RT Journal T1 NAgging wives and nervous husbands. JF Journal of the American Medical Association JO Journal of the American Medical Association YR 1899 FD September 9 VO XXXIII IS 11 SP 673 OP 674 DO 10.1001/jama.1899.02450630049006 UL http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jama.1899.02450630049006 AB Some years ago one of the health officers of New York City stirred up self-appointed representatives of the "new woman" by his remarks on the production of nervcus prostration in husbands by the nagging of wives. The novelists devote much attention to the self-sacrifice of the wife to the hypochondriac husband, but the reverse of the picture is too well known to physicians. The hysteric nagging wife of the insane or neurasthenic husband is a familiar acquaintance. Such women are usually regarded as fin-de-siecle products. The puritan matron, like her descendants, however, was often a hysteric. The eighteenth century statutes anent the use of the ducking-stool—which still survive in Delaware— demonstrate the recognition of nagging as an antisocial vice by the fathers of the republic. In the late sixteenth and early seventeenth century, hysterics were far more frequent than is usually supposed, and that minor form of hysteria which takes