Shrinks: The Untold Story of Psychiatry by Jeffrey A. Lieberman & Ogi Ogas
Author:Jeffrey A. Lieberman & Ogi Ogas
Language: eng
Format: mobi
Publisher: Orion
Published: 2015-03-11T22:00:00+00:00
Chapter 6
Mother’s Little Helper: Medicine at Last
Mother needs something today to calm her down
And though she’s not really ill
There’s a little yellow pill
She goes running for the shelter of a mother’s little helper
— MICK JAGGER AND KEITH RICHARDS
It’s better to be lucky than smart.
— HENRY SPENCER
Chloral Simmerings in My Spine
These days, it’s difficult to imagine the practice of psychiatry without medication. You can hardly watch TV without seeing an ad for some mood-enhancing pill, usually featuring merry families frolicking on sandy beaches or joyous couples hiking through sun-dappled forests. Young people are far more likely to associate my profession with Prozac, Adderall, and Xanax than reclining on a couch week after week, divulging one’s dreams and sexual fantasies. Schools, colleges, and nursing homes in every state openly endorse the liberal use of psychoactive drugs to mollify their more disruptive charges. What is less well known is that psychiatry’s dramatic transformation from a profession of shrinks to a profession of pill-pushers came about through sheer serendipity.
When I was born, not a single therapeutically effective medication existed for any mental disorder. There were no antidepressants, no antipsychotics, no anti-anxiety drugs—at least, no sort of psychiatric drug that quelled your symptoms and enabled you to function effectively. The few existing treatments for the major categories of mental illness (mood disorders, schizophrenia, and anxiety disorders) were all invasive, risky, and burdened with appalling side effects, and these desperate measures were mostly used to control disruptive inmates in mental institutions. Similarly, the first psychiatric drugs were not intended to be curative or even therapeutic—they were blunt instruments for pacification. Their daunting side effects were only deemed acceptable because the alternatives—fever cures, coma therapy, induced convulsions—were even worse.
In the late nineteenth century, asylums used injections of morphine and other opiate-derived drugs to subdue recalcitrant inmates. While the patients may have ranked this among the most agreeable psychiatric treatments of the Victorian Era, the practice was discontinued once it became clear that opioids turned patients into hardcore addicts. The first behavior-altering drug commonly prescribed outside of asylums (psychotropic drug, in the argot of medicine) was chloral, a sleep-inducing non-opiate prescribed to relieve insomnia in anxious and depressed patients. Like morphine, chloral was not intended to treat a patient’s most salient symptoms—namely, the fearfulness in anxiety disorders or the feelings of sadness in depression—it was intended to knock the patient out cold. Chloral was preferable to morphine because it was reliable in strength from dose to dose and could be given orally, but patients disliked its awful taste and the distinctive odor it imparted to their breath, known as “alky-breath.”
Even though chloral was less addictive than morphine, it was still habit-forming. Women suffering from “nervous conditions” often self-administered the drug at home in order to avoid the embarrassment of institutionalization and frequently ended up as chloral addicts. The celebrated author Virginia Woolf, who suffered from manic-depressive illness and was repeatedly institutionalized, frequently swallowed chloral in the 1920s. From her boudoir, she wrote to her lover Vita Sackville-West about
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