-. MEDICAL SCIENCES - PROGRAM AND POLICY-- PSYCIIIA'PRY WHAT IS PSYCHIATRP? @a -1 by Alan Gregg December 3, 19-41 WHAT IS PSYCHIATlIY? u. GYC 77 It has been my experience that apart from an imaginative minority most people have either had close contact with what is called mental disease through having seen a relativc or friend attackcd by some form of it, or, on the other hand, they have virtually no interest in psychiatry but merely an ignorance enhanced by aversion and evasion. Close contact even for one day with a friend who has bccome insane is an expcrience which beggars any argument for the inportance of psychiatry, and only those who have never seen mental disease at close range can shrup; their normal shoulders with undonoern or with umuffled resignation assume the adequacy of the nearest asylum. Whereas the usual physical ills concern the inade2uate performance of heart, lungs, stomach or some other organ in tho service it renders to the rest of the body, psychiatric diseases must in thc min still be defined in terms of inadequate performmce of an individual human being vis vis other human beings. Psychiatrists study and treat human beings who are inadequate or actually dangerous in their behavior as members of society: and so it happens that psychiatry as the study of disordered conduct is intimate to an almost suspicious degree with cthics , with cultural anthro- pology, with socioloF;y, with motayhysics, xith rcligion, with artistic activities -- and this despite the fact that the behavior of R human in- dividual as a whole should be as soundly understood in terms of medicine as the behavior or function of any of his component organs. To understand mcntal disease calls for medical art aid science but also for a wide knowl- edge of the society and culture to which each of us must lcarn to adjust. Vhile your attention is still at the optirmun let me offer you bvo ideas of cardinal importance to your understanding diat psychiatry is 8 first, that tho psychiatrist atQdies the function and the influence of mental processes and emotional states in the v.hole vast range from incurable disease to optimum health; and, second, that the psychiatrist seldom handles conditions which he can describe without reference to the demands of society upon the individual.. As the f'unctions of an automobile are not the functions of its carburetor or its gears, so the functions of man as a whole individual not only transocnd but differ radically from the functions of any of his component organs or systems. vith the nervous system, it is quite natural, for the function of the nervous system is to coordinate, to integrate, to adjust, to harmonize, to administer the services of all the organs of the individual and to perpetuate his identity as a person through a finite but extremely long series of changing environments -- dangers and difficulties and defeats, as well as resting periods, comforts and delightful s~cce8ses. If psyohiatry has especially closc connections I should not be satisfied with the definition of psychiatry as that specialty of medicine thhich deals with mental disorders. nevrspaper hcadline, such a definition confines while condensing and mis- represents by oversi-plifying. Psychiatry deals also with the emotional Like a bad mid social life of man, merely his reasoning mental operations. Insofar as experience has shown you that enotional thinking is different from logical reasoning, the whole purvicw and range of psychiatry is evidently extended. Indeed, the province of psychiatry is the conduct of man, his reactions, his behavior as an indivisible sentient being with other such beings. recently attention has bcen given only to grossly disordered cofiduct -- to pcrsons locked up in asylums -- but now the field is far more inclusive because it reaches into the anxieties, the fatipes, the instabilities, the adjustnents, thc disturbances of nor-ml everyday living, and also bccause it iricludes the cffccts of mental and emotional functions upon the component organs of the body QC well as the effects of disordors of these organs upon the functions of thc human being as a whole. Until Let us make the position of psychiatry a little clearcr by distin- pishinp; it from neurology and. from psychoanalysis. of the nervous system; more specifically, the discases of the nervous systen. Olx-iviusly there is much overlapping between neurology and psychiatry trr!icn de- fects or diseascs of the brain, spinal cord and peripheral cervcs are involved. But neurology points toward the functions of the nervous system as serving the efficiency of the individual nachine, while psychiatry directs its attention to conduct -- that blend of mental and emotional functions, dependent, it is true, largely upon the nervous system but involving more than the serviceability of that system to the individual RS a whole. The location, structure and func- tion of the nerves ar-d thc paths taken by nerve irqulses are the basic icnowledCe of the neurologist. The neurologist learns to dctect vfiiere injury or infection is located along a large variety of nerve tracts. 