{"id":5603,"date":"2017-05-15T09:13:09","date_gmt":"2017-05-15T09:13:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/?page_id=5603"},"modified":"2019-01-10T14:55:25","modified_gmt":"2019-01-10T14:55:25","slug":"john-yerbury-dent-1888-1962","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/?page_id=5603","title":{"rendered":"John Yerbury Dent, 1888\u20131962"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Physician and author, tireless advocate of apomorphine. He endeavoured to make it widely available and made it famous enough to last.<!--themify_builder_static--><\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>\n<h4>Biography<\/h4>\n<figure id=\"attachment_7101\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-7101\" style=\"width: 300px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/01\/Jack-Dent_1-218x300.jpg\" alt=\"John Yerbury Dent\" width=\"300\" height=\"414\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-7101\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><em>John Yerbury Dent<\/em><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Dr John Yerbury Dent was one of the few doctors to be so completely identified with a treatment that it was named after him; the &#8216;Dent method&#8217; (1), a short and intense course of treatment for alcoholics. An avuncular and no-nonsense man, he inspired devotion in both his patients and nurses. The same independence of thought and interest in his patients which led him to develop the treatment, however, were also the eventual cause of its slide into obscurity.<\/p>\n<p>Dent showed signs of an acute yet rebellious intellect at an early age, a quality which stayed with him his entire life. He began his medical studies in 1905. After a week at Cambridge University, which sat ill with his Quaker background, he came down and enrolled at King\u2019s College Medical School, following in the footsteps of his father and uncle. He was careful only to attend 4 days a week, serially skipping lectures to go on trips to the countryside with his uncle to study geology and go mountaineering. His disrespect for authority manifested in a campaign of provocative letters to the Principal (an exasperated Dr Headlam), for which he was eventually expelled, much to his and his father\u2019s delight. As Dent was popular with his lecturers, they invited him to continue to attend, and so the expulsion was barely an impediment to his continued education, but delayed his qualification as a doctor.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_7102\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-7102\" style=\"width: 300px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/01\/Jack-Dent_2.jpg\" alt=\"John Yerbury Dent\" width=\"300\" height=\"445\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-7102\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><em>John Yerbury Dent<\/em><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Dent\u2019s willingness to treat those in the direst conditions led him to contract tuberculosis from slumdwellers around Holborn in 1913. (2)<sup>\u00a0<\/sup>A year spent recovering in a sanatorium gave him time to read widely and refine thoughts on the purpose of authority. With the outbreak of the First World War the demand for doctors saw the newly qualified Dent taking on responsibilities far beyond his training at the new Kings College Hospital in Denmark Hill. Determined to do &#8216;real work&#8217; treating patients he evaded the bi-weekly drills which all male hospital staff were required to perform by so angering the drill sergeant that the latter refused to examine Dent\u2019s fitness, at which point Dent promptly examined himself and declared himself unfit due to a &#8216;cavity in the lung&#8217;. (3)<\/p>\n<p>But this was not mere cheekiness; his Quaker background left him with both a disrespect for conventional authority and a profound concern for his patients. In 1917 Dent was posted to the Norfolk and Norwich Hospital where he treated the war- wounded. He dispensed with the rule which forced injured soldiers to stand and salute officers before entering the hospital for treatment. He removed the rank insignia from soldiers\u2019 beds, as these had been used to give different levels of treatment for different ranks. (4)<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_7094\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-7094\" style=\"width: 350px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/01\/stpancras2.jpg\" alt=\"St Pancras Workhouse Infirmary South Wing\" width=\"350\" height=\"255\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-7094\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><em>St Pancras Workhouse Infirmary South Wing<\/em><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Dent first encountered apomorphine, the drug that would become the