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Clinical Studies in Psychopathology: A Contribution to the Aetiology of Neurotic Illness

JAMA. 1949;141(15):1106. doi:10.1001/jama.1949.02910150072033.
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ABSTRACT

The British experience of psychiatry during and since World War II is much like that of the Americans. The present volume represents a modified freudian approach to psychiatry. The extensive practice of the author has permitted citations from many case reports, which make graphic the presentation of various psychologic concepts. The author insists that he does not follow the official freudian doctrine but that his book represents modern psychoanalytic thought. The author recognizes that psychopathology and psychotherapy will never become exact sciences but that great progress has been made in restoring the human element to medicine. Psychosomatic medicine probably represents an established scientific approach to many medical problems. The author has a fine ability for brief descriptions of his patients which makes them more alive and human than does the average case report.

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