Andy
Retired committee member
Jon Stone cross referencing himself again.
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Paywall, https://academic.oup.com/brain/advance-article-abstract/doi/10.1093/brain/awaa037/5816705In 1900, functional neurological disorder, then known as ‘hysteria’, was a key topic of neurological research. A condition with its own catalogue of signs, symptoms and treatment, like any other; but one that eluded the pathologist’s gaze. ‘Hysteria’ was a standard part of the neurological curriculum for neurologists of the period, from Charcot to Babinski in Paris, and Gowers to Henry Head in the UK (Stone, 2016). This is well-trodden ground for medical historians. However, a combination of factors led to a steep decline in neurological interest in ‘hysteria’ after World War I: the shell shock epidemic and subsequent home office enquiry, the...
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