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Austen Riggs Center

Austen Riggs Center
Austen Riggs Center Main Campus
Geography
Location , Massachusetts, Berkshire County, Massachusetts, United States
Coordinates 42°16′59.1″N 73°18′47.9″W / 42.283083°N 73.313306°W / 42.283083; -73.313306Coordinates: 42°16′59.1″N 73°18′47.9″W / 42.283083°N 73.313306°W / 42.283083; -73.313306
Organization
Funding Non-profit hospital
Hospital type Specialist
Affiliated university Cambridge Health Alliance, Yale Child Study Center, Yale University School of Medicine
Services
Standards Joint Commission
Beds 74
Speciality Open psychiatric care center
History
Founded 1913
Links
Website http://www.austenriggs.org/
Lists Hospitals in Massachusetts

The Austen Riggs Center is a psychiatric treatment facility founded in 1913 in .

A New York City internist who repaired to Stockbridge, MA while suffering from tuberculosis, Austen Fox Riggs developed a treatment regimen that both anticipated the rise of psychosomatic medicine and therapeutic psychology, and forged a new direction for residential care.

Riggs was influenced by the mental hygiene movement (also known as the social hygiene movement). He developed his residential model after observing a physician in Bethel, Maine named John George Gehring, who treated patients through strict daily regimens and treatments through suggestion.

Opened in 1913 as The Stockbridge Institute for the Study and Treatment of the Psychoneuroses, the Institute incorporated in 1919 as the Austen Riggs Foundation. Riggs grew quickly; it had 100 patients by 1924, with average stays of four to six weeks. A staff of doctors handled no more than 10 patients each, and physicians in training joined regular staff meetings and conferences. A series of "green books" summed up Riggs's "precepts for successful living" and an associate from the 1930s said that patients were encouraged to be "a valuable member of a united team."

Riggs had what a colleague described as a "deep and almost Puritanic conviction that feeling must be kept under constant surveillance and control by doing." His hospital had an occupational therapy shop equipped for weaving, carpentry, painting, and other handicrafts, and rooms for games and recreation. Riggs also had what he called "10 commandments" of successful living.

Though he denounced what he called Freud's "mental gymnastics," and criticized the Vienna doctors' emphasis on sexual conflicts as the root of neurosis, Riggs's practices bore commonalities with the emerging field of psychoanalysis. He believed neurotics to be troubled by the "residues of past experience," and that they would heal in part by self-knowledge and adaptation to practical realities. Where Freud spoke of defense mechanisms, Riggs once said that a patient "cannot be deprived of the protection of his neuroses." Where Freud spoke of coming to grips with the ordinary unhappiness of the world, Riggs spoke of the problem of "magnifying suffering by making a personal quarrel with pain." The American Journal of Psychiatry has called Riggs' system "a fully integrated conceptual system of ego psychology" that preceded Sigmund Freud's attention to the field by ten years. Riggs also read Freud in the original German, as well as Pierre Janet and Jean-Martin Charcot in French.


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