lynchpin of his treatment of addicts, while working as a junior doctor at St Pancras Workhouse Infirmary just after the first word war. There were destitute people in the area who, having drunk too much, would need emergency treatment to clear alcohol from their system. There were two accepted ways to do this; pumping out the patient\u2019s stomach, a procedure that left patients feeling much the worse for wear, and apomorphine. While the vigorous vomiting caused by apomorphine wasn\u2019t pleasant, Dent observed that his patients felt in \u201cfine fettle\u201d the next morning. (5)<\/p>\n<p>Intriguingly, he also noticed that the patient was left with a &#8216;distaste&#8217; for alcohol. This incidental observation planted the seed of an idea that would germinate some time later.<\/p>\n<p>In 1924 Dent became a general practitioner at his father\u2019s practice in Kensington, an affluent district of London. His father referred to him many of his more challenging patients, mainly alcoholics. Dent came to rely increasingly on apomorphine, not just as a method to empty the stomachs of his patients, but to treat what he saw as the underlying insecurities of his patients. The drug, he wrote, had &#8216;a remarkably soothing effect (for) agoraphobia, hysteria, melancholia, schizophrenia, delirium tremens and alcoholism.&#8217; (6)<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_7098\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-7098\" style=\"width: 400px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/01\/geograph-1120931-by-Christine-Matthews-1.jpg\" alt=\"Cromwell Road, London\" width=\"400\" height=\"266\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-7098\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><em>Cromwell Road. Dent\u2019s clinic was located on the top two floors. 99 Cromwell Road has since been demolished.<\/em><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>This focus on the wellbeing of his patients, as well as his genial manner, established his reputation as a man who could successfully treat alcoholics whom others had failed. As his income rose, he moved from a single consulting room to renting two floors in a nursing home at 99 Cromwell Road, where he developed an intense seven-day treatment plan for alcoholics. Always supervised by nurses and following a strict regime, the patient was given a continuous course of apomorphine injections every two to four hours for the first two days and his or her preferred alcoholic drink. Only when the patient had overcome their urge to drink alcohol was the patient offered a non-alcoholic drink and some food. The regime of repeated apomorphine injections continued for a further two days to ensure no alcohol remained in the patient\u2019s system. This whole process took some 5 weeks less than conventional sanatorium treatment at the time. (7)<\/p>\n<p>But why alcohol and apomorphine <i>at the same time? <\/i>The answer lay in his encountering an unfortunate idea at the wrong time; that of the \u201cconditioned reflex\u201d. In the late 1920s and early 1930s researchers, mainly Russian, were publishing a series of papers discussing the application of Pavlovian principles of psychology to humans. (8) This meant attempting to associate particular actions or objects with unpleasant feelings in order to discourage the person from pursuing them; classic &#8216;aversion therapy&#8217;.<\/p>\n<p>Dent, who had been attempting to discover why apomorphine had its effects on his patients, found these papers and seized upon them as a rationale for his treatment. This was a mistake that would haunt him and the reputation of his treatment for the rest of his career. In the short run, however, it was a useful way to legitimise his approach; in 1934 his paper \u2018Apomorphine in the Treatment of Anxiety States with Especial Reference to Alcoholism\u2019 was published in the Journal of the Society for the Study of Inebriety.* (9)<\/p>\n<p>It would take some 15 years or so for Dent\u2019s ideas to evolve to the point where he was willing to abandon the idea of aversion, partly because of his success in treating patients who had not vomited at all. In the meantime, he published \u2018The Reactions of The Human Machine\u2019 (10)\u00a0and \u2018Anxiety And Its Treatment&#8217; (11), two works in which he discussed both what he saw as the addict\u2019s physiological problems &#8211; imbalances of hormones and blood composition &#8211; and the psychological problems &#8211; most notably anxiety. He took an exceptionally progressive approach, discarding the moralising of the temperance movement to address what he saw as the disorders underlying alcoholism. And, within this framework, apomorphine addressed both elements of the disorder; helping addicts physically, calming them down and eliminating their craving.