Hospitalism (or anaclitic depression in its sublethal form) was a pediatric diagnosis used in the 1930s to describe infants who wasted away while in a hospital. The symptoms could include decreased physical development and disruption of perceptual-motor skills and language. In the first half of the 20th century, hospitalism was discovered to be linked to social deprivation between an infant and its caregiver. The term was in use in 1945, but the term can be traced back as early as 1897.
ホスピタリズム(Hospitalism)とは、乳幼児期に、何らかの事情により長期に渡って親から離され施設に入所した場合にでてくる情緒的な障害や身体的な発育の遅れなどを総称する言葉である。「施設病」「施設症」と言うこともある。
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).