within an hour or so. If this works out it will be a great advance for people who are too bad for shock but not bad enough for surgery.
Freeman went around the country in the late 1940s demonstrating this technique in mental hospitals. These exhibitions reportedly went well for the most part, except on those occasions when the patient bled too much or the ice pick broke off within the orbit or inside the skull. To remedy this problem, the ice pick was later replaced with a sturdier instrument and an ordinary carpenter's hammer was used to drive it into the brain.

The first lobotomy in the United States took place on September 14, 1936. By August 15, 1949, the procedure had been performed 10,706 times. In the mid-1950s the popularity of the operation waned due to the availability of psychotropic drugs, which offered similar benefits without the trauma. One hopes today the practice is extinct, but you never know.

From Cecil Adams' The Straight Dope, which was the place to get obscure information prior to the advent of the Internet.
 
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While I was in grad school in Athens I spent a lot of time riding my motorcycle in the countryside (some of the best riding / driving roads I've every found FTR) and one of the places that I always enjoyed putting through was The Ridges. Absolutely beautiful grounds up there. Spooky as all FSCK knowing the stories and all, but beautiful nonetheless.
 
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