'io the studies of gunshot injuries of the nervous system Arierican rieurology axes its beginninpJs during the Ciril liar. loss of sensation due to ncrve injury, is the task of R neurologist, not a psychiatrist. Lfost neurologists practise psychiatry because whai lie laymin calls "nervousness is not an affair of nerve tracts but is riue to emotional conflicts or other psychiatric disturbances o Fsgchiatric disorders are much more numerous Lhan neurolorical disorders. Kcurology is the study The location of' a brain tumor, or the cause of a paralysis or 11 Indeed, the psychiatrist' ti domain is almost bafflingly large, for it includes derarieements of conduct or behavior often discernible only in term of the patient's relationships with other human beings in some givcn intellec- tual or cultural or social or moral system. cble knowledge of language, of custom, of tradition, of tlie culture arid mores that surround the yttient. be responsikle, and. for thcir correction an equally varied acsortmcnt of treat- ments my Le effective. Indeed, so complicated and numerous are the components of norm1 l-iwnmi conduct that it Iias tallen years of study of abcorrnalities t.o arrive at cveri a tentative list 02 vhat had hitherto escaped recognition because of its constant prescnce in normal persons. As a figure of speech we say, "It sticks out like u sore thumb." In the sm.e way normal behavior renaiiis incon- spicuous until Ziseasc calls attention to its numerous components. Psychiatry has had to Lukt.: the long road. to recoEnition of o. f'unctiori through the conspic- uousness of' its absence. And that presupposcs a consider- For these deracgcmcnts a wide gamut of causes may Let ne offer some oxa.nples of such functions of the persoriality suddenly made concpicuous 3. A man receives a severe blow on the head. corifused, ~~5th or without knowing that he has lost touch with reality. he nay lose consciousness or lose his mcmory for the events imediately pre- ceding the blow. be conscious and have memory intact. IIe may be dazed or Or Thus ne see that the normal man should know where he is, A soldier may receive a bullet which traverses a part of his brain. The permanent after-effects Ray be a loss of initiative amountin& to the general apathy of ti purely vegetative life. of a nan. Such placidity is riot Ihe normal condition Alcohol in excess produces effects which would seem Roro remarkable if they werc less familiar -- a sense of self-confidence and vrell-being -- as William James said, the mood of "saying yes to everything" -- a loss of discrc- tion and self-control, and in extreme cases sensation, emotion and mental activ- ity erased in stuporous and dangerously insensate sleep. You will note that the phenomena ~r9 of the order of derangements of conduct of the individual as a person, and that it is sometimes hard to separate psychiatric symptoms from immorality. A malrrourished patient vi& pellagra exhibits irritability, eclotional instability and a sense of fatigue. accompanies high fever suff crs from delusions, believing perhaps that his at- tendants are soor. to be his assassins, tmd reacts accordingly. of either sex as they approach the fifties or sixties often pass through a year or so of depressed spirits and show a morbid concern for their health but emerge on the other side of that too little recognized slough of despond with a seren- ity end. good chesr vhich comfort in equal neasure themselves arid their friends. An elderly marl whose hardened arteries supplying thc brain givc insufficicnt service there shows child-like temper taritrums arid enbittered pigheadedness -- the tragic fatc I think of Woodrow t'lilson. A patient with the delirium which often Human beings A tumor of the frontal lobe may show its first symptoms ir, an in- ordinate vreakncss for making puns on2 jests of doubtful propriety. An infection of the brain with the spirochete of syjjhilis often results in delusions of gran- dew and self-importance vhich are no less disastrous for hnving an insidious and unrecognized beg imiiip; . Kovr you will note that each of the symptoms I have meritioncd relates to conduct ond yet each vas differert. symptoms resulted from conditions afflicting a p-cviously vel1 person, and are accompanied by physical or chemical events in the body which car1 be stated in other terms than those of conduct. There ~VRS a bruise on the scalp, a bullet hole, alcohol in thc blood, inadequate vitamins, high fever, a reduction of sex hormones, a tumor, deficient blood su;iply in the brain, or positive Wasser- mam in thc spinal fluid. Also, please note that these psychiatric But psychiatrists must; deal also with aberrations from normal conduct in pcrsons ivho ncver were normal -- with idiots whose heads never grow larger than a crapefruit, v:i th cretins vhose brains have been irreparably handicappcd by lack of iodino, witk congenital epileptics and other hereditary or congenital disease -- but in each of these conditions the essential and pressing fact is that in terms