Morton Birnbaum

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Morton_Birnbaum an entity of type: Thing

مورتون بيرنبوم (بالإنجليزية: Morton Birnbaum)‏ هو طبيب نفسي ومحامي أمريكي، ولد في 20 أكتوبر 1926 في بروكلين في الولايات المتحدة، وتوفي بنفس المكان في 26 نوفمبر 2005. rdf:langString
Morton Birnbaum (October 20, 1926 – November 26, 2005) was an American lawyer and physician who advocated for the right of psychiatric patients to have adequate, humane care, and who coined the term sanism. rdf:langString
rdf:langString مورتون بيرنبوم
rdf:langString Morton Birnbaum
rdf:langString Morton Birnbaum
rdf:langString Morton Birnbaum
xsd:date 2005-11-26
xsd:date 1926-10-26
xsd:integer 40192817
xsd:integer 1093448243
rdf:langString New York Medical College, M.D.
rdf:langString Columbia University JD, Doctorate, Legal Jurisprudence
xsd:date 1926-10-26
xsd:date 2005-11-26
rdf:langString right to treatment doctrine
rdf:langString Advocating for the right of psychiatric patients to have adequate, humane care
rdf:langString مورتون بيرنبوم (بالإنجليزية: Morton Birnbaum)‏ هو طبيب نفسي ومحامي أمريكي، ولد في 20 أكتوبر 1926 في بروكلين في الولايات المتحدة، وتوفي بنفس المكان في 26 نوفمبر 2005.
rdf:langString Morton Birnbaum (October 20, 1926 – November 26, 2005) was an American lawyer and physician who advocated for the right of psychiatric patients to have adequate, humane care, and who coined the term sanism. His seminal paper on "The Right To Treatment" appeared in 1960 in the American Bar Association Journal, marking the first published use of the term sanism to describe a form of discrimination against the mentally ill. His "right to treatment" concept primarily addressed the legal right of 'mentally ill' patients who were involuntarily confined to receive appropriate care. He went as far as suggesting that if suitable treatment was not provided then the person should be entitled to be released, even if this presented a risk to themselves and others. It was his belief that this practice was the only way to ensure public opinion would demand suitable treatment be made available. Over a period of two years, fifty publications refused the paper. It was not published by a psychiatric journal until 1965. At the time, public mental hospitals were warehousing large numbers of patients, often without significant treatment efforts or qualified treatment staff.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 19121

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