The Impact of Normal Volunteers on a Psychiatric Research Unit
Abstract
Normal subjects were admitted to a psychiatric unit devoted to the study and treatment of affective illness. Initially the authors were concerned about the difficulties volunteers might have living with psychiatric patients. However, the volunteers adjusted with relative ease, while the patients’ depressive symptoms were exacerbated. Their confrontation with the volunteers’ “normality” triggered an acute awareness of their underlying sense of failure. This response is analogous to depressed patients’ reactions before discharge, when they struggle not only with their special vulnerability to separation and loss but with inevitable challenges to their fragile self-esteem during reintegration into the outside world. The presence of normal volunteers highlighted these issues and led to increased therapeutic work and considerable resolution.
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