of their relationship vdth normal human bcin,gs these paticnts are obviously incapable of the expected conduct. Thus far the conditions mentioned have involved in thc first place disorders of reaction, conduct or behavior which are at the same time recog- nizable by characteristic changes in body structure or body chcmistry. These are the conditions more easily recognized -0 where fuiiction and structure are both at variance with the normal. There remains a much morc difficult group of diseases where up to now we can merely say that conduct and types of reactior, are disordered but no struc- tural or chemical variation is knovrn to accompany in characteristic fashion the all too obvious symptoms of social, moral, and intellcctual inadequacy. In this category falls every gradation of disintegrated personality, from the uncon- trollablG manias of the madhouse to the trivial fears and the virtually harmless mannerisms or petty foibles of everyday life. In this catecory, too, fall most of the psychiatrist's cases -- L&e schizophrenics with their characteristic inaccessibility arid remote rejection of emotional exchange with normal persons, the manic depressives vdth their unreasonable melancholia or equally irrational elatiori and overactivity, the feebleminded, arid the lone; list of psychoneurotics with their hysterias, anxieties, obsessions, and states of inexplicable fatigue and indecision. companiment which can be detected by the present methods of laboratory examina- tion, and for these conditions the methods of the psychiatrist are only accurate description of the patient's reaction and conduct, together with an elaborate and meticulous history or narrative of the development of the disorder. None of these conditions has any characteristic physical ac- It is here that we may describe psychoanalysis as one of the methods of eliciting from a patient the narrative and the nature of his intellectual and emotional growth. of interpretation of human conduct. It is one of the nore illuminating methods used in psychiatry bul; not-affective in curing many psychiatric diseases. It is an elaborate and relatively reqe ssembly of theories or postulates, based upon the study of all that the pat5 ays in oft repeated interviews with the analyst regarding his memories, his attitudes, his daydream and phantasies, - his dreams, his motional life, his sins and peccadillos. There is an element of the confessional in such recitals and a relief obtained by discussing sub- jects previously repressed. Psychoanalysis postulates the immense importance of the unconscious and assumes a duality in human behavior, a conscious, ac- ceptable, idealistic force often in conflict with unconscious primitive animal desires, and psychoanalysis further attaches great importance to the successive anc? complete changes necessary in the growth of an infant from a completely de- pendent, amoral animal to an ethically passable adult. By many it is overrated as an exclusive form of treatment, but by even more it is underrated as a pre- requisite for many types of treatment. but they arc applied in treatment. experience; even more than on abdominal operation it calls for a cautious operator illhose knowledge and cxperience should exceed his enthusiasm to get to work. emphasis which Freud attached to the role of sex seems at times fantastic, but, on the other hand, equally extraordinary would be the assumption that so essential Psychoanalysis is only one of the methods and forms Anatomy and physioloey are not treatment And certainly psychoanalysis is not a casual The 5. a function throughout plant and animal life can be adequately understood or directed by pious moralizinp,, rattled evasion, and stern taboo. from the essay On Instincts by William Morton Fjheeler, whom Whitehead char- acterized as the only man he had ever known who would have been both vrorthy and able to sustain a conversation vsith Aristotle. Let me read Similar cbnsiderations have led me recently to read some twenty volumes of psychoanalytic literature comprising the wrks of beud, June, Brill, Adler, Ernest Jones, Ferenzci, Bjerre, and We A. White, with the result that I feel as if I had been taking a course of svrimming lessons in a veritable cesspool of learninc. As I have not since had an opportunity to take a spiritual shower- bath you will understand why my remarks throughout this paper lack the oustomary refinement of a Sunday evening discourse. 