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On Bodily Disease as a Cause and Complication of Insanity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2018

G. J. Conford*
Affiliation:
Coppice Hospital for the Insane, Nottingham

Extract

The observations upon which this essay is written have been made in the Coppice Hospital, and refer to cases admitted between 1st August, 1859, and 1st August, 1893, and still surviving at the latter date, and to cases thereafter admitted consecutively, all of which have come under the writer's care, being 175 in all.

Type
Part I.—Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1900 

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References

(1) See Journ. of Mental Science, vol. xxxvi, p. 560.—Google Scholar

(2) See Journ. of Mental Science, vol. xxi.—Google Scholar

(3) “A Contribution to the Study of the Circulatory System in the Insane,” by T. Duncan Greenlees, M.B., Edinburgh, Journ. of Mental Science, vol. xxxi.—Google Scholar

(4) Dr. T. S. Clouston, “The Connection between Tuberculosis and Insanity,” Journ. of Mental Science, 1863 et seq.—CrossRefGoogle Scholar

(5) “Polyneuritis in Relation to Gestation and the Puerperium,” by H. G. Turney, M.D.Oxon., St. Thomas's Hos pital Reports, vol. xxv.—Google Scholar

(6) “Alternation of Neuroses,” G. H. Savage, Journ. of Mental Science, Jan., 1887.—Google Scholar

(7) Maudsley, “Physiology and Pathology of Mind,” London, 1867.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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