When it was established early in the twentieth century, Tokanui became part of a network of mental hospitals that were responsible for the care and confinement of the insane and the mentally deficient. At the time of its construction Tokanui was the first new mental hospital commissioned in over 20 years and the first to be built in the central North Island. Of those mental hospitals operating in 1912 all, except Ashburn Hall (the country's only private institution), were government controlled and funded. State dominance in the management of mental abnormality was the result of an unofficial policy which followed English precedent, favouring government intervention in the belief that it produced beneficial results and which endorsed the con...
This paper examines the interplay of commercial imperatives and health care legislation in the survi...
Objective: To review the way in which psychiatric patients were managed around the turn of the last ...
This paper examines the role of place in the positioning and survival of the contemporary private as...
This thesis considers the response of one New Zealand institution, Tokanui Mental Hospital, to legis...
Tokanui was the first hospital to be built entirely to the villa design, and as such, its physically...
Community treatment orders are considered a new development in mental health care and ar...
xi, 517 leaves, [59] leaves of plates :ill. ; 30 cm. Includes bibliographical references (p. 476-517...
Thousands of New Zealanders were treated in the nation’s mental hospitals in the late nineteenth and...
During the late 18th and early 19th century the mentally ill who were not considered dangerous or to...
This thesis examines anxieties about national fitness and efficiency in nineteenth-century New Zeala...
The deinstitutionalisation of mental healthcare has left New Zealand with more voluntary community h...
Mental deficiency policy remains a controversial topic within the wider history of institutional and...
The state´s responsibility for the health and well-being of the population was part of the developme...
This thesis began as a study of the Hospitals and Charitable Institutions Act of 1885, which provide...
This chapter is concerned with finding out about mental health patients - taking this term at the ou...
This paper examines the interplay of commercial imperatives and health care legislation in the survi...
Objective: To review the way in which psychiatric patients were managed around the turn of the last ...
This paper examines the role of place in the positioning and survival of the contemporary private as...
This thesis considers the response of one New Zealand institution, Tokanui Mental Hospital, to legis...
Tokanui was the first hospital to be built entirely to the villa design, and as such, its physically...
Community treatment orders are considered a new development in mental health care and ar...
xi, 517 leaves, [59] leaves of plates :ill. ; 30 cm. Includes bibliographical references (p. 476-517...
Thousands of New Zealanders were treated in the nation’s mental hospitals in the late nineteenth and...
During the late 18th and early 19th century the mentally ill who were not considered dangerous or to...
This thesis examines anxieties about national fitness and efficiency in nineteenth-century New Zeala...
The deinstitutionalisation of mental healthcare has left New Zealand with more voluntary community h...
Mental deficiency policy remains a controversial topic within the wider history of institutional and...
The state´s responsibility for the health and well-being of the population was part of the developme...
This thesis began as a study of the Hospitals and Charitable Institutions Act of 1885, which provide...
This chapter is concerned with finding out about mental health patients - taking this term at the ou...
This paper examines the interplay of commercial imperatives and health care legislation in the survi...
Objective: To review the way in which psychiatric patients were managed around the turn of the last ...
This paper examines the role of place in the positioning and survival of the contemporary private as...