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Hubbard, Lois D., senior medical officer:

Tubs versus showers in the mental hospital. Modern Hospital, Vol. XXX, No. 2. P. 88.

What becomes of the mental patient. Hygeia. Oct., 1928. Vol. 6, No. 10. Pp. 577-578.

The psychiatric nurse and her personal problems. Trained Nurse and Hospital Review. Vol. LXXXII, No. 5, May, 1929. Pp. 616–617. Karpman, Benjamin, senior medical officer:

Psychotherapy in the criminally insane. Psychiatric Quarterly, July, 1929, p. 370.

Psychoses in Criminals. Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases. Part 2, Case 2, July, 1928.

Impulsive neuroses and crime. A critical review. Jr. Amer. Institute of Criminal Law and Criminology. Feb., 1929.

Impotence in the male: A critical review. Archives of Neurology and Psychiatry, vol. 21, p. 924, Apr., 1929.

Hall, Roscoe W., clinical director:

(With J. H. W. Rhein.) "Neuropsychiatry " in the Medical Department of the United States Army in the World War. Vol. X, Sec. II, Chap. 3, Army Neurological Hospitals. Pp. 325-353. U. S. Government Printing Office, 1929. (Prepared under the Direction of Maj. Gen. M. W. Ireland, Surgeon General, U. S. Army.)

Richmond, Winifred V., psychologist:

The psychiatrist in the college. Jr. Amer. Assn. Univ. Women. April, 1929. Reprinted in the Bulletin Am. Assn. College Professors, May, 1929. Colomb, Henry C., associate medical officer:

Calcium metabolism as related to therapy. Med. Jr. and Record. 1929. Pp. 129-121.

McCartney, James L., junior medical officer:

Epilepsy amongst Chinese, with analysis of case. Psychoanalytic Review. 1929. Vol. XVI, pp. 12-17.

Sadism and masochism, with discussion on esoteric flagellation. Jour. Nerv. and Ment. Dis. 1928, vol. 68, pp. 28-38.

Call to foreign missions: Its effect on unstable personalities. Mental Hygiene. 1928, Vol. XII, p. 521.

Menninger, Wm. L., junior medical officer:

Pupillary anomalies in Schizophrenia. Arch. Neurol. and Psychiat. 1928, vol. 20, pp. 186-192.

Klein, Elmer, associate medical officer:

Psychologic trends in psychiatry since 1900. Amer. Jr. Psych. 1928, Vol. VIII, pp. 273-280.

Freeman, Walter, director of laboratories:

Pathologic sleep. Jour. Amer. Med. Assn. 91:67-70. (July 14, 1928.) Biometrical studies in psychiatry. II. The small heart in schizophrenics. Trans. Amer. Neurol. Assn. 1927.

Biometrical studies in psychiatry. III. The chances of death. Amer. Jour. of Psychiatry. 8: 425, Nov. 1928.

Biometrical studies in psychiatry. (Thesis for degree of M. S., Georgetown University, 1929.)

Lipoid degeneration products in the basal ganglia in dementia precox. Assn. for Research in Nerv. and Mental Disease. Vol. Schizophrenia, 1928, p. 382.

Murphy, J. P. H., senior medical officer:

Comparative study of epilepsy and schizophrenia. M. J. and Record, vol. 128, July 18, 1928, p. 77; Aug. 1, 1928, p. 110.

Lewis, Nolan D. C., clinical psychiatrist:

The psychobiology of the castration complex. The Psychoanalytic Review, Vol. XV, No. 3, July, 1928, pp. 304–323.

Hypnosis (special review of book by Paul Schilder). Psychoanalytic Review, Vol. XV, No. 4, Oct., 1928, pp. 440-442.

Coriat's Stammering (special review). Psychoanalytic Review, Vol. XV, No. 4, Oct., 1928, pp. 443-445.

Jelliffe's Postencephalitic Respiratory Disorders (special review). Psychoanalytic Review, Vol. XV, No. 4, Oct., 1928, pp. 446.

Hadley, Ernest E., associate medical officer:

Presidential address, Washington Psychopathological Society, Jan. 12, 1928 (history of the society). Psychoanalytic Review, Vol. XV, No. 4, Oct., 1928, pp. 384–392.

Fong, Theodore C., serologist:

Tryparsamide therapy in treatment of neurosyphilis. M. J. and Record, vol. 128, July 18, 1928, pp. 85-88.

Conrad, Agnes, assistant medical officer:

Women of the staff of St. Elizabeths Hospital. Medical Woman's Journal, vol. 35, No. 8, Aug., 1928, pp. 219–221.

