What do you think?
Rate this book


382 pages, Hardcover
First published November 5, 2019
If sanity and insanity exist ... how shall we know them?These questions not only began Rosenhan's seminal study, they shaped the bulk of Cahalan's The Great Pretender. Rosenhan was a Stanford professor of psychology and law when he published "On Being Sane in Insane Places" (OBSIP) in 1973 in Science. He described how eight healthy adults presented themselves as having auditory hallucinations and were committed into eight different psychiatric hospitals across the US. The hospital intake psychiatrists diagnosed seven of these pseudo-patients with schizophrenia and one with manic depression. After an average stay of 19 days, these pseudo-patients were discharged with the diagnoses that their disorders were in remission and not cured. Rosenhan's conclusions that the field of psychiatry was unable to recognize sanity and the depersonalizing treatment from the hospitals inflicted severe blows on a medical discipline which has had a shaky reputation since its inception.
- David Rosenhan

