The American Psychiatric Association (APA) has updated its Privacy Policy and Terms of Use, including with new information specifically addressed to individuals in the European Economic Area. As described in the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use, this website utilizes cookies, including for the purpose of offering an optimal online experience and services tailored to your preferences.

Please read the entire Privacy Policy and Terms of Use. By closing this message, browsing this website, continuing the navigation, or otherwise continuing to use the APA's websites, you confirm that you understand and accept the terms of the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use, including the utilization of cookies.

×
Images in PsychiatryFull Access

Ewald Hecker, 1843–1909

Published Online:https://doi.org/10.1176/ajp.157.8.1220

Ewald Hecker was born on Oct. 20, 1843, in Halle, Prussia. His father was a master builder, and thus Hecker studied architecture and medicine from 1861 to 1866. He worked with Karl Ludwig Kahlbaum in Görlitz until 1872 and became one of his closest friends and his chief of staff. In 1891 Hecker purchased his own psychiatric hospital in Wiesbaden, in western Germany. Because of his political liberalism, he was never awarded an academic professorship of psychiatry at a university hospital, but he was honored with a professorial title in 1907. He married in 1871, had two sons and one daughter, and died after a series of strokes in 1909.

Hecker is mostly known as the originator of the concept of hebephrenia (1871) and as the expositor of Kahlbaum’s “clinical method” (1). However, he should also be remembered for his revolutionary spirit and his progressive ideas, which strongly diverged from the mainstream of psychiatry of his time. Hecker recognized early in his career that the asylums of that time did not provide adequate care for patients with less severe forms of psychiatric disorders. He also strongly advocated the abolition of coercive measures in psychiatry and publicly questioned their clinical utility and psychiatrists’ right to administer them. For Hecker, the importance of establishing a humane environment for the patients became so paramount that he even took some patients into his own household. In his day, Hecker made himself a name as a hypnotherapist and psychotherapist, mainly for patients with cyclothymia, anxiety, and sleep disorders (2), and he provided the touchstone for today’s integration of psychological treatments into psychiatry.

In addition, Hecker promoted public education. Many of his publications were directed at general practitioners, patients, and their families in an attempt to educate them about psychiatric disorders and to diminish the stigmatization associated with suffering from such a disorder (3). His scientific publications covered such diverse topics as malingering, forensic psychiatry, and physiological and pathological laughter, distinguishing him as a scientific enthusiast and empathic therapist.

Address reprint requests to Dr. Krüger, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Mood and Anxiety Disorders Division, Clarke Institute of Psychiatry, 250 College St., Toronto, Ont. M5T 1R8, Canada; (e-mail). Photograph from Deutsche Irrenärzte: Einzelbildin ihres Lebeus (German Psychiatrists: Images of Their Lives) by T. Kirchhoff (Berlin, Springer, 1924).

Ewald Hecker

References

1. Sedler MJ: The legacy of Ewald Hecker: a new translation of “Die Hebephrenie”; translated by Schoelly M-L; edited by Sedler MJ. Am J Psychiatry 1985; 142:1265–1271Google Scholar

2. Hecker E: Sleep and dreams. Q J Psychiatry Med 1871; 5:67–80Google Scholar

3. Hecker E: The causes and first symptoms of mental disease. NC Med J 1885; 15:16–19Google Scholar