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_7100\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-7100\" style=\"width: 400px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/01\/Anxiety-and-its-treament-300x256.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"400\" height=\"341\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-7100\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><em>Anxiety and its Treament, by John Yerbury Dent<\/em><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>He increasingly involved himself with the Society for the Study of Inebriety, becoming editor of its journal in 1941. He used this position to advocate better treatment for addicts and spread what he saw as the good news about apomorphine in his many editorial pieces, which was becoming strongly associated with him.<\/p>\n<p>It was shortly after this that Dent finally fully committed to his new understanding of how the treatment worked: <\/p>\n<p><i>I have been forced to the conclusion that apomorphine has some further action that the production of vomit. \u2026<\/i><\/p>\n<p><i>I have now given this treatment to over two hundred and fifty alcoholic patients and about 3% of these have produced no vomiting at all. Some others did not vomit the spirit given to them during the first stage (of the treatment)\u2026. but vomited their tea during the second stage, and I thought, &#8216;Here I am producing an aversion for tea.&#8217; Yet these people lost their craving for alcohol, developed no aversion to tea, and did as well as the others. If the main object were to produce a conditioned aversion to alcohol, the risk would not be taken of giving apomorphine during the second stage after the patient has been cut off his alcohol.\u00a0<\/i>(12)<\/p>\n<p>Dent reported a 60-70% rate of full abstinence in his patients 1 year after treatment, with only a 10% rate of what he described as &#8216;complete failures&#8217; (13). With knowledge of his method spreading and his editorial control over the main journal of alcohol researchers in the UK, renamed the \u2018Journal of Addiction\u2019 in 1946, everything seemed to be going very well.<\/p>\n<p>Dent\u2019s views were, in many ways, ahead of their time. He quickly recognised the dangers posed by barbiturates and was profoundly worried by the possibility of the UK adopting a US-style prohibition approach to heroin. Although his practice was operated mainly from a private clinic he was interested in making the apomorphine treatment available to all who needed it. His willingness to experiment to achieve a version of the treatment that could be administered quickly at home resulted in ridicule when it was revealed he had tried crushed apomorphine tablets inserted into the nose (apomorphine can be absorbed through the membranes of the nose), but it was a demonstration of his desire to help as many people as possible. (14)<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_7103\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-7103\" style=\"width: 300px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/01\/JYD-239x300.jpg\" alt=\"John Yerbury Dent\" width=\"300\" height=\"376\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-7103\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><em>John Yerbury Dent<\/em><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Dent was beginning to assemble a rigorous evidence base for apomorphine treatment. The Cantonal Hospital in Switzerland under Dr Harry Feldmann, undertook a study of his method on 150 alcoholics and found it to be highly effective, spreading the idea in Northern Europe. (15)\u00a0Dent procured funding for research at the Burden Institute on how apomorphine affected the physiology of rats. (16)\u00a0Apomorphine was even listed as an approved treatment for alcoholism in the first report by the Alcoholism subcommittee for the nascent World Health Organisation. (17)\u00a0Despite Dent\u2019s unconventional roots, he was undertaking the conventional scientific and medical work to make apomorphine an accepted treatment.<\/p>\n<p>Then came Antabuse. Developed in Denmark in 1947, the new (patentable) drug swept across the addiction world. It was cheap, seemingly effective and had a reassuringly punitive aspect \u2013 if you drank while under its effects, you would feel violently ill. It even chimed well with the idea of the conditioned reflex \u2013 drink, feel bad \u2013 classic aversion therapy. And, even better for doctors, it neither required an expensive seven-day in-patient procedure nor caused vomiting. Despite Dent\u2019s attempts to promote apomorphine, Antabuse rapidly became the drug of choice. (18)<\/p>\n<p>This came to a head with the arrival of the newly-founded National Health Service; Dent campaigned as hard as he could for the NHS to use apomorphine, but Antabuse was preferred. Britain\u2019s laws which banned a doctor from advertising, which included using their name in the media, prevented him from making his treatment better known, and his repeated use of the Journal to spread the word began to irritate other British experts in the area. His attempts to get better training for junior doctors in the treatment of addiction were blocked. Dent respected the anonymity of his patients \u2013 many were the great and the good in the establishment. However, he was disappointed that they didn&#8217;t use their influence to support the cause for better provision. Discussing one\u2019s own medical problems remained socially unacceptable amongst the upper classes, especially when speaking of the treatment involved admitting that they were an alcoholic.