World War I Psychoneuroses: Hysteria Goes to War

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TitreWorld War I Psychoneuroses: Hysteria Goes to War
Type de publicationBook Chapter
Year of Publication2014
AuteursTatu L, Bogousslavsky J
EditorBogousslavsky J
Book TitleHYSTERIA: THE RISE OF AN ENIGMA
Series TitleFrontiers of Neurology and Neuroscience
Volume35
Pagination157-168
PublisherKARGER
CityPOSTFACH, CH-4009 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
ISBN Number978-3-318-02647-4; 978-3-318-02646-7
ISBN1660-4431
Résumé

During the First World War, military physicians from the belligerent countries were faced with soldiers suffering from psychotrauma with often unheard of clinical signs, such as camptocormia. These varied clinical presentations took the form of abnormal movements, deaf-mutism, mental confusion, and delusional disorders. In Anglo- Saxon countries, the term `shell shock' was used to define these disorders. The debate on whether the war was responsible for these disorders divided mobilized neuropsychiatrists. In psychological theories, war is seen as the principal causal factor. In hystero-pithiatism, developed by Joseph Babinski (1857-1932), trauma was not directly caused by the war. It was rather due to the unwillingness of the soldier to take part in the war. Permanent suspicion of malingering resulted in the establishment of a wide range of medical experiments. Many doctors used aggressive treatment methods to force the soldiers exhibiting war neuroses to return to the front as quickly as possible. Medicomilitary collusion ensued. Electrotherapy became the basis of repressive psychotherapy, such as `torpillage', which was developed by Clovis Vincent (1879-1947), or psychofaradism, which was established by Gustave Roussy (1874-1948). Some soldiers refused such treatments, considering them a form of torture, and were brought before courts-martial. Famous cases, such as that of Baptiste Deschamps (1881-1953), raised the question of the rights of the wounded. Soldiers suffering from psychotrauma, ignored and regarded as malingerers or deserters, were sentenced to death by the courtsmartial. Trials of soldiers or doctors were also held in Germany and Austria. After the war, psychoneurotics long haunted asylums and rehabilitation centers. Abuses related to the treatment of the Great War psychoneuroses nevertheless significantly changed medical concepts, leading to the modern definition of `posttraumatic stress disorder'. (C) 2014 S. Karger AG, Basel

DOI10.1159/000360060