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A Psychiatric Review of Fifty Cases of Gunshot Wounds Self-Inflicted

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 February 2018

Extract

My interest in this subject was aroused during the first few weeks of the campaign in Normandy, when seemingly large numbers of these cases were known to be undergoing surgical treatment. At that time the rapid flow of psychiatric cases prevented a clear view of the significance of the situation as it was impossible to know accurately whether these wounded were in high proportion to the number of troops in action or to the total of battle casualties.

Type
Part I.—Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1948 

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References

(1) Manual of Courts Martial. Washington, D.C.: United Army Government Printing Office, 1940.Google Scholar
(2) “Physical Standards,” Selective Service Regulations, 6: 31, 18 October.Google Scholar
(3) Bruinewitsch, K. (1939), “Über das Simulieren von Krankheiten, Kurze Zusammenstellung der Simulation und Organschädigungen zum Zwecke des Ausweichens von Militärdienst, nach Beobachtungen aus der Kriegszeit im Moskauer Haupt-Kriegsspital,” Wien. med. Woch., 89, 472–73, 6, May.Google Scholar
(4) Hart, D., and Jones, R. (1938), “Self-inflicted Wounds in Civil Practice,” South. Med. J., 12 October, 963.Google Scholar
(5) Flicker, D. (1942), “The Self-inflicted Injury: A Case-report,” Amer. J. Psychiat., 99, No. 2, 168, 19 Sept. Google Scholar
(6) Miller, E. (1940), The Neuroses of War. Macmillan & Co. Google Scholar
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