<\/p>\n<p>Something good did come out of the whole Antabuse situation for Dent though; a friendship with the doctor who had conduct the clinical study on Antabuse to begin with, Oluf Martensen-Larsen. They corresponded, and Dent convinced him that apomorphine was more than merely an aversive drug. (19)\u00a0After becoming disillusioned with Antabuse over the decade after its discovery \u2013 Martensen-Larsen returned to apomorphine and fathered a surge of interest in Scandinavia in the 1970s. This, however was too late for Dent.<\/p>\n<p>Dent died in 1962, aged 73. By the end he had become a spent force, viewed as eccentric and old-fashioned by the ascendant guard of psychiatrists who were framing the direction addiction services were going to take. A few private GPs continued to use apomorphine to treat addiction, but the treatment had petered out completely in the UK by the early 1970s. By the 1980s he, and his method, had been largely forgotten outside Scandinavia.<\/p>\n<p>Dent was the possessor of a legendarily good bedside manner. He inspired great devotion in his patients, several of whom went on to publish books discussing Dent and his method positively, among them the publisher Alan Maclean (20)\u00a0and the composer Ursula Lutyens (21). Most important of all was his treatment of the American author William Burroughs in 1956, whose writings inspired later addicts to seek out the Dent method to treat addiction, from their own doctors. (22)<\/p>\n<p>Before Dent, few people knew that apomorphine could be used to treat alcoholism, and fewer still had attempted to allay craving with it. By the time of his death he had established that doses of apomorphine by itself reduced anxiety and craving in alcoholics over both the short and longer term, with no need to make the patient vomit. His non-aversive method was the basis for much of the work done on apomorphine and alcoholism in the 1970s, some prompted by patients who had read works by Burroughs.<\/p>\n<p>It is fitting that, stymied by the medical establishment with whom he had never got on, Dent\u2019s method would find its justification in the writings of brave former addicts whom it had helped.<\/p>\n<p>*Now \u2018Addiction\u2019.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_7104\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-7104\" style=\"width: 270px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/01\/Dent-Cartoon.jpg\" alt=\"John Dent cartoon by his daughter Ann Dent.\" width=\"270\" height=\"543\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-7104\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><em>John Dent cartoon by his daughter Ann Dent. \u00a9 Antonia Rubinstein 2018<\/em><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p><b>References<\/b><\/p>\n<p>1. Revilliod, H. The Third Kelynack Memorial Lecture. Some Aspects of The Problem of Alcoholism in Switzerland. The British Journal of Addiction, Vol 41, No 1. 1950.<\/p>\n<p>2. Dent, J.Y. Draft 1, Memoirs. \u20181 Kings\u2019, Dent family archive.<\/p>\n<p>3. Dent, J.Y., Draft 1, Memoirs. \u20182 Kings\u2019, Dent family archive<\/p>\n<p>4. Dent, J.Y. Draft 1 \u20182 Lamentations\u2019, Dent family archive<\/p>\n<p>5. Dent, J.Y. Autobiographical notes, Chronicles, p.2. Dent family archive<\/p>\n<p>6. Dent, J. Y. 1934. Apomorphine in the treatment of Anxiety States, with Especial Reference to Alcoholism. The British Journal of Inebriety. Vol.32. No.2.<\/p>\n<p>7. Dent, A. 2010. Anecdotal reminiscence of Dent\u2019s practice.<\/p>\n<p>8. Choudhury, S. Slaby, J. Condition and Suggest: Narcology\u2019s Therapies. Critical Neuroscience. A Handbook of the Social and Cultural Contexts if Neuroscience. John Wiley &amp; Sons 2011<\/p>\n<p>9. Dent, J. Y. 1934. Apomorphine in the treatment of Anxiety States, with Especial Reference to Alcoholism. The British Journal of Inebriety. Vol.32. No.2.<\/p>\n<p>10. Dent, J.Y. The Reactions of The Human Machine, V. Gollancz, Ltd,1937.<\/p>\n<p>11. Dent, J.Y. Anxiety and Its Treatment, John Murray, 1941.<\/p>\n<p>12. Dent, J.Y. Apomorphine Treatment of Addiction. Some Recent Developments. The British Journal of Addiction. Vol 46. No 1. January 1941.