Adjusting for population growth, the number of people in public psychiatric hospitals fell from a 1955-equivalent 885,010 to 71,619 by 1994—about a 92% decline. This reframes deinstitutionalization not just as moving patients out but as a permanent removal of bed capacity at national scale.
— It sets a clear baseline for current policy arguments about rebuilding psychiatric infrastructure, civil commitment, and the mental health–homelessness nexus.
2026.01.05
95% relevant
The Wikipedia entry recounts the two waves of deinstitutionalization, Willowbrook exposures, the 1946 NIMH law, and state policy drivers—providing the historical and causal background that underlies the existing idea that U.S. public psychiatric bed capacity collapsed (~92% decline) and produced long‑run service and safety tradeoffs.
2025.12.08
100% relevant
Torrey’s calculation comparing 1955 inpatient census (558,239 with a 164M U.S. population) to a 1994 population‑adjusted equivalent of 885,010 versus the actual 71,619.
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