Central European Psychiatry: World War I and the Interwar Period

David Freis
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Abstract

During World War I, soldiers from all warring countries suffered from mental disorders caused by the strains and shocks of modern warfare. Military psychiatrists in Germany and the Austro-Hungarian Empire were initially overwhelmed by the unexpected numbers of psychiatric patients, and they soon engaged in fierce debates about the etiology and therapy of “war neuroses.” After early therapeutic approaches relying on rest and occupational therapy had failed to yield the necessary results, psychiatry faced increasing pressure by the state and the military. After 1916, the etiological debate coalesced around the diagnosis of “war hysteria,” and psychiatric treatment of war neurotics became dominated by so-called active therapies, which promised to return patients to the frontline or the war industry as quickly and efficiently as possible. War psychiatry became characterized by an unprecedented rationalization of medical treatment, which subordinated the goals of medicine to the needs of the military and the wartime economy. Brutal treatment methods and struggles over pensions led to conflicts between patients and doctors that continued after the war ended.
中欧精神病学:第一次世界大战和两次世界大战之间的时期
第一次世界大战期间,所有交战国的士兵都因现代战争的紧张和冲击而患上精神疾病。德国和奥匈帝国的军事精神科医生最初被数量惊人的精神病患者所淹没,他们很快就“战争神经症”的病因和治疗进行了激烈的辩论。在依靠休息和职业疗法的早期治疗方法未能产生必要的效果之后,精神病学面临着来自国家和军队的越来越大的压力。1916年后,病因学上的争论集中在“战争歇斯底里症”的诊断上,对战争神经症的精神治疗被所谓的积极疗法所主导,这种疗法承诺让病人尽可能快速有效地回到前线或军工企业。战争精神病学的特点是前所未有的医疗合理化,使医疗目标服从于军队和战时经济的需要。残酷的治疗方法和对养老金的争夺导致了病人和医生之间的冲突,这种冲突在战争结束后仍在继续。
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