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1

Massachusetts. Department of Mental Health. Department of Mental Health facts and figures. Boston, Mass: Dept. of Mental Health, 1998.

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2

Massachusetts. General Court. House of Representatives. Committee on Post Audit and Oversight. Special report: Department of Mental Health patient treatment. Boston]: General Court of Massachusetts, Committee on Post Audit and Oversight, Post Audit and Oversight Bureau, 1989.

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3

Massachusetts. General Court. Senate. Committee on Post Audit and Oversight. Analysis of fiscal year 1989 Department of Mental Health allocations. Boston, Mass: The Bureau, 1990.

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4

Massachusetts. Department of Mental Health. Transition plan for the separation of the Department of Mental Health. Boston, Mass: Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Executive Office of Human Services, Dept. of Mental Health, 1987.

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5

Massachusetts. General Court. House of Representatives. Post Audit and Oversight Bureau. Preliminary review: Department of Mental Health client deaths and investigations. Boston, Mass: General Court of Massachusetts, House Committee on Post Audit and Oversight and the Post Audit and Oversight Bureau, 1997.

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6

Massachusetts. Dept. of Mental Retardation. Investigations Advisory Panel. Investigations Advisory Panel report for the Department of Mental Retardation. [Boston, Mass: Investigations Advisory Panel, Dept. of Mental Retardation], 1998.

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7

Massachusetts. General Court. Joint Special Commission on the Division of the Dept. of Mental Health. A report of the Joint Special Commission on the Division of the Department of Mental Health. Boston: The Commission, 1987.

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8

Massachusetts. Department of Mental Health. The Massachusetts Department of Mental Health plan to combat the stigma associated with mental illness. Boston]: The Dept., 1988.

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9

Taskforce, Critical Incident Reporting. Report on Massachusetts Department of Mental Health service recipient mortality (1991-1993). [Cambridge, Mass: Human Services Research Institute, 1996.

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10

Massachusetts. Department of the State Auditor. Independent State Auditor's report on the administration and oversight by the Departments of Public Health, Mental Health, and Mental Retardation of the Medication Administration Program at 48 community residences and 12 human service providers. Boston, Mass: Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Auditor of the Commonwealth, 2001.

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11

Massachusetts. Governor's Commission on Mental Retardation. Strategies for reducing the waiting list for services from the Department of Mental Retardation in Massachusetts: Report to Governor William F. Weld. Boston, MA: The Commission, 1994.

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12

Massachusetts. General Court. Senate. Committee on Post Audit and Oversight. Analysis of fiscal year, 1989: Department of Mental Health Allocations : a report of the Senate Committee on Post Audit and Oversight. Boston, Mass. (State House, Room 312, Boston 02133): The Bureau, 1990.

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13

Massachusetts. Department of the State Auditor. Report on the use of "03" consultants in the Departments of Mental Health, Public Welfare, and Social Services, July 1, 1984 to June 30, 1986. Boston: Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Auditor of the Commonwealth, 1987.

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14

Massachusetts. Department of Mental Health. Equity analysis. [Boston, Mass.]: The Dept., 1996.

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15

Commission, Massachusetts Performance Enhancement. Performance Enhancement Commission interim report to the legislature. [Boston, Mass.]: Performance Enhancement Commission, 1998.

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16

Massachusetts. General Court. House of Representatives. Post Audit and Oversight Bureau. Report on the Massachusetts Department of Mental Retardation: An investigation by the House of Representatives Post Audit and Oversight Bureau, including, "Are you sure about this guy?" : an analysis of the abuse of two mentally retarded men in Raynham, Massachusetts. [Boston, Mass.]: House Committee on Post Audit and the Post Audit and Oversight Bureau, 1997.

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17

Massachusetts. Department of Mental Health. Consumer accounting and billing system business requirements. [Boston, Mass.]: The Dept., 1996.

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18

1935-, Cassem Ned H., and Massachusetts General Hospital, eds. Massachusetts General Hospital handbook of general hospital psychiatry. 3rd ed. St. Louis: Mosby Year Book, 1991.

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19

Maryland. Dept. of Health and Mental Hygiene. Maryland nutritional surveillance feasibility study: Report to the General Assembly, October 10, 1985 from the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. [Baltimore, Md.]: The Department, 1985.

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20

M, Prager Laura. Suicide by security blanket, and other stories from the child psychiatric emergency department: Understanding children with acute mental disorders. Santa Barbara, California: Praeger, 2012.

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21

Georgia. Department of Audits and Accounts. Healthcare Audits Division. Phase I study results of the Community Service Board (CSB) Service Delivery System administered by the Georgia Department of Human Resources. Atlanta, GA: Dept. of Audits and Accounts, Healthcare Audits Division, 2004.

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22

Georgia. Department of Audits and Accounts. Healthcare Audits Division. Phase II study results of the Community Service Board (CSB) Service Delivery System administered by the Georgia Department of Human Resources. Atlanta, GA: Dept. of Audits and Accounts, Healthcare Audits Division, 2005.

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23

Conner, Geraldine L. Current assessment and projections of human services needed by severely disabled mentally ill adults and children, Commonwealth of Massachusetts Department of Mental Health, Region IV: 1989-1993. [Massachusetts]: HSRA, 1989.

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24

Massachusetts Department of Mental D. Bulletin of the Massachusetts Department of Mental Diseases; 18. Legare Street Press, 2021.

