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Mental Health Services for Older Adults, Central and North West London NHS Mental Health Trust, Northwick Park Hospital, Watford Road, Harrow HA13UJ, e-mail: claire.hilton{at}nhs.net
1 The tests, used in educational, employment and clinical situations, measure
two complementary components of intelligence. The progressive matrices measure
the ability to make sense of complex data, to draw meaning out of ambiguity,
to perceive and think clearly. The vocabulary scales measure the ability to
store and reproduce information reflecting a cultures common pool of
knowledge. ![]()
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Introduction |
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The directors |
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The cast |
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I found an excitement about the work that I had not encountered before. The staff...were very keen and every patient was regarded as interesting and someone from whom we could learn a lot. I worked with people I had only read about till then. (Cited in Nolan, 1993)
Aubrey Lewis invited Hans Eysenck, who had also fled from Nazi persecution, to Mill Hill. Eysencks appointment proved to be the fulcrum of his career with the launch of his research on personality. One of his first major works, Dimensions of Personality, was commenced at Mill Hill. He later became Professor of Psychology at the Institute of Psychiatry (Richards, 2004). Much work was done on personality, Aubrey Lewis ensuring that patients had a personality assessment and short training courses in engineering or clerical work to improve their employment opportunities when they left the hospital (Cramer, 1999). The psychology department also included John Carlyle Raven, conscientious objector who developed and validated the Progressive Matrices and the Mill Hill Vocabulary Scale (Raven, 1940, 1943).1 Meanwhile, preliminary research on mental tests in senile dementia (Halstead, 1944) coincided with the very early development of the specialty of old age psychiatry, a subject for which Aubrey Lewis showed particular interest (Lewis, 1946).
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The drama |
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One junior doctor described his impressions of effort syndrome and its clinical management:
Some were from Dunkirk, but most were just ordinary service people, who had broken down with the stress of being in the army, just being in the army, being away from home, being drilled, the danger to come.Effort syndrome is... a condition when people exert themselves, they begin to feel breathless, have pain in the chest, and general exhaustion....The main thing was to assure them about their heart, which wasnt usually very well received, because the motive of getting out of the army was all too obvious in most cases I think.... I do not remember any one who was accused of malingering. They all had the symptoms you see... signs like tachycardia, which you cant malinger... and also anxiety.
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On the stage. The archives of the Bethlem and Maudsley Hospital hold many photographs of the Mill Hill Emergency Hospital. Many are unlabelled. If any reader can assist in identifying the characters in these photographs it would be greatly appreciated.
There were women patients in one of the out lying villas. I had my room there, Professor Lewis later referred to me"you are the phallic symbol there". The women were air raid casualties and also from womens services.One man had a severe anxiety state after he had been torpedoed, and so I hypnotised him and took him through his experiences, reliving this ship wreck, this torpedoing... and so on, and then I brought him out of hypnosis, only to discover very soon that he was still on the ship which had rescued him, still in danger, so I had to rehypnotise him to bring him back to the hospital.
It was one of the ways we helped people... either tohypnotise them or to put them under narcosis, semi-narcosis with sodium amytal injections, and then they would relive their experiences. I think it was a treatment which was very effective if given soon after the trauma. Of course by the time they came to us, the trauma was a long time away, so it wasnt quite so effective.
There was psychotherapy, letting them talk, listening to them, interpreting the real meaning of some of their symptoms, and so on. (Post, 1996)
Individual psychotherapy was well established by the 1940s, but only in private practice; it was never widespread during the war nor in the armed forces (Jones, 2004). Partly owing to staff shortages and a large workload, large group psychotherapy was introduced. New ideas were developed at Mill Hill by Maxwell Jones, in particular, that treatment was a continuous process operating throughout the day and over every aspect of the patients life, with both patients and staff working together as a team, notions central to the therapeutic community ideology. The Mill Hill work complemented that undertaken at psychiatric establishments elsewhere (Millard, 1999), but Lewis criticised Jones for his lack of statistical methods to evaluate outcome (Jones, 2004).
