Literature DB >> 27917025

'The gut war': Functional somatic disorders in the UK during the Second World War.

Edgar Jones1.   

Abstract

Hospital admission and mortality statistics suggested that peptic ulcer reached a peak prevalence in the mid-1950s. During the Second World War, against this background of serious and common pathology, an epidemic of dyspepsia afflicted both service personnel and civilians alike. In the absence of reliable diagnostic techniques, physicians struggled to distinguish between life-threatening illness and mild, temporary disorders. This article explores the context in which non-ulcer stomach conditions flourished. At a time when fear was considered defeatist and overt psychological disorder attracted stigma, both soldiers and civilians exposed to frightening events may have unconsciously translated their distress into gastrointestinal disorders. While the nature of army food was initially identified as the cause of duodenal ulcer in servicemen, the pre-war idea that conscientious and anxious individuals were at high risk gathered support and fed into post-war beliefs that this was a stress-related illness. Diet continued to be employed as a means of management at a time when the nation was preoccupied by food because of the constraints imposed by rationing. The peptic ulcer phenomenon set much of the medical agenda for the war years and conflicted with the commonly held view that the British people had never been healthier.

Entities:  

Keywords:  dyspepsia; functional disorder; peptic ulcer; psychosomatic illness; somatization

Year:  2012        PMID: 27917025      PMCID: PMC5130149          DOI: 10.1177/0952695112466515

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hist Human Sci        ISSN: 0952-6951            Impact factor:   0.690


  31 in total

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2.  Peptic Ulcer and Dyspepsia in the Army.

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Journal:  Br Med J       Date:  1943-10-16

3.  Occupation and Peptic Ulcer.

Authors: 
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4.  Progress in the Psychiatry of War.

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5.  War Neurosis: A Year in a Neuropathic Hospital-I.

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6.  The validity and significance of the clinical diagnosis of hysteria (Briquet's syndrome).

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Journal:  Am J Psychiatry       Date:  1975-02       Impact factor: 18.112

7.  Occupational factors in the aetiology of gastric and duodenal ulcers with an estimate of their incidence in the general population.

Authors:  R DOLL; F A JONES; M M BUCKATZSCH
Journal:  Spec Rep Ser Med Res Counc (G B)       Date:  1951

8.  THE CANON--3: The harmony of illusions: inventing post-traumatic stress disorder, by Allan Young.

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Journal:  Anthropol Med       Date:  2012-04

9.  How psychiatric symptoms varied in World War I and II.

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10.  War syndromes: the impact of culture on medically unexplained symptoms.

Authors:  Edgar Jones; Simon Wessely
Journal:  Med Hist       Date:  2005-01       Impact factor: 1.419

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Review 5.  Military medical research on internal diseases in modern warfare: new concepts, demands, challenges, and opportunities.

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6.  Rethinking the history of peptic ulcer disease and its relevance for network epistemology.

Authors:  Bartosz Michał Radomski; Dunja Šešelja; Kim Naumann
Journal:  Hist Philos Life Sci       Date:  2021-11-04       Impact factor: 1.205

  6 in total

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