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MENTAL DISORDERS

DANGERS OF EXCESSIVE EDUCATION • \ SMOKING AND SLIMMING. (From Ocb Own Correspondent.) LONDON, August 5. Dr H. R. C. Rutherford, speaking in the neurology and psychological section of the British Medical Association Conference at Dublin, laid stress on the fact that little attention is paid to the influence of school life when considering mental disorders.

The advance of education and the necessity for receiving and retaining in one's memory a large amount of tacts and figures which might (or might not) be useful in a later period impose one of the most difficult strains to be experienced in life. When it was remembered that at adolescence the brain was immature, and that, although mental illness might have been absent up to the school age, yet it was likely that minor physical disturbances had been present for many years, and perhaps even since birth, it would not seem a matter for surprise that psychoses occurred frequently at this period. Dr Rutherford would suggest that there was a danger in what one might term "the excessive education of the unfit," and he would include within it backward children and those who showed any marked evidence of a nervous condition associated with a predisposition to mental illness, even though some of them might be of the brilliant type. They should hasten slowly during this period, and so remove any strain upon the intellect. How often did not one see a hitherto brilliant mind become less than mediocre, and make its possessor incapable of selfsupport? If such young people had been removed early from school and put to work upon the land many of them might have become useful citizens of the State. EXCESSIVE SMOKING.

"I have known excessive smoking to be the only apparent exciting cause 01 several caflea," l)r Rutherford added, " and, indeed, I regard it as being a fairly common contributory cause of mental illness. Its effects are not so obvious aa those of alcohol, for alcohol, if taken in sufficient quantities, will soon terminate the desire for its continuance by means of the production of an acute psychosis; but in the case of excessive smoking the effects are insidious, with the production of gastric disturbances, loss of appetite, and a; generally lowered physical condition, which makes a mental attack likely to occur with little other provocation. One contemplates with some alarm the future of a generation yet unborn the mothers of which, are harassed with a desire for slimness and excessive smoking. TOUGHNESS OF THE BRAIN.

"The experiences of the war proved the extraordinary resistance of the brain to external injury; and, indeed, the highly skilled art of the brain surgeon, for which art I have the greatest respect and admiration, has proved it again and again. He has shaved off portions of the cortex, incised the substance of the brain, probed it, extracted neoplasms from it, and even blown air into it. Notwithstanding all these things, he has the satisfaction of seeing his patient recover 'from the anaesthetic with a sane mind. It is only when the cortex is affected widely, usually in some insidious manner by a toxin, that we get symptoms of mental disease."

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ODT19330925.2.100

Bibliographic details

Otago Daily Times, Issue 22067, 25 September 1933, Page 10

Word Count
528

MENTAL DISORDERS Otago Daily Times, Issue 22067, 25 September 1933, Page 10

MENTAL DISORDERS Otago Daily Times, Issue 22067, 25 September 1933, Page 10

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