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The Influence of Reserpine on a Disturbed Male Ward and a Method for Assessing This

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 February 2018

J. Ph. Hes
Affiliation:
Of the “Talbieh” Psychiatric Hospital affiliated to the Medical School of the Hebrew University and Hadassah, Jerusalem
S. Bracha
Affiliation:
Of the “Talbieh” Psychiatric Hospital affiliated to the Medical School of the Hebrew University and Hadassah, Jerusalem

Extract

When we commenced using reserpine in our disturbed male ward we were impressed by the calming effect which this produced in many of the patients and by the fact that the ward as a whole became quieter. In order to confirm these impressions we created a method which enabled us to express the behaviour of the patients in a graph. We thus had a simple means of comparing one clinical state with another and of assessing the influence of the therapeutic measures used.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1956 

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References

Kline, N. S., a.o., Ann. of the New York Acad. of Science, 1954, 59, 1140.Google Scholar
Bleuler, M., and Stoll, W. A., “Clinical use of reserpine in psychiatry, Comparison with chlorpromazine,” Ann. of the New York Acad of Science, 15 April, 1955, 61, art. 1, 167173.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
“Reserpine and the Nervous System,” Leading article in the Lancet, 24 December, 1955.Google Scholar
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