1 should, of course, be vrandering entirely off my beat if I atempted seriously to discuss psychoanalysis, but I cannot refrain from recording a few personal impressions of what I believe to be one of the most extraordinary and tar-reaching, contributions to t and at the'nowbiologtsts vho have handled instinct, I now see my opgorhuiity to get under the ski-n of the pEychologists. After perusing during the past twenty years a small library of rose-water psychologies of the academic type and notioing how their authors igqors QP merely hint at the existence of such stupendous and f'un- damental bio1op;ical phenomena as those of hunger, sex, and fear, I should not disagree with, let us say, an imaginary critic recently arrived from Mars, who should express the opinion khat many of these works read as if they had been composed by beings that had been born and bred in a belfry, castrated in early infancy, and fed continually for fifty years through a tube with a stream of liquid nutriment of constant chemical composition. tically, most of our traditional p6yChOlOgieS are about as useful for purposes Qf understanding the human mind as an equal number of dtssbrtations on Greek statuary would be to a student eager for a kuowledge of anatomy. Such a student atomslearns khat the object of' his investigation, tho human animail body, is very largely com- posed.of parts offensive to the aesthetic sense, but this does not deter him from studying them as thoroup;hly as other parts. The ty$A psychologist, vho might be expected to study his material in the same scientific spirit, does nothing of the kind, but con- fines his attention to the head and the upper extremities and drapes or ignores the other parts. 5. IIabily: had a flir4 at fiearly all'the types of biologists To puC it dras- Now I believe that the psychoanalysts arc getting down to brass tacks. seems to consist in sitting dom together or with the philosophers and seeing who can halluoinate fastest or most subtly and clothe the results in the beet English, is not helping us very much in solving the terribly insistent problems of life. They have had the courage to dig up the subconscious, that hotbed of all the egotism, They have discovered that the psychologist's game which b. greed, lust, pugnacity, cowardice, sloth, hate, and er,vjr vinich every single one of us carries about as his inheritance from the animal world. f'hese are all ethically end aesthetically very unpleasant phenomena but they are just as real and fundamcntal as our entrails, blood, and reproductive organs. In this matter, I am glad to admit, the theologims, with their doctrine of total depravity, seem to me to be nearer the truth than the psychologists. that our depravity is only about 85 to 9C$. I should say, however, In nothinf: is the courage of the psychoanalysts better seen than in their use of the biogenetic law. They certainly employ that great biological slogar, of tne nineteenth century with a fearlessness that makes thc timid twentieth-century biologist gasp. But making all due allowance for the extravagant statements of Freud end Jug and their disciples, afiy fair-minded student of human nature is compelled to admit that there is a very considerable residuum of accurate obscrva- tion and inference jri their accounts of Lhe dream, of the perversions of thc nutritive ond scxual instincts, of the erotio conflicts and repressions, and of the surviving infantilism.. . . . . To mc ono of the most striking indications that the psychoanalysts are on the right road is the fact that mrcy of their theories have such a broad biological basis that they can be applied, erceptis excipiendis, to a group of animals so remote from man as the insects. escaped Jurqy, who calls atLention to the striking ma1op;ies between the nutritive caterpillar stage R~LI human infancy, the chrysalis and the period of latency, and thc imaginal butterfly and pubcrty in man. Thcre are even cases of repression and sublination as in the workers of social insects, an2 did tine permit I could cite exmplos of mul- tiple persocality or of infantilisms, that is, larval traits vhich survive or reappcar in the adults of m-y species. Insects undoubt- edly sleep. Do they dream? If thcy do, what a pity that we shall never be able to apply the Freudian analysis to the dreamG of that sym- bol of sexual repression and scblimation, the worker ant! This has not But these are trivial considerations. The great fact remains that the work of thc psychiatrists is bcginning to have its effect even on such hidebound institutions as ethics, religion, cducation, and jurisprudence, and that the knowledge that is being gained of the work- ings of` our subconscious must eventually profoundly affect animal no less than human psychology, since the subconscious - is the animal mind. NOOM let us turn to one other field close to that of psychiatry, vhero differences from psychiatry may serve for the purpose of deficition. is to the practice of medicine, psychology is -- or should be -- to the practice of psychiatry. not precede the study of the abnormal. the exception illustrates the rule. normal function of the organism has received much from psychiatry. whole method of experinentation insofar as it creates artificial conditions pro- duces in some degree illuminating abcarnalities. abnormal precedes the normal. As physiology In the hisLory of medicine the investigatioll of the normal did SiTilarly, psychology as thc study of the Indeed the As a source of knowledge the The abnormal has revealed the normal as 7. There are psychiatrists who woulc! be content to describe psychiatry as medical psychology just as there are physicians who insist that medicine is