STAFF CHANGES JULY 1, 1928, TO JUNE 30, 1929

The following appointments were made during the year: Junior medical officers (internes): Matthew J. Callanan, Vincent J. Dardinski, Ambrose H. Cook, Francis J. Tartaglino, Meta F. Haldeman, John N. Wilson, William G. Cushard, Frederick T. Zimmerman, Charles C. Graves, jr., Granville L. Jones, and Alonzo R. Dawson; associate medical officer: Clarence P. May; assistant medical officers: Henry O. Colomb, Sarah M. J. Ching, Edith B. Jackson, Elsie Blanchard, and Anita A. W. Harper.

The following resignations took effect during the year:

Samuel Luber, John T. Gray, Ambrose H. Cook, Matthew J. Callanan, Clyde R. Bennett, and John M. Wilson, junior medical officers; John M. Damgaard, assistant medical officer; Elmer Klein and Clarence P. May, associate medical officers; Daniel C. Main, medical officer; Arthur P. Noyes, first assistant physician; and Nathan Cone, associate dentist.

The following promotions were made during the year: Herbert C. Woolley, from clinical director to first assistant physician; Roscoe W. Hall, from medical officer to clinical director; Harriet E. Twombly, from associate medical officer to medical officer; and Henry O. Colomb, from assistant medical officer to associate medical officer.

APPENDIX

TABLE 1.-General information

(Data correct at end of hospital year June 30, 1929.)

Date of opening as a hospital for mental diseases__.

Type of hospital: State, county, endowed private, or unendowed

1853

Federal.

private--

Hospital plant:

Value of hospital property, real estate, including buildings__ $4, 600, 000 Personal property-.

Total

900,000 5,500,000

Total acreage of hospital property owned (includes grounds, farm
and garden, and sites occupied by buildings) ----
Total acreage under cultivation during previous year (includes land
owned and rented).

803

445

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Patients under treatment in occupational-therapy classes, including phys-
ical training, on date of report..
Other patients employed in general work of hospital on date of report.
Average daily number of all patients actually in hospital during year.

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TABLE 2.-Financial statement for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1929

RECEIPTS

Balance on hand from previous fiscal year (includes balance for

maintenance and for all other purposes).

Received from appropriations__.

Received from paying patients.

Received from all other sources_

Total receipts___.

$480, 031. 06

1, 450, 132. 00

1, 913, 446. 02

78, 137.32

3, 921, 746. 40

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Total expenditures for maintenance__. Expenditures for all purposes other than maintenance, including new buildings, other additions, and permanent betterments (under this heading are placed all expenditures for items, such as additional land [bought, or reclaimed under special appropriation], new buildings, new equipment [not replacements], etc., which represent not restorations but improvements or additions to plant).

Total expenditures--.

Balance on hand at close of year (includes balance for maintenance and for all other purposes).

Total disbursements, including balance on hand (this item
equals total receipts)---

2,863, 768. 19

106,216. 73

2, 969, 984. 92

951, 761. 48

3,921, 746. 40

TABLE 3.—Movement of insane patient population, fiscal year ended June

30, 1929

[Includes all patients admitted with psychosis (insane) who are on books of hospital regardless of the method of admission, whether voluntary, committed, emergency, temporary care, for observation or otherwise, but does not include those who are only dispensary or out-patient cases]

Insane patients on books of hospital at beginning of hospital year:
In hospital...

On parole or otherwise absent..

Total...

Admissions during year:

First admissions (includes all patients admitted as insane for the first
time to any hospital for mental diseases, public or private, wherever
situated, in or outside of State, excepting institutions for temporary
care).
Readmissions (includes all insane patients admitted who have been
previously under treatment in a hospital for mental diseases, except-
ing transfers and patients who have received treatment only in
institutions for temporary care. Returned paroled and escaped
patients are not counted among readmissions).

Total received during year..

Total on books during year..

Discharged from books during year (does not include patients away from hospital on parole, on visit, boarded out, or on other temporary leave from hospital):

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As recovered.

As improved (does not include transfers).

78 105

As unimproved (includes all insane patients discharged not benefited by treatment, exclusive of transfers)

65

As without psychosis (includes all discharged patients who though admitted as insane are found to have had no psychosis)..

20

Died during year..

149

103

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100

117

78

23

252

Total discharged, transferred, and died during year..

417

151

568

Insane patients remaining on books of hospital at end of hospital year:
In hospital..

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REPORT OF ST. ELIZABETHS HOSPITAL

TABLE 4.-Nativity of first admissions and of parents of first admissions for the year ended June 30, 1929

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