MEDICAL JOURNAL University of Western Ontario No.2
March, 1950
Vol. 20
PSYCHODYNAMIC CONSIDERATIONS IN THE TREATMENT OF PSYCHOTIC PATIENTS* JOHN
C.
WHITEHORN,
M .D . t
UNDERTAKING to discuss psychodynamic considerations in the I Ntreatment of psychotic patients, it is necessary to clarify the perspective before attempting to formulate the more concrete materials. At the present stage of psychiatric progress, "psychodynamic" is a term which arouses different concepts and different feelings in different observers. In the fairly recent past, it was the common supposition in psychiatry that morbid psychological experiences and personal behavior were merely symptomatic- the result or the reflection of some more substantial physical or chemical chain of causation. The notion that psychological events might form significant links in a chain of causation, producing illness or modifying the condition of patients, either for good or for evil, was viewed by the medical profession in general with outright skepticism or with mildly disparaging agnosticism. In dealing with grocers, bankers, stock brokers and garage mechanics, in the ordinary affairs of life, physicians have followed the general cultural supposition that the way you treat a person makes a路 difference in how he reacts, but these m~tters have been considered as "within normal limits," and reactions which exceed normal limits have been considered, in this tradition, as being beyond the range of any ordinary psychological influence. Physicians have also relied upon psychological influences in the business of building up a professional practice, wherein much practical 'lalue is attributed to a pleasing bed-side manner and a knack of diplomacy in consultations. But on the "scientific" side-in the understanding of illness and in efforts at scientifically oriented treatment-the medical profession has been in general, reluctant to admit, professionally, that psychological forces really count for much. Practitioners of medicine, with much experience and confidence in the wisdom gained from experience have acknowledged the practical importance of psy<;:hological attitudes in dealing with patients, and actually do try to influence patients psychologically, but this is considered as a little to one side of scientific
* The
B. T . McGhie Memorial Lecture, 1950.
t Professor of Psychiatry, Johns Hopkins University; Director of the Henry Phipps Psychiatric Clinic, Johns Hopkins Hospital.
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