We are all familiar with the two McEvedy and Beard papers which appeared in the January !970 BMJ. Less familiar is the third paper published elsewhere in 1973. There has been little attention paid to the Editorial which accompanied the papers. It does little credit to the journal or its editor. Here it is:https://www.bmj.com/content/bmj/1/5687/1.1.full.pdf
It is far worse than the M and B papers.
This is the obituary of the editor: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.317.7168.1323
It is not clear what experience or authority the editor had to expound on the subject.
Among the most severely affected cases a previous history of neurotic symptoms, instability, recurrent illness of uncertain origin, or actual breakdown may be elicited. Whether or not prominent conversion symptoms such as hysterical convulsions, paralysis, aphonia, disorientation, and dissociative episodes are observed may depend on whether some leading or popular member of the group, who happens to have been an early case, responded in this manner and thus provided a pattern for simulation. The term "hysteria" is not properly applicable to these epidemics, partly because the many uses of this term have blunted its meaning and partly because anxiety or panic appears to have been the central feature of most of the epidemic cases. Motivated, self-dramatizing, and importunate behaviour, conversion symptoms, and dissociation of consciousness are inconsistent, often fleeting, and may be secondary to anxiety. The pejorative meaning that has come to be attached to "hysteria" adds to the reasons for the use of terms such as "epidemic anxiety state" or "epidemic neurotic reaction" and for referring to "epidemic hysteria" only when strictly justified
It is far worse than the M and B papers.
This is the obituary of the editor: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.317.7168.1323
It is not clear what experience or authority the editor had to expound on the subject.
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