Tim Good

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Some of the earliest Black nurses felt their patients had been coerced into an electroshock routine. It wasn’t being used as a last resort; it had become as normal as taking vitamins in the morning. They worried that while these therapies were sometimes meant as genuine treatment—and some patients liked and requested them—there were teams at the hospital who seemed to leverage them as punishments.
Madness: Race and Insanity in a Jim Crow Asylum
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