Clinical work went hand-in-hand with research. Psychiatric social worker Helen Goldschmidt included residents of an elderly persons housing estate in Mill Hill in her study of social aspects of ageing and senility (Goldschmidt, 1946). Elizabeth Rosenberg and Eric Guttmann - later to marry - wrote an article entitled Chronic neurotics and the outbreak of war based on data from out-patient clinics in inner London (Rosenberg & Guttmann, 1940). Anxiety and the heart and The psychology of pain were also by Guttmann, co-authored with fellow refugee psychiatrist Willi Mayer-Gross who had recently moved from the Maudsley to the Crichton Royal Hospital in Dumfries (Guttmann & Mayer-Gross, 1940, 1943). Alex Baker later recalled Guttmann at Mill Hill:
He was so helpful and supportive to a young doctor, particularly one like myself who was naïve, incompetent and ignorant. I was indebted to him and always will be. (Baker, 1990)
Felix Post was also a refugee. Both he and Guttmann suffered the indignity of being interned on the Isle of Man as enemy aliens (Post, 1988), as did Adam Limentani, an Italian psychiatrist working in Mill Hill with casualties from Dunkirk, when he was arrested along with many other Italians after Italy joined Germany in the war (Limentani, 1994). Many years later Post reflected on Mill Hill in 1941:
I experienced the fascination of the hypnotic sessions... and witnessed the first beginnings of Maxwell Jonesapproach to neurotic problems, which were initially group-didactic rather than group-therapeutic....My very first experience at Mill Hill was having to assist with the setting of a humerus fractured during a cardiazol fit. The far less distressing electroconvulsive therapy, which was demonstrated to us a few months later... was only a shade less unpleasant to work with and to administer; but it did work. (Post, 1978)
The Mill Hill Maudsley was one of the earlier hospitals in Britain to introduce electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). This therapy, described in the Lancet in 1939 (Kalinowsky, 1939), had still not entirely supplanted cardiazol-induced seizures by 1944 (Sargant & Slater, 1944). Lewis permitted ECT but not leucotomies or insulin therapy, although these were carried out in the other part of the evacuated Maudsley in Sutton (where Sargant and Slater were deputy clinical director and clinical director, respectively), a source of clinical therapeutic tension when the two branches of the Maudsley reunited in Denmark Hill, London after the war (Jones, 2003). After the war other challenges followed (Waddington, 1998) including the merger with the Bethlem Royal Hospital under the new National Health Service, the development of the Institute of Psychiatry, and the post-war modernisation of clinical psychiatric practice.
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Acknowledgments |
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References |
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BAKER, A. (1990) Interview by Hugh Freeman. In Talking about Psychiatry (ed. G. Wilkinson), pp. 192 -206. London: Gaskell.
CRAMER, J. (1999) 1941-1950. In A Century of Psychiatry (ed. H. Freeman), pp. 117 -135. London: MosbyWolfe Medical.
GELDER, M. (1991) Adolph Meyer and his influence on Britishpsychiatry. In 150 Years of British Psychiatry (ed. G. E. Berrios & H. Freeman), pp. 419-435. London: Gaskell.
GILLAM, S. J. (2004) William Hewitt Gillespie. Munks Roll, Vol. XI. http://www.rcplondon.ac.uk
GOLDSCHMIDT, H. (1946) Social aspects of ageing and senility. Journal of Mental Science, 92, 182 -194.
GUTTMANN, E. & MAYER-GROSS, W. (1940) Anxiety and the heart. Lancet, 25 May, 979 -980.
GUTTMANN, E. & MAYER-GROSS, W. (1943) The psychology of pain. Lancet, 20 February, 225 -227.
HALSTEAD, H. (1944) Mental tests in senile dementia. Journal of Mental Science, 90, 720 -727.
HAYWARD, R. (2004) Edward Mapother: Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. http://www.oxforddnb.com
HOLLMAN, A. (2004) Thomas Lewis: Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. http://www.oxforddnb.com
JONES, E. (2003) Aubrey Lewis, Edward Mapother and the Maudsley. In European Psychiatry on the Eve of War: Aubrey Lewis, The Maudsley Hospital and the Rockefeller Foundation in the 1930s (eds K. Angel, E. Jones & M. Neve). Medical History (suppl. 22), 3 -38.
JONES, E. (2004) War and the practice of psychotherapy: the UK experience 1939-1960. Medical History, 48, 439 -510.
JONES, M. (1983) Interview by Brian Barraclough. In Talking about Psychiatry (ed. G. Wilkinson), pp. 50 -58. London: Gaskell.
JONES, M. & LEWIS, A. (1941) Effort Syndrome. Lancet, 28 June, 813 -818.
KALINOWSKY, L. (1939) Electricconvulsion therapy in schizophrenia. Lancet, 9 December, 1232 -1233.
LEWIS, A. (1946) Ageing and senility: a major problem of psychiatry. Journal of Mental Science, 92, 150 -170.
LIMENTANI, A. (1994) In conversation with Harold
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MILLARD, D. (1999) Therapeutic communities. In A Century of Psychiatry (ed. H. Freeman), pp. 155 -159. London: MosbyWolfe Medical.
NOLAN, P. (1993) A History of Mental Health Nursing. London: Chapman & Hall.
POST, F. (1978) Then and Now. British
Journal of Psychiatry, 133, 83
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POST, F. (1988) Interview by Brian Barraclough. In Talking about Psychiatry (ed. G. Wilkinson), pp. 157 -177. London: Gaskell.
POST, F. (1996) Dr Conrad Woods Interviewed Felix Post, 6 May 1996. London: Imperial War Museum (tape 16642).
RAVEN, J. C. (1940) Progressive Matrices. London: H. K. Lewis.
RAVEN, J. C. (1943) The Mill Hill Vocabulary Scale. London: H. K. Lewis.
RICHARDS, G. (2004) Hans Jurgen Eysenck: Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. http://www.oxforddnb.com
ROSENBERG, E. & GUTTMANN, E. (1940) Chronic neurotics and the outbreak of war. Lancet, 27 July, 95 -96.
SARGANT, W. & SLATER, E. (1944) An Introduction to Physical Methods of Treatment in Psychiatry. Edinburgh: E & S Livingstone.
WADDINGTON, K. (1998) Enemies within: Postwar Bethlem and the Maudsley Hospital. In Cultures of Psychiatry (eds M. Gijsurijt-Hofstra & R. Porter), pp. 185 -202. London: Clio Medica.
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