physiology applied to disease. this role and thus be the handmaiden to psychiatry, she is in reality a very green hired girl with almost as much to unlearn as to acquire before she be- comes indispecsable to the psychiatrist, Patienoe rather than dismissal is indicated for even now psychology, especially when well grounded in biology and physiology, is valuable. service in mental testing, conditioned reflex research, localization studies and in certain seloctivc procedures like the Rorschaoh test. Though in theory psychology should play Already psychology gives real though limited To summarize the foregoing: liman beings are not merely collections or assemblies of collaborating organs. characteristic of organisms as a whole and appropriate for individuals living ir2 indispensable contact and collaboration with other human beings. That they do we call oonduot or behavior (and equally important what they manap to keep from doing). Psychiatry is the field of study which concerris a very wide raqp of disorders, defeots or inadequacies of behavior of these individuals. It has been wisely said that Life's aim is an act, not a thought,, In the same sense it is not merely mental phenomena that constitute the material of psyohiatry, but that blend of instincts, emotions, thoughts and feelings and physiological states which eventuates in oonduct -- in action or the inhibi- tion of action. cal or other disturbances in some part of the machinery of thcbody, e.gr, bullet wounds, motabolic disorder, alcohol, bacterial disease. But it is also tr~e that we witness disturbances for which we can find as yot no cause so simgle and objective, whcre mood and motivation, emotions and instincts, and the faculties of adjustment to reality appear to be in conflict or disordar, and these derangements also are the task of ttle psychiatrist. They have functions and capacities It is true that conduct will Le affected by physical, chemi- XOW for a few conunents upon the status of psychiatry and I am done. Since 1880 medicine as a whole has profited immeasurably from tvro broad lines of study, bacteriology and cellular pathology. diseases as due to invading micro-oTganisms, the other desoribod in analytic terms of separate organs and organic disease the phenomena shown by sicktpeople. There has been for the past fifty years, however, something approaching neglect of thc patient as a person. Ilarmnan of Ea1 t imor e . The one explained a host of Let me quote from a first-rate physician -- Louis To the specialist, psychiatry is another specialty operating in a contiguous but separate domain. To the internist, it is a vital and intcgral part of his work. Indeed I find it impossible to formulate a clear expression of the relation of psychiatry to medioine, so intimately and inextrioably are they bound together. The physician studies and practices psychiatry continuously, even when hc protests that he has not the least knowledge of formal psychiatry. he may practice it unoonsciouslg...... It is the chief instrument of his suocets, even though In spite of this growing importance it is the subject about which medical students know least and the one in vihioh their training is most deficient. chiatry are many; I can mention only a few of the outstanding ones. The reasons for this slighting treatment of psy- 8. 1. the Subject. okjects of ridioule and contumely, riot of serious study and sp- pathy. 'l'he patient with no gross lesion to justify his mmy com- plaints was neglected aid avoided. cast at a fellow student was to call him neurasthenic. Uter care- ful obscrmtion had csta5lishcd thc fact that a patient had no or- ganic disease professional relations were supposed to be Et an exid and he vas dismissed with some such reassuring renark as, 'There is nothing whatsocvcr wrong I;ith you; your troublcs arc imginnry; go on and forget them,' or ever1 nore curtly xith a placebo and the ardent hope that he would never return. Kith the passaze of years this brusque atti tudc has bccone somcwliat softened mid yet essentially it is still the attitude of many physicians. The mind always seeks precise classification and is never more pleased than when experience can be snugly labcled.. . . . . Thc General Lack of Appreciation of the Importance of When I v:as a medical student psychoncurotics wcre The worst irisulL that could 5e In order to furnish tangi3le evidence of the important part psyc!iiatric problems play in the practice of medicine I have revie:yed the records of 500 consecutive patients 1~110 consulted me. To rive the Meres any value I must explair. that my practice covers the whole field of internal medicine aid thst patients come to me or are sent to me chiefly for diagnosis. I have 110 reputaLiou as a psychiatrist nor am I even suspected of having unusual interest or talent in that field. Lot one of the 500 patients consulted me on account of an overt psychiatric condition.. . o . . Among thc 500 paticnts therc vcre 116 (23 per cent) without my discoverable organic cause for the symptoms of which they complained. ~n adtiition, *ere