<\/p>\n<p>13. Ibid. (12).<\/p>\n<p>14. Dent, J.Y. Self-Treatment of Anxiety and Craving, By Apomorphine, Through the Nose. The British Journal of Inebriety, Vol 41. No 2. 1944.<\/p>\n<p>15. Morsier, G. Feldmann, H. The Biological Treatment of Chronic Alcoholism by Apomorphine. Study of 150 Cases. The British Journal of Addiction. Vol 42, No 2. 1950.<\/p>\n<p>16. Ibid. (12)<\/p>\n<p>17. Word Health Organisation Technical Report Series. No.42. Expert Committee On Mental Health, Report on the First Session of the Alcoholism Subcommittee. Geneva, 11 -16 December 1950. (5). Means of Treatment. Pages 13\/14<\/p>\n<p>18. Personal communication, Hore. B.D, (Manchester conference organizer,1974) with Rubinstein A. 19.04.2017.<\/p>\n<p>19. Martensen Larsen, O. private correspondence with Dent, A. 18.10.90. Dent family archive.<\/p>\n<p>20. Maclean, Alan. No I tell a Lie, It Was the Tuesday. Kyle Cathie Limited, 1997.<\/p>\n<p>21. Lutyens, Ursula. A Goldfish Bowl, Littlehampton Book Service Ltd, 1972.<\/p>\n<p>22. Schlatter, E.K.E. Treatment of alcoholics with apomorphine using Dent\u2019s Method; A Preliminary Study. Quebec Psychopharmacological Association 08.02.1966.<\/p>\n<\/li>\n<li>\n<h4>Nurse&#8217;s Story<\/h4>\n<p><strong>The Nursing Of Alcoholic Patients,\u00a0by an Associate of the Society<br \/><\/strong><em>Published in The British Journal of Addiction, <a href=\"http:\/\/onlinelibrary.wiley.com\/doi\/10.1111\/add.1947.44.issue-2\/issuetoc\">Volume 44,\u00a0Issue 2,<\/a>\u00a0pages 75\u201378,\u00a0July 1947.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>The nursing of addicts falls into three stages:<\/p>\n<ol>\n<li>Intoxication<\/li>\n<li>Treatment<\/li>\n<li>Convalescence and rehabilitation<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<figure id=\"attachment_6252\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-6252\" style=\"width: 246px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/10\/Nursing_Dent-246x300.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"246\" height=\"300\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-6252\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><em>Morsey, one of Dent\u2019s Nurses<\/em><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>The nurse must be a versatile person. She must be intuitive and tactful in the stage of intoxication: very purposeful in the carrying out of treatment; shrewd and quick to note deceit and lack of personal hygiene in her, temporarily, demoralized and childish patient. \u00a0She must possess imagination and resource in the long boring period of convalescence. She must have power to infuse new hope and desires in flaccid, weary personalities, yet, at the same time, keep herself detached so that they do not cling to her longer than is necessary. Her aim must be, not only to wean them from a vicious habit, but to arouse them once more to the healthy joys of duty and social obligation. Needless to say she must possess patience to an unlimited degree!<\/p>\n<p>We will take the three stages in turn.<\/p>\n<p><b>Intoxication<br \/><\/b>The patient may be brought to her by friends or she may have to deal with some undesirable entourage. It takes hours very often to get an inebriated person into the only safe haven \u2013 bed. No force, no hurry, no impatience must be shown. Once anger is aroused the game, for the moment, is up. As there is no real will-power just now, however, in spite of much outside bluster, the nurse in the end can usually get her own way, if she hides her determined purpose under an unruffled manner and with endless patience.<\/p>\n<p><b>Treatment<br \/><\/b>Nowadays, once safely in bed, for the moment all is fairly simple. A hypodermic injection of apomorphine soon quietens the most excited person. \u00a0As a rule all patients fall asleep almost at once. They must not be left a minute as they may vomit while unconscious. Even if they are only unconscious for a few minutes they awake calmed. The doctor will have ordered a sedative \u2013 strong \u2013 small doses are useless for inebriates. They must take this and any nourishment they fancy. \u00a0Many like tea or milk only for the first few days: others have large appetites and will take anything. It is very important to fall in with their whims at first as if any real good is to be assured, it must be accomplished with co-operation, not force of any kind. The same advice applies to the aperient which they much should ensure the removal of the poison from their system: if they have a favourite one, let them have it: few things upset people more than tampering with their aperients. As a rule, when thus comfortable in bed, patients fall asleep or at least doze quietly; they often wake up surprised to find that they have been so long without their drink yet feel so little distress.