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25

Bulletin of the Massachusetts Department of Mental Diseases; v.14. Legare Street Press, 2021.

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26

Massachusetts. General Court. House of Representatives. Post Audit and Oversight Bureau., ed. The Department of Mental Retardation: Preliminary report. Boston, Mass: Commonwealth of Massachusetts, House of Representatives, House Post Audit and Oversight Bureau, 1994.

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27

Beowulf. Bulletin Of The Massachusetts Commission On Mental Diseases, Volume 1. Arkose Press, 2015.

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28

Annual Report of the Massachusetts Commission On Mental Diseases of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Nabu Press, 2010.

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29

The DMR Investigations Division: A critical review. Boston, Mass: The Office, 1992.

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30

1928-, Hackett Thomas P., Cassem Ned H. 1935-, and Massachusetts General Hospital, eds. Massachusetts General Hospital handbook of general hospital psychiatry. 2nd ed. Littleton, Mass: PSG Pub. Co., 1987.

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31

Tilney, Frederick, and Columbia University Dept of Neurology. Neurological Bulletin: Clinical Studies of Nervous and Mental Diseases in the Neurological Department of Columbia University; Volume 3. Franklin Classics Trade Press, 2018.

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32

Kenny, Patrick Edward. TO KNOW AND TO SERVE: THE HISTORY OF THE PENNSYLVANIA HOSPITAL TRAINING SCHOOL FOR MALE NURSES OF THE DEPARTMENT FOR MENTAL AND NERVOUS DISEASES, 1914-1965. 1994.

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33

Kahn, Richard J. Diseases in the District of Maine 1772 - 1820. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190053253.001.0001.

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This previously unpublished primary source allows modern readers to reimagine medicine as practiced two hundred years ago by a rural physician in New England through his case histories, correspondence, biographical sketches, and personal commentary. Throughout his fifty-year practice, beginning with a preceptorship in Hingham, Massachusetts, Jeremiah Barker documented his constant efforts to keep up with and contribute to the medical literature in a changing medical landscape, as practice and authority shifted from historical to scientific methods. He performed experiments and autopsies, became interested in the new chemistry of Lavoisier, risked scorn in his use of alkaline remedies, studied epidemic fever and approaches to bloodletting, and struggled to understand epidemic fever, childbed fever, cancer, public health, consumption, mental illness, and the “dangers of spirituous liquors.” He corresponded with luminaries such as Benjamin Rush, Samuel Mitchill, and Lyman Spalding, and he published several articles in the first US medical journal, the Medical Repository. Perhaps many rural physicians practiced at this level, but few such written records have survived. Barker’s rare transcribed manuscript, never before published, is presented in its entirety with extensive annotations, a five-chapter introduction to contextualize the work, and a glossary to make it accessible to twenty-first-century general readers, genealogists, students, and historians.
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34

Essential facts about Covid-19: the disease, the responses, and an uncertain future. For South African learners, teachers, and the general public. Academy of Science of South Africa (ASSAf), 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.17159/assaf.2021/0072.

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The first cases of a new coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) were identified toward the end of 2019 in Wuhan, China. Over the following months, this virus spread to everywhere in the world. By now no country has been spared the devastation from the loss of lives from the disease (Covid-19) and the economic and social impacts of responses to mitigate the impact of the virus. Our lives in South Africa have been turned upside down as we try to make the best of this bad situation. The 2020 school year was disrupted with closure and then reopening in a phased approach, as stipulated by the Department of Education. This booklet is a collective effort by academics who are Members of the Academy of Science of South Africa (ASSAf) and other invited scholars to help you appreciate some of the basic scientific facts that you need to know in order to understand the present crisis and the various options available to respond to it. We emphasise that the threat of infectious diseases is not an entirely new phenomenon that has sprung onto the stage out of nowhere. Infectious diseases and pandemics have been with us for centuries, in fact much longer. Scientists have warned us for years of the need to prepare for the next pandemic. Progress in medicine in the course of the 20th century has been formidable. Childhood mortality has greatly decreased almost everywhere in the world, thanks mainly, but not only, to the many vaccines that have been developed. Effective drugs now exist for many deadly diseases for which there were once no cures. For many of us, this progress has generated a false sense of security. It has caused us to believe that the likes of the 1918 ‘Spanish flu’ pandemic, which caused some 50 million deaths around the world within a span of a few months, could not be repeated in some form in today’s modern world. The Covid-19 pandemic reminds us that as new cures for old diseases are discovered, new diseases come along for which we are unprepared. And every hundred or so years one of these diseases wreaks havoc on the world and interferes severely with our usual ways of going about our lives. Today’s world has become increasingly interconnected and interdependent, through trade, migrations, and rapid air travel. This globalisation makes it easier for epidemics to spread, somewhat offsetting the power of modern medicine. In this booklet we have endeavoured to provide an historical perspective, and to enrich your knowledge with some of the basics of medicine, viruses, and epidemiology. Beyond the immediate Covid-19 crisis, South Africa faces a number of other major health challenges: highly unequal access to quality healthcare, widespread tuberculosis, HIV infection causing AIDS, a high prevalence of mental illness, and a low life expectancy, compared to what is possible with today’s medicine. It is essential that you, as young people, also learn about the nature of these new challenges, so that you may contribute to finding future solutions.
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