were SG (11 per cent) presenting rzinor organic lesions but with symptom which could riot possibly Le explained by the lcsions alone. In a word, one-third of the patients suFfered solely or pre- dor!iinantly from functional disorders. Strictly spedrinc it might be stretching a point to say that all of 'illuse filnctional disturbmccs were due primarily to psychiatric disorrlers. IJevertheless, if you are vSil1i.q to define the province of psychiatry as the broad field T hare outlined, then surely the problem of these patients are of interest and concern to psychiatrists. For instmice, a man other- wise xell and coqetent; suffers from very distressing digestive s~pptorns whenevcr he is worried, nr for other reasons under nerwus strain. Shall ne corisider this o. psychiatric problem? here psychic influences play the chief role in di.sturbing the balance of thc vegetative nervous systm. invades the psychiatric field :narc promincntl:: than it does thc gastro- onterolozi cal . I think ve undoubtedly must, since Y&at is commonly called the spastic colon Li Lh steady insistence psychiatrists iiavc laid strcss upon the whole personality of any wid evely patient -- their mm mci thosc in cvcry medical specialty. Psychiatrists, des2ite their isolation in asylums, despite inferior recruitment to their ranks aid the taboo and horror associated with insanity, desuite the time required for making their diagnoses, arid despite their isola- tion from cxpcrizental methods and the fact that laboratory animals do not appear to develop psycliiatric contiitions (except .Pavlov' s experimental neuroses), ciesrite all these handicaps psychiatrists are nearer to adequate discharge of their duties 9. than they have ever been before. dispassionately and in terms of cause and effect; - not devils axid disasters. Cannon's work upon the physiology of the emotions, the exceptional growth of neuro-physiology, thanks to Sherrington and to new instruments of registering the changes of electrical potential in ncrves, thc stimlus of Preudian thcory, of Yavlov's work on reflex behavior, and the steady extension of scientific mthods of study of psychiatric patients are sone of the factors in the progress of psy- chiatry. For Lhc first time man studies his own conduct 1hCh renains to be done. Kolb of' the United States Public iiealth Service reported that in 1939 $200,000,000 was spent 011 menkal diseases, yet not 1 per cent of it for research. some tiKe of his life be hospitalized for mental diseaso, and mother child in the same 20 vSill at sone time be psychiatrically disablcd but iiot hospitalizcd. l'hcre are probably 6,000,000 feeble-ninded persons of all trades ir the United States, 80 to 95 per cent at large in the population, 100,000 alcoholics and drug addicts, betwoen 800,000 and a million mentally discased and 400,000 egi- leptics. There are more hospital beds devoted to psychiatric cases than to all other forms of disease. Jinety 2er cent of the cost is at public expense. hr,d in the face of the dislocation, loss and sorrow in the families of' the mentally disordcrcd the statistician remains mtc. One child in evsry 20 in this country vrill at Addendum Answering a90 inquiry of the Chairman, ILr. Stcrvrnrt, as to the plans of thc I'edical Sciences in Psychiatry: ment of Psychiatry has been and would continue to be in three general categories. The first and most important type of aid is directed to the improverlent in the teaching of Psychiatry to medical students. The seconc! form of support is in grants for research work in psychiatry, neurology, psychology , neurophysiology ar,d other fields essential to the progress of psychiatry. seeks to improve i;he care of mental patients im-ediately ant1 directly, working 195th the present personnel and actual conditions of the present day. Rockefeller Foundation aid for the develop- 'hc third form of aid As cxamplcs of aid to t2.c teaching of Psychiatry The liockefeller Founda- tion is suppor tirig departnents of Psychiatry at Yale, Iiarvard, *Gashirigtori Univer- sity, St. Louis, Chicago, Duke arid %lane wid is 1are;el.y respomiblo ?or their initiatim. the tributing substantially to departmental expense. At Johns Hopkins , Columbia (neurology), the University of Pennsylvania, University of Illinois and the Iiniversity of Colorado the Foundation is con- Research granks have been numerous md more widely scattered, i.e., in- cluding the Ehudsley Hospital in London, the Uiiiversity of Kdinburgh, and Uni- versities in ;lorway, Sweden, Holland, Belgium, Sxcitzerland, Canada and Australia. Funds used Tor khe irnprovernent of psychiatric institutions would in- clude grants for holding postgraduate assemblies of psychiatrists in state nental hospital work, aid for psychiatric nursing, aid for a symposium on mental disease under the auspices of the American Association for the Advancenent of Science, etc . 10. A record of support during the years 1931-1941 of Psychiatry, lkurology, and Closely Related Subjects, prepared for the meeting in Decenber, 1941, but not presented is appended.