<\/p>\n<p>Without the preliminary apomorphine there is a very different tale to tell! Double quantities of every sedative and hypnotic will often hardly keep a heavy drinker even drowsy: the struggle can go on for days.<\/p>\n<p>If all goes well, however, now is the time to make friends. There is a long weary period ahead. Alcohol in excess means damaged tissues, gastritis, congested liver, clogged kidneys, neuritis, insomnia, and nervous fears. In addition to more or less of these, the removal of the accustomed large quantities of fluids often means the added, and perhaps new, discomfort of obstinate constipation.<\/p>\n<p>No patients are to be trusted at this stage: however repentant and friendly they may appear, they can deceive even themselves \u2013 they are subconsciously craving for alcohol and will get it, if any loop- hole is allowed. The nurse must be an amateur detective! In this short article there is no time for digression, but adventures of all kinds may now ensue. \u00a0These first weeks are often a battle of wits. A sense of humour is a great asset but it must be kept well in hand.<\/p>\n<p>Any treatment ordered by the doctor must be carried out with pomp, emphasis, and regularity. Both patients and friends have great faith in \u201ctreatments,\u201d and this must be encouraged. The whole force of suggestion must now be brought to bear on this treatment which is going to cure.<\/p>\n<p>While it is proceeding the usual lines of nursing will be followed: all small ailments and minor discomforts alleviated, insomnia and constipation bought under control. The nurse now, often has to act as a Citizens\u2019 Advice Bureau. Finance, domestic life, emotional affairs, usually are in complete disarray: women are often much cheered by a visit to the hairdresser, and pawn brokers sometimes are really important people. \u00a0There are, usually, many problems to unravel before the patients\u2019 minds are at rest and ready for new suggestions of health.<\/p>\n<p><b>Rehabilitation<br \/><\/b>This is the most trying time of all for a nurse. There is no actual nursing now to do; in fact, the utmost care must be taken to wean patients from dependence. Risks must be taken. They must go out alone, think and decide for themselves, learn to endure small discomforts without flying to remedies.<\/p>\n<p>The hardest part of all is the infusing of new energy and initiative. Left to themselves alcoholics so often wish to sit about and smoke and potter. They shrink from effort, mental or physical and have lost interest in the world of affairs. They must be relentlessly kept at a timetable, learn to get up again at a reasonable hour, be polite and punctual at meals, play games, got to concerts and classes, etc. They must be encouraged in any hobby they fancy. Should mind, and body all need strengthening. The nurse will often feel she is pushing a heavy body endlessly uphill only to feel it falling back on her again. If any suspicion is aroused of relapse the utmost tact must be used. \u00a0An open accusation with no <i>proof<\/i> is no good whatever. Once drinking starts the old habits of deceit start with it. The first glass is the only one taken with a fully conscious brain. The bottle must be <i>found<\/i>, or the bill <i>produced<\/i>, and the attack made suddenly with this in hand as proof positive. The sudden shock will open the patient\u2019s own mind to what is happening, and after a paroxysm of shame and despair the way will be open for a fresh beginning. If proofs are not forthcoming, the only alternative is to wait for the inevitable time when the truth has become evident to everyone and the patient is too confused to conceal the facts any longer.<\/p>\n<p>While convalescence is proceeding, a sharp eye must be kept for the signs of a recurring dipsomania. This circular compulsive form of drinking is akin to manic-depression. Drinking is usually proceeded by a change in character; a cheerful, active personality sinking into depression, irritability, sloth, and vicious habits. This phase gradually gives way to unlimited self-assurance, boastfulness, mono-mania, and dislike of all restraints. It is now a physical compulsion: nothing but force, at the present time not lawful in certified persons, will keep a person in this state from escaping to alcohol. The doctor must be notified at once of the premonitory symptoms, and whatever steps ordered must be carried out. But these cases are the disappointment of alcoholic nursing, and we can only await, as patiently as possible, the time when the cause will have been discovered and the necessary treatment prepared and made available for all.<\/p>\n<p>Sometimes it is impossible to arrive at the stage of rehabilitation. A certain proportion of alcoholics, chiefly elderly, chronic drinkers, sink into a semi- conscious senile condition. Korsakoff\u2019s syndrome appears: they develop a low muttering delirium with a soaring temperature and signs of heart and kidney failure. The care is now one of ordinary chronic nursing and needs the usual care as to diet, elimination, and the prevention of pressure sores.