Arizona State Hospital

Arizona State Hospital is a state-run psychiatric hospital in Phoenix, Arizona. It was opened as the Insane Asylum of Arizona in 1887 and is still open today.

History

Territory status

In 1871, the territorial legislature recognized that care for the mentally ill was the responsibility of the government. From 1873 to 1887, the state contracted with a hospital in Stockton, California to send Arizona's mentally ill population there.[1]

The 13th Arizona Territorial Legislature, known as the "Thieving Thirteenth", allocated territorial institutions to Arizona cities in 1885. Tucson got the state university, Tempe the normal school, Yuma retained its prison, Prescott remained the capital, and Phoenix received the insane asylum.[2]

The Insane Asylum of Arizona opened in 1887. 61 patients were transferred from the hospital in California.[1]

In 1911, a fire started in the central building on campus, D-Building. This causes considerable damage, but all patients and employees were safely evacuated.[1]

After statehood

Arizona becomes a state in 1912 and the Territorial Asylum for the Insane is renamed the Arizona State Asylum for the Insane.[1] In 1922, the patient population had reached 568, 998 in 1942, and 1,200 in 1945.[3]

in 1939, a social worker was hired exclusively to aid in the discharge of patients.[1]

In 1952, three new buildings were built.[1]

Involuntary sterilizations

Arizona passed a compulsory sterilization law on March 9, 1929. This was precipitated by the issue of overcrowding at the Arizona State Hospital. Under this bill, the superintendent of the Arizona State Hospital could make recommendations. The first sterilizations occurred in 1932 when twenty patients were sterilized. 30 individuals total were sterilized, of whom 20 were women 80% of victims were considered mentally ill, and the remaining 20% mentally deficient. The last sterilization took place in 1956.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f "AZDHS | Arizona State Hospital - Timeline". Arizona Department of Health Services. Retrieved 2023-02-10.
  2. ^ Wagoner, Jay J. (1970). Arizona Territory 1863–1912: A Political history. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. ISBN 0816501769.
  3. ^ a b "Arizona Eugenics". www.uvm.edu. Retrieved 2023-02-10.