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Am J Psychiatry 120:112-117, August 1963
doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.120.2.112
© 1963 American Psychiatric Association
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OPIUM AS A TRANQUILIZER

ERIC T. CARLSON M. D., and MERIBETH M. SIMPSON A.B.1

1 Dept. of Psychiatry, New York Hospital (Payne Whitney Clinic), Cornell University Medlical College, New York, N. Y.

We have seen in our survey that our current search for a drug that will calm without sedating is not in any sense new. Over the centuries opium has been used as a tranquilizer and also for its effect as a hypnotic. It was used throughout the spectrum of psychiatric diagnoses but primarily for hysteria and hypochondriasis in its earliest history, then for mania for over a century, and more recently in the treatment of melancholia. Its use in psychiatry reached a peak in the middle of the 19th century, when many doctors considered it the greatest pharmaceutical aid that psychiatry had available. It was about this same time however that this favored psychiatric treatment began to be considered an occasional cause of mental illness and finally as morphinomania, a psychiatric disease itself. But not all psychiatrists recognized it as a disease, and we see in the late 19th century a final irony in the fact that as overcrowding increasingly plagued mental hospitals, addicts whose condition was frequently caused by physicians were turned away in favor of patients with other types of disorders.







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