Titre
Military Neuropsychiatry. Proceedings of the Association December 15 and 16, 1944, New York
Auteur
Whitehorn, John C. Brill, Norman Q. Farrell, Malcolm J. Grinker, Roy R. Strecker, Edward A. Rees, J. R.
Langue
anglais
Éditeur
The Williams & Wilkins Company, Baltimore
Prix
€ 60,00(Excl. toute livraison)
Détails
1946, 1e druk, xviii + 366 blz., bordeauxrood linnen band, geplastificeerd, met kleine bibliotheek-etiket op de rug, met 34 illustraties en 48 tabellen.
Plus d'informations
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CONTENTS
I. Changing Concepts of Psychoneurosis in Relation to Military Psychiatry. John C. Whitehorn 1
II. Neurotic Reactions in Psychopaths (Hystero-Malingering). Norman Q. Brill and Malcolm J. Farrell 11
III. A Dynamic Study of War Neuroses in Flyers Returned to the United States. Roy R. Grinker 26
IV. Psychiatric Contrasts in the Two World Wars. Edward A. Strecker and Kenneth E. Appel 38
V. The Development of Psychiatry in the British Army. J. R. Rees 48
VI. Research Aspects at the AAF School of Aviation Medicine in Nervous and Mental Diseases. Eugen G. Reinartz 54
VII. Emotional Problems of Demobilization. G. B. Chisholm 63
VIII. The Problem of the Discharged Neuropsychiatric Patient. William C. Menninger 70
IX. The Mental Hygiene Unit: A Practical Approach to the Utilization of the Mild Psychoneurotic in the Armed Forces. Lewis L. Robbins 78
X. An Experimental Unit for the Retraining of Psychoneurotic Soldiers. Fred F. Senerchia, Jr. 87
XI. Psychiatric Reaction to Amputation. Guy C. Randall, Jack R. Ewalt and Harry Blair 94
XII. Anxiety in Aerial Combat. David G. Wright 116
XIII. A Note on the Teleology of Combat Incurred Neuroses. John W. Appel 125
XIV. Concerning Combat Exhaustion. Lloyd J. Thompson 139
XV. Neuropsychiatry in an Overseas Evacuation Hospital. Ralph T. Collins 147
XVI. The Importance of the Emotional Outlet in Psychotherapy. Herbert I. Harris 156
XVII. Psychopathology and Group Therapy. Howard P. Rome 162
XVIII. Methods of Recovery in Combat Fatigue and the Influence of Therapy. George N. Raines, Leslie B. Hohman and L. C. Kolb, Jr. 171
XIX. Psychotherapy in a Naval Convalescent Hospital. Manuel M. Pearson and Robert A. Cohen 181
XX. The Therapeutic Role of Drugs in the Process of Repression, Dissociation and Synthesis. Lawrence S. Kubie and Sydney Margolin 188
XXI. The Electro-encephalogram in War Wounds of the Brain; with Particular Reference to Post-traumatic Epilepsy. Ephraim Roseman and Barnes Woodhall 200
XXII. Cranio-Cerebral Injuries of Personnel Involved in Aircraft Accidents. George M. Hass 220
XXIII. The Response of Muscle to Electrical Stimuli During Degeneration, Denervation, and Regeneration. Lewis J. Pollock, James G. Golseth and Alex J. Arieff 236
XXIV. Psychiatric Procedure in the Rehabilitation Center, Second Service Command. Herman B. Snow 258
XXV. Convalescent Reconditioning Program for Neuropsychiatric Casualties in the U. S. Army. Walter E. Barton 271
XXVI. Neuropsychiatric Problems of the Veterans Administration. John H. Baird 285
XXVII. Mental Illness and the Expanded Federal-State Vocational Rehabilitation Program. Dean A. Clark and Victor H. Vogel 292
XXVIII. Psychiatric Rehabilitation in Industry. Leonard E. Himler 297
XXIX. Personality and Psychosomatic Disturbances in Patients on Medical and Surgical Wards: A Survey of 450 Admissions. Bela Mittelmann, Arthur Weider, Keeve Brodman, David Wechsler and Harold G. Wolff 304
XXX. The Development of Group Psychotherapy in a Military Setting. Donald A. Shaskan 311
XXXI. The Psychiatric Treatment Program at Welch Convalescent Hospital. John M. Cotton 316
XXXII. Neuropsychiatric Rehabilitation Problems of Discharged Veterans in Rural Communities of the South. Maurice H. Greenhill and Hans Löwenbach 322
XXXIII. Modification of the Rorschach Method for Large Scale Investigations. M. R. Harrower-Erickson 340
Index 345
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Tekstfragment
CHAPTER I
CHANGING CONCEPTS OF PSYCHONEUROSIS
IN RELATION TO MILITARY PSYCHIATRY
JOHN C. WHITEHORN
WE MEET here this year for the purpose of bringing to bear upon the problems of military psychiatry the cold light of scientific inquiry and to bring to view, thereby, facts and principles by which policies and practices may be improved.
We have been having a tremendous experience in military psychiatric problems for three years and more, but a military organization is not set up for scientific research and experience does not of itself bring wisdom or even knowledge. It is necessary that individuals struggle with that experience to make something out of it. Those who participate in this program have the obligation, not merely to recite facts, but to shape significant questions and answers.
The present moment on the program is ideally suited for a civilian to throw into the discussion just those jarring comments and impudently stimulating questions which should serve to crystallize the materials brought together in this program. I regret that my conservative disposition inhibits me from the full and lively exploitation of this opportunity.
Let us begin at the dull level of nomenclature, as a kind of pedestrian index of the development of psychiatric concepts. Shell shock was a spectacular sort of term which captured the imagination of Mott and others, as inevitably as shell-fire itself captures one’s attention. Now it is the peculiar property of such vivid ideas never to die, properly and decently. One has to sit on the squirming corpse of one concept to open the door to a new concept, and such a posture does not favor the most advantageous handling of the new concept. When it became clearer and clearer back in 1915 and 16, that commotio cerebri was an inadequate and inappropriate explanation for so-called “shell-shock,” then conceptions of psychological etiology came in, but these conceptions entered professional minds still preoccupied and reverberating, so to speak, to the idea of shock, hence psychological trauma became the successor to physical shock as the acceptable explanation. What I want to emphasize here is that the “shell-shock” concept lived a kind of second life again in the notion of psychological trauma.
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Zoekwoorden
militaire psychiatrie; oorlogstrauma; psychoneurose; combat fatigue; shell shock; medische geschiedenis; psychotherapie; neuropsychiatrie; Tweede Wereldoorlog; klinische psychologie; revalidatie; legergeneeskunde
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