Menninger Foundation
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The Menninger Foundation was founded in 1919 by the Menninger family in Topeka, Kansas. The Menninger Foundation, known locally as Menninger's, consists of a clinic, a sanatorium, and a school of psychiatry, all of which bear the Menninger name. Menninger's consisted of a campus at 5800 S.W. 6th Avenue in Topeka, Kansas which included a pool as well as the other aforementioned buildings. In 2003, the Menninger Clinic moved to Houston. The foundation was started in 1919 by Dr. Charles F. Menninger and his sons, Drs. Karl and William Menninger. It represented the first group psychiatry practice. "We had a vision," Dr. C. F. Menninger said, "of a better kind of medicine and a better kind of world."
History
The Menninger Clinic, also known as the C. F. Menninger Memorial Hospital,[1] was founded in the 1920s in Topeka, Kansas.[2] The Menninger Sanitarium was founded in 1925.[3] The Menninger Clinic established the Southard School for children in 1926. The school fostered treatment programs for children and adolescents that were recognized worldwide. In the 1930s the Menningers expanded training programs for psychiatrists, psychologists, and other mental health professionals.
The Menninger Foundation was established in 1941. The Menninger School of Psychiatry was established in 1946. It quickly became the largest training center in the country, driven by the country's demand for psychiatrists to treat military veterans.
Menninger announced its affiliation with
Moves
The Menninger Clinic moved in June 2003 from
Current facilities
As of May 2012, The Menninger Clinic offers: Adolescent Treatment Program,[5] a Professionals Program,[6] the Compass Program for Young Adults,[7] the Comprehensive Psychiatric Assessment & Stabilization Program,[8] an Assessments Service[9] and the Hope Program for Adults.[10]
Revolution in psychiatric education
The Menninger School of Psychiatry and the local Veterans Administration Hospital represented the center of a psychiatric education revolution. The Clinic and the School became the hub for training professionals in the bio-psycho-social approach. This approach integrated the foundations of medical, psychodynamic, developmental, and family systems to focus on the overall health of patients. For patients, this way of treatment attended to their physical, emotional, and social needs.
Dr. Otto Fleischmann, head of the psychoanalytic institute from 1956 to 1963, was doing psychotherapy behind a one-way vision screen, in full view of all the students.
In 1960
Karl Menninger
Dr. Karl Menninger's first book, The Human Mind (1930), became a bestseller and familiarized the American public with human behavior. Many Americans also read his subsequent books, including The Vital Balance, Man Against Himself and Love Against Hate.[2]
Will Menninger
Dr. Will Menninger made a major contribution to the field of psychiatry when he developed a system of hospital treatment known as
Activities
At the Menninger Clinic, staff proceeded to launch new treatment approaches and open specialty programs. The Menninger Foundation gained a reputation for intensive, individualized treatment, particularly for patients with complex or long-standing symptoms. The treatment approach was multidimensional, addressing a patient's medical, psychological, and social needs. Numerous independent organizations recognized the Menninger Foundation as a world leader in psychiatric and behavioral health treatment.
US News & World Report listed Houston’s Menninger Clinic #5 in Psychiatry on their annual list of best hospitals [12] The rankings are based on performance in meeting certain criteria, and are given a grade in each section and an overall scorecard. The eligibility requirements to participate are such that only 165 hospitals were considered for evaluation.[13]
The Menninger Clinic remains one of the primary North American settings supporting psychodynamically informed research on clinical diagnosis, assessment, and treatment. Recently, efforts have been organized around the construct of mentalizing, a concept integrating research activities related to attachment, theory of mind, internal representations, and neuroscience.
In the 1960s the Menninger Clinic studied
See also
- Roy W. Menninger
- W. Walter Menninger
- Harriet Lerner
- Riley Gardner
- The New York Foundation
References
- ^ C.F. Menninger Memorial Hospital, Topeka, Kansas at the Kansas Historical Society website
- ^ ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2018-01-22.
- ^ "Menninger Quick Facts". www.menningerclinic.com. Retrieved 2018-01-22.
- ^ "The Menninger Clinic".
- ^ Menninger Clinic: Adolescent Treatment Program (ATP)
- ^ "Professionals Program".
- ^ "Psychiatric Treatment Program for Young Adults - The Menninger Clinic".
- ^ Menninger Clinic: Comprehensive Psychiatric Assessment & Stabilization Program (CPAS)
- ^ Menninger Clinic: Assessments
- ^ "Hope Program for Adults - Inpatient Psychiatric Treatment - Menninger".
- ^ Otto Kernberg, M.D., Menninger Clinic at Topeka, Kansas at the Kansas Historical Society website
- ^ "US News Best Hospitals Menninger Clinic". Retrieved 21 May 2020.
- ^ "US News How and Why We Rank and Rate Hospitals". Retrieved 21 May 2020.
- Lawrence Jacob Friedman, Menninger: The Family and the Clinic, University Press of Kansas, 1992 (Reprint)
- Robert S. Wallerstein, Forty-two lives in treatment : a study of psychoanalysis and psychotherapy : the report of the Psychotherapy Research Project of the Menninger Foundation, 1954-1982, New York : Other Press, 2000
External links
- Menninger Clinic official website
- Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic
- The Topeka Capital Journal's in-depth coverage of Menninger leaving Topeka - index page
- U.S. News & World Report psychiatric hospital rankings
- Menninger Foundation Archives from Kansas State Historical Society
- Access Menninger photographs and documents on Kansas Memory, the Kansas State Historical Society's digital portal
- ERICA GOODE - Famed Psychiatric Clinic Abandons Prairie Home - New York Times Article 2003
- Staff of Psychotherapy Research Project at Menninger in Topeka, Kansas, 1959, at Kansas Memory, not in PD