Deinstitutionalization second time around – What can we learn from the psychiatric experience?

This historical opinion article draws parallels between mid-20th-century psychiatric deinstitutionalization and today's rapid expansion of home-based medical care. While psychiatric conditions differ fundamentally from acute medical illnesses, lessons from deinstitutionalization can inform curr...

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Main Authors: Uri Manor, Gad Segal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2025-07-01
Series:Digital Health
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/20552076251360921
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author Uri Manor
Gad Segal
author_facet Uri Manor
Gad Segal
author_sort Uri Manor
collection DOAJ
description This historical opinion article draws parallels between mid-20th-century psychiatric deinstitutionalization and today's rapid expansion of home-based medical care. While psychiatric conditions differ fundamentally from acute medical illnesses, lessons from deinstitutionalization can inform current and future telemedicine models. Deinstitutionalization resulted from social, legal, and pharmaceutical advances but also produced unforeseen consequences, including increased incarceration, homelessness, medication misuse, and significant family burden. Similarly, shifting acute care to the home may expose patients and caregivers to new stresses: elevated risk of medical complications, uneven access to technology, cost-shifting, and the potential neglect of those most vulnerable or socially disadvantaged. Historical patterns show that successful community-based care demands strong infrastructure, equitable resource allocation, and thorough patient selection. This manuscript urges stakeholders to heed these lessons and build robust, multidisciplinary, and family-centered systems to support patients transitioning to home care. With proper planning, the current dehospitalization process can achieve its promise of high-quality, cost-effective care without repeating the pitfalls of past reforms.
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spelling doaj-art-c3ceacdf022e433ab3e060898070fd072025-08-20T03:08:33ZengSAGE PublishingDigital Health2055-20762025-07-011110.1177/20552076251360921Deinstitutionalization second time around – What can we learn from the psychiatric experience?Uri Manor0Gad Segal1 Management Wing, Sheba Medical Center, Tel HaShomer, Israel Gray Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, IsraelThis historical opinion article draws parallels between mid-20th-century psychiatric deinstitutionalization and today's rapid expansion of home-based medical care. While psychiatric conditions differ fundamentally from acute medical illnesses, lessons from deinstitutionalization can inform current and future telemedicine models. Deinstitutionalization resulted from social, legal, and pharmaceutical advances but also produced unforeseen consequences, including increased incarceration, homelessness, medication misuse, and significant family burden. Similarly, shifting acute care to the home may expose patients and caregivers to new stresses: elevated risk of medical complications, uneven access to technology, cost-shifting, and the potential neglect of those most vulnerable or socially disadvantaged. Historical patterns show that successful community-based care demands strong infrastructure, equitable resource allocation, and thorough patient selection. This manuscript urges stakeholders to heed these lessons and build robust, multidisciplinary, and family-centered systems to support patients transitioning to home care. With proper planning, the current dehospitalization process can achieve its promise of high-quality, cost-effective care without repeating the pitfalls of past reforms.https://doi.org/10.1177/20552076251360921
spellingShingle Uri Manor
Gad Segal
Deinstitutionalization second time around – What can we learn from the psychiatric experience?
Digital Health
title Deinstitutionalization second time around – What can we learn from the psychiatric experience?
title_full Deinstitutionalization second time around – What can we learn from the psychiatric experience?
title_fullStr Deinstitutionalization second time around – What can we learn from the psychiatric experience?
title_full_unstemmed Deinstitutionalization second time around – What can we learn from the psychiatric experience?
title_short Deinstitutionalization second time around – What can we learn from the psychiatric experience?
title_sort deinstitutionalization second time around what can we learn from the psychiatric experience
url https://doi.org/10.1177/20552076251360921
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