Literature DB >> 17105748

Performing a cure for schizophrenia: insulin coma therapy on the wards.

Deborah Blythe Doroshow1.   

Abstract

Most historians of psychiatry regard insulin coma therapy (ICT) either as an embarrassing stumble on the path to modern biological psychiatry or as one member of a long line of somatic therapies used to treat mental illness in the mid-twentieth century. This article explores the ICT era, roughly 1933-60, as a key moment in the development of American psychiatry. Developed only ten years after insulin had been embraced as a "miracle drug" for the treatment of diabetes, ICT was perceived by psychiatrists as a means of bringing their field closer to mainstream medicine, particularly to neurology. In addition, the story of ICT reveals how a treatment never quite proven on paper was unquestionably efficacious in the local world in which it was performed. An institutionally-based treatment, ICT was administered in a specific area of the mental hospital deemed the insulin unit, a room with its own staff, practices, and attitudes toward mental illness. There, psychiatrists often experienced wondrous recoveries of individual, formerly intractable patients. These intense personal experiences allowed psychiatrists to feel truly efficacious, enabling them to reinvent themselves as medical doctors rather than behavioral and disciplinary supervisors. The confidence they derived from this capacity, along with the operating room-like setting of the insulin unit, the unit's specialized staffing and group bond, and the availability of both risk-assessment tests and a medley of treatments that countered side effects and complications, allowed ICT to be understood as an efficacious treatment for schizophrenia within the local world in which it was administered.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2006        PMID: 17105748     DOI: 10.1093/jhmas/jrl044

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Hist Med Allied Sci        ISSN: 0022-5045            Impact factor:   2.088


  4 in total

1.  The Intimate Geographies of Panic Disorder: Parsing Anxiety through Psychopharmacological Dissection.

Authors:  Felicity Callard
Journal:  Osiris       Date:  2016       Impact factor: 0.548

Review 2.  Insulin receptor signaling in the development of neuronal structure and function.

Authors:  Shu-Ling Chiu; Hollis T Cline
Journal:  Neural Dev       Date:  2010-03-15       Impact factor: 3.842

3.  Sex and gender in psychiatry: a view from history.

Authors:  Laura Hirshbein
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2010-06

4.  'A landmark in psychiatric progress'? The role of evidence in the rise and fall of insulin coma therapy.

Authors:  Robert Freudenthal; Joanna Moncrieff
Journal:  Hist Psychiatry       Date:  2021-12-22
  4 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.