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A man against insanity : the birth of drug therapy in a rural Michigan asylum  Cover Image Book Book

A man against insanity : the birth of drug therapy in a rural Michigan asylum

Summary: The story of Dr. Jack Ferguson, a man who battled drug addiction and had repeated psychotic breakdowns, but recovered and became a physician. He was determined to help the so-called incurably insane and mostly forgotten mental patients at the Traverse City State Hospital through experimental drug therapy, and in the process changed the way the mentally ill were treated.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781943995554
  • ISBN: 1943995559
  • Physical Description: print
    xiii, 182 pages : illustrations, portraits ; 21 cm
  • Edition: New edition.
  • Publisher: Traverse City, MI : Mission Point Press, [2018]

Content descriptions

General Note:
Originally published by Harcourt, Brace and Company in 1957.
Edition statement from preface, page xiii.
"1 doctor, 107 nurses, 1000 patients"--Front cover.
"Medical / Psychiatry / Psychopharmacology"--Back cover.
Subject: Ferguson, John Thatcher 1908-1968
Traverse City State Hospital (Mich.) x History.
Physicians Michigan Biography
Psychiatric hospitals Michigan Traverse City History
Mentally ill Care
Mentally ill Biography

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at Kirtland Community College.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Kirtland Community College Library R 154 .F47 D4 2018 30775305544372 General Collection Available -

Syndetic Solutions - Summary for ISBN Number 9781943995554
A Man Against Insanity : The Birth of Drug Therapy in a Rural Michigan Asylum
A Man Against Insanity : The Birth of Drug Therapy in a Rural Michigan Asylum
by de Kruif, Paul
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Summary

A Man Against Insanity : The Birth of Drug Therapy in a Rural Michigan Asylum


Meet the man against insanity. His laboratory? The sadly sinister wards of the 3,000-bed Traverse City State Hospital. His apparatus? Only his own eyes and hands, plus the hands and eyes of more than one hundred nurse attendants. And for his experiments, the patients whom staff referred to as the "cats and dogs"- the seemingly incurable psychotics resistant to all treatment and far beyond hope."Maybe we're not scientific here," Ferguson admitted. "I know we're different than they are in the big medical schools. We don't treat diseases - we try to treat sick people."In this book, originally published in 1957, author Paul de Kruif tells the story of Dr. Jack Ferguson, a family physician who originally made a name for himself by perfecting a three-minute lobotomy. In 1954, he arrived in Traverse City, Michigan, ready to perform 500 lobotomies on the so-called incurably insane. Yet he never got around to even the first one. Instead, using an unscientific combination of chemicals, copious notes and loving attention, he began one of the boldest drug therapy experiments ever attempted in a mental institution, helping to reshape how the mentally ill are treated in this country and abroad.
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