<\/p>\n<p>The diet of all alcoholic patients should be rich in vitamin B, especially when they have neuritis. Glucose if obtainable, is a suitable adjunct to the diet of those whose gastritis prevents them from being adequately nourished. \u00a0They should all, also, be encouraged to develop a taste for \u201csoft\u201d drinks. Water as a rule should not be a horror to them, as it is most important for them to have plenty of fluids something must be found to take its place. It will be easier for them, too, when out on their own again, if they have something \u201cout of a bottle\u201d when their friends are in indulging in their favourite drinks. One must always try to build good, safe habits: it is not enough just to remove the bad ones, as one knows that, when one\u2019s patients leave, it is to be a world full of danger to them that they are returning.<\/p>\n<p><em>Reproduced with permission by \u2018Addiction\u2019.<br \/>Image: Dent family archive.<\/em><\/p>\n<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<h2>Patient Stories<\/h2>\n<p> <a href=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/?page_id=5626\" > <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/08\/Lutyens-2-300x200.jpg\" width=\"300\" height=\"200\" title=\"Elizabeth Lutyens\" alt=\"Elizabeth Lutyens\" srcset=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/08\/Lutyens-2-300x200.jpg 300w, https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/08\/Lutyens-2-2x1.jpg 2w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/> <\/a> <\/p>\n<h3> <a href=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/?page_id=5626\" > Elizabeth Lutyens <\/a> <\/h3>\n<p> <a href=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/?page_id=6017\" > <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/06\/William_Burroughs-300x200.png\" width=\"300\" height=\"200\" title=\"William Burroughs\" alt=\"William Burroughs\" \/> <\/a> <\/p>\n<h3> <a href=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/?page_id=6017\" > William Burroughs <\/a> <\/h3>\n<p> <a href=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/?page_id=6044\" > <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/08\/Patrick_Riddell-1-300x200.png\" width=\"300\" height=\"200\" title=\"Patrick Riddell\" alt=\"Patrick Riddell\" \/> <\/a> <\/p>\n<h3> <a href=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/?page_id=6044\" > Patrick Riddell <\/a> <\/h3>\n<p> <a href=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/?page_id=6008\" > <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/06\/Alan_Maclean-300x200.png\" width=\"300\" height=\"200\" title=\"Alan Maclean\" alt=\"Alan Maclean\" srcset=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/06\/Alan_Maclean-300x200.png 300w, https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/06\/Alan_Maclean-180x120.png 180w, https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/06\/Alan_Maclean-2x1.png 2w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/> <\/a> <\/p>\n<h3> <a href=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/?page_id=6008\" > Alan Maclean <\/a> <\/h3>\n<p><!--\/themify_builder_static--><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Physician and author, tireless advocate of apomorphine. He endeavoured to make it widely available and made it famous enough to last. Biography Dr John Yerbury Dent was one of the few doctors to be so completely identified with a treatment that it was named after him; the &#8216;Dent method&#8217; (1), a short and intense course [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":5706,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":{"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-5603","page","type-page","status-publish","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","has-post-title","has-post-date","has-post-category","has-post-tag","has-post-comment","has-post-author",""],"builder_content":"\n<ul><li><h4>Biography<\/h4>[caption id=\\\"attachment_7101\\\" align=\\\"aligncenter\\\" width=\\\"300\\\"]<img class=\\\"wp-image-7101\\\" src=\\\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/01\/Jack-Dent_1-218x300.jpg\\\" alt=\\\"John Yerbury Dent\\\" width=\\\"300\\\" height=\\\"414\\\" \/> <em>John Yerbury Dent<\/em>[\/caption] <p class=\\\"p1\\\">Dr John Yerbury Dent was one of the few doctors to be so completely identified with a treatment that it was named after him; the \\'Dent method\\' (1), a short and intense course of treatment for alcoholics. An avuncular and no-nonsense man, he inspired devotion in both his patients and nurses. The same independence of thought and interest in his patients which led him to develop the treatment, however, were also the eventual cause of its slide into obscurity.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">Dent showed signs of an acute yet rebellious intellect at an early age, a quality which stayed with him his entire life. He began his medical studies in 1905. After a week at Cambridge University, which sat ill with his Quaker background, he came down and enrolled at King\u2019s College Medical School, following in the footsteps of his father and uncle. He was careful only to attend 4 days a week, serially skipping lectures to go on trips to the countryside with his uncle to study geology and go mountaineering. His disrespect for authority manifested in a campaign of provocative letters to the Principal (an exasperated Dr Headlam), for which he was eventually expelled, much to his and his father\u2019s delight. As Dent was popular with his lecturers, they invited him to continue to attend, and so the expulsion was barely an impediment to his continued education, but delayed his qualification as a doctor.<\/p> [caption id=\\\"attachment_7102\\\" align=\\\"aligncenter\\\" width=\\\"300\\\"]<img class=\\\"wp-image-7102\\\" src=\\\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/01\/Jack-Dent_2.jpg\\\" alt=\\\"John Yerbury Dent\\\" width=\\\"300\\\" height=\\\"445\\\" \/> <em>John Yerbury Dent<\/em>[\/caption] <p class=\\\"p1\\\">Dent\u2019s willingness to treat those in the direst conditions led him to contract tuberculosis from slumdwellers around Holborn in 1913. (2)<sup>\u00a0<\/sup>A year spent recovering in a sanatorium gave him time to read widely and refine thoughts on the purpose of authority. With the outbreak of the First World War the demand for doctors saw the newly qualified Dent taking on responsibilities far beyond his training at the new Kings College Hospital in Denmark Hill. Determined to do \\'real work\\' treating patients he evaded the bi-weekly drills which all male hospital staff were required to perform by so angering the drill sergeant that the latter refused to examine Dent\u2019s fitness, at which point Dent promptly examined himself and declared himself unfit due to a \\'cavity in the lung\\'. (3)<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">But this was not mere cheekiness; his Quaker background left him with both a disrespect for conventional authority and a profound concern for his patients. In 1917 Dent was posted to the Norfolk and Norwich Hospital where he treated the war- wounded. He dispensed with the rule which forced injured soldiers to stand and salute officers before entering the hospital for treatment. He removed the rank insignia from soldiers\u2019 beds, as these had been used to give different levels of treatment for different ranks. (4)<\/p> [caption id=\\\"attachment_7094\\\" align=\\\"aligncenter\\\" width=\\\"350\\\"]<img class=\\\"size-full wp-image-7094\\\" src=\\\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/01\/stpancras2.jpg\\\" alt=\\\"St Pancras Workhouse Infirmary South Wing\\\" width=\\\"350\\\" height=\\\"255\\\" \/> <em>St Pancras Workhouse Infirmary South Wing<\/em>[\/caption] <p class=\\\"p1\\\">Dent first encountered apomorphine, the drug that would become the lynchpin of his treatment of addicts, while working as a junior doctor at St Pancras Workhouse Infirmary just after the first word war. There were destitute people in the area who, having drunk too much, would need emergency treatment to clear alcohol from their system. There were two accepted ways to do this; pumping out the patient\u2019s stomach, a procedure that left patients feeling much the worse for wear, and apomorphine. While the vigorous vomiting caused by apomorphine wasn\u2019t pleasant, Dent observed that his patients felt in \u201cfine fettle\u201d the next morning. (5)<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">Intriguingly, he also noticed that the patient was left with a \\'distaste\\' for alcohol. This incidental observation planted the seed of an idea that would germinate some time later.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">In 1924 Dent became a general practitioner at his father\u2019s practice in Kensington, an affluent district of London. His father referred to him many of his more challenging patients, mainly alcoholics. Dent came to rely increasingly on apomorphine, not just as a method to empty the stomachs of his patients, but to treat what he saw as the underlying insecurities of his patients. The drug, he wrote, had \\'a remarkably soothing effect (for) agoraphobia, hysteria, melancholia, schizophrenia, delirium tremens and alcoholism.\\' (6)<\/p> [caption id=\\\"attachment_7098\\\" align=\\\"aligncenter\\\" width=\\\"400\\\"]<img class=\\\"wp-image-7098\\\" src=\\\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/01\/geograph-1120931-by-Christine-Matthews-1.jpg\\\" alt=\\\"Cromