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9 Prison J. 1 (1929)

handle is hein.journals/prsjrnl9 and id is 1 raw text is: 









                              THE


      PRISON JOURNAL
            DEVOTED   TO THE  SCIENCE OF PENOLOGY
                       Published Quarterly by
            THE  PENNSYLVANIA PRISON SOCIETY
                         (Organised 1787)
                811 South Juniper St., Philadelphia, Pa.

This Number  (Twenty Cents)                   Fifty Cents a Year


                 THE  VALUE   OF  PSYCHIATRY
Address before Pennsylvania Prison Society at the Annual Meeting,
                       January 10th, 1929
                 WINFRED OVERHoLsER, M.D., Director
           Division for Examination of Prisoners, Boston, Mass.
    Surely, although sometimes in appearance, slowly, penology is
making  progress. A mass-treatment of offenders is giving way to a
method of dealing with the law-breaker which considers the actor more
than the act, which makes an attempt to understand the offender and
to deal with him in accordance with his needs and possibilities.
    In any consistent attempt to individualize penal correctional treat-
ment  psychiatry plays an important, not to say indispensable, part,
as the specialty of medicine which deals with mental processes and
with conduct (which, after all, is always the result of mental activity
of some sort.)
    As one index of the extent, to which the value of psychiatry as an
aid to courts and penal institutions, may be mentioned the results of
the National Crime Commission's recent survey of the country. Of
1168 criminal courts which replied to a questionnaire, 110 or 9.4%
reported themselves as employing regularly a psychiatrist or a psy-
chiatrist or a psychiatric clinic. Of these courts, 10 were located in
Pennsylvania. The  comments  made  by the Judges on the value of
Psychiatric advice to them as an aid in disposition were overwhelm-
ingly favorable. As an interesting evidence of the recency of develop-
ment  of psychiatry as a court adjunct may be cited the fact that
Psychiatric service in over half of the courts reporting has been in-
stituted since 1921.


VOLUME IX,   No. 1


JANUARY,   1929

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