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The Morison Lectures, 1913.—General Paralysis of the Insane

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2018

George M. Robertson*
Affiliation:
Royal Asylum, Morningside, and University of Edinburgh
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General paralysis is common in our large cities, and assumes so many disguises that it is necessary to be ever on the alert for it. About a third of the male admissions to asylums between the ages of thirty-five and fifty suffer from it, and the possibility of its presence should always be remembered in the case of a man of this age presenting mental symptoms. Such men are usually the heads of families, and occupy positions of responsibility, for as a rule those who suffer from general paralysis are no weaklings. The social troubles and inconvenience produced by the occurrence of adolescent or senile insanity, bad as they may seem, are therefore trivial compared with those produced by a disease such as this, which attacks the bread-winner of a family and the head of a business in the prime of his life.

Type
Part I.—Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1913 
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