This section contains 740 words (approx. 2 pages at 400 words per page) |
Shock Therapy
Sigmund Freud, considered to be the father of modern psychiatry, became well-known to the American public during the 1920s. His fame started when intellectuals, who heard about the research he was doing in Europe, began undergoing psychoanalysis themselves. From their writings and their life stories, the general populace became familiar with Freud's ideas about the subconscious, an idea that would have perplexed people of earlier centuries, when eccentric behavior was treated as harshly as criminal behavior. Freud's work became familiar, but it was also considered something of a luxury, a hobby that the wealthy could afford to indulge in. In the more extreme cases of mental disorder, science hurried past trying to understand patients and went right for effective treatment of behavior. For severe depression in particular, this meant "shock treatment" (referred to today as "Electroconvulsive Therapy," or "ECT"). ECT proved to have quicker and more...
This section contains 740 words (approx. 2 pages at 400 words per page) |