The Psychopharmacological Revolution in the USSR: Schizophrenia Treatment and the Thaw in Soviet Psychiatry, 1954–64

Author:

Zajicek Benjamin

Abstract

Twentieth-century psychiatry was transformed in the 1950s and 1960s by the introduction of powerful psychopharmaceuticals, particularly Chlorpromazine (Thorazine). This paper examines the reception of Chlorpromazine in the Soviet Union and its effect on the Soviet practice of psychiatry. The drug, known in the USSR by the name Aminazine, was first used in Moscow in 1954 and was officially approved in 1955. I argue that Soviet psychiatrists initially embraced it because Aminazine enabled them to successfully challenge the Stalin-era dogma in their field (Ivan Pavlov’s ‘theory of higher nervous activity’). Unlike in the West, however, the new psychopharmaceuticals did not lead to deinstitutionalisation. I argue that the new drugs did not disrupt the existing Soviet system because, unlike the system in the West, the Soviets were already dedicated, at least in theory, to a model which paired psychiatric hospitals with community-based ‘neuropsychiatric dispensaries.’ Chlorpromazine gave this system a new lease on life, encouraging Soviet psychiatrists to more rapidly move patients from in-patient treatment to ‘supporting’ treatment in the community.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

History,Medicine (miscellaneous),General Nursing

Reference142 articles.

1. ‘Godovoi otchet MZ o seti, deiatel’nosti i kadrakh meditsinskikh uchrezhdenii SSSR’ [1954], Rossiiskii gosudarstvennyi arkhiv ekonomiki[hereafter RGAE], f. 1562, op. 27, d. 48.

2. Mark B. Adams, ‘Networks in action: the Khrushchev era, the Cold War, and the transformation of Soviet science’, in Garland Allen and Roy MacLeod (eds), Science, History and Social Activism, Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science (Springer Netherlands, 2001), 257. On de-Stalinisation, see Polly Jones, ‘Introduction: the dilemmas of de-Stalinization’, in Polly Jones (ed.), The Dilemmas of De-Stalinization: Negotiating Cultural and Social Change in the Khrushchev Era (London: Routledge, 2006), 1–18.

3. Ibid., 308.

4. Ibid., l. 114.

5. A.V. Snezhnevskii, ‘Psikhopatologiia’, in Klinicheskaia psikhiatriia (Izbrannye trudy) (Moscow: Meditsina, 2004), 102. [Original publication: Bol’shaia meditsinskaia entsiklopediia, vol. 27, 2nd edn (Moscow: Sovetskaia entsiklopediia, 1962), 372–92.].

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