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Encephalitis Lethargica—its Psychological Implications

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2018

G. A. Auden*
Affiliation:
City of Birmingham
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The gradual rise in the yearly incidence of encephalitis lethargica, culminating in the serious epidemic which marked the first half of the past year, and the tragic results which so often follow, have invested this disease with a sinister importance. But there are other reasons which make this infection peculiarly suitable for consideration at a meeting of the Medico-Psychological Association. These reasons have been well described in a recent paper by von Economo, who gave the name to the disease in 1917.

Type
Part I.—Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1925 

References

* Throughout the paper verbatim statements by parents are placed in inverted commas.Google Scholar

(2) Von C. v. Economo, Encephalitis Lethargica, pp. 42, no date.Google Scholar

(3) Diefendorf, Neurographs—Huntingdon Number, May, 1908.Google Scholar

(4) Instinct and the Unconscious, p. 48.Google Scholar

(5) Politics, I, 2: άνθρωπος φύσα πολιτικόν ζᾡον.Google Scholar

(6) Whateley Smith, W., The Measurement of Emotion, p. 138.Google Scholar

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