The following chapter has at least minor reference to this, but probably not a lot of detail: From madness to mental illness: Psychiatry and biopolitics in Michel Foucault.
The Oxford handbook of philosophy and psychiatry.
By Leoni, Federico
Fulford, K. W. M. (Ed); Davies, Martin (Ed); Gipps, Richard G. T. (Ed); Graham, George (Ed); Sadler, John Z. (Ed); Stanghellini, Giovanni (Ed); Thornton, Tim (Ed), (2013). The Oxford handbook of philosophy and psychiatry. International perspectives in philosophy and psychiatry., (pp. 85-98). New York, NY, US: Oxford University Press, xviii, 1322 pp.
The current chapter presents the Michel Foucault's concepts on madness, mental illness, psychiatry, and biopolitics. The list of Foucault's interests and fields of research spans a quite unusual variety of topics and issues, including crime, madness, epidemics, health, hunger, punishment, wars and strategies, pleasure and asceticism, masturbation and chastity, military life and hermaphroditism, schools, mental hospitals, prisons, barracks, factories, and companies. Foucault's style of inquiry typically lies halfway between, on the one hand, history and philosophy and, on the other, epistemology of the human sciences and genealogy of the main social, political, and economic institutions of modernity. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2015 APA, all rights reserved)
I have managed to read the English summary of the article and the ideas presented sound like they could be of interest to me. However I am unable to translate the publication. Do you by any chance have an english version available?