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ARTICLE |

"THE TREATMENT OF HYSTERIA"

Henry L. Stick, M.D.
JAMA. 1919;72(3):214. doi:10.1001/jama.1919.02610030060030.
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ABSTRACT

To the Editor:  —I have read the article on "The Treatment of Hysteria," by Capt. Julian M. Wolfsohn, with the hope of getting some new and really advanced ideas on the treatment of hysterical cases known on the firing line as shell shock cases. Many of these cases have been treated here in American base hospitals, with the exception that the injuries causing the condition were not received on the firing line; but these cases demonstrated all the points of interest that Captain Wolfsohn set forth in his interesting paper. In his final analysis, however, in laying down the cardinal principles of treatment, he fails, in my opinion, to state at least two, if not three, very important factors:First, it would seem that at least many of these patients sustained some physical injury in combination with the hysteria, and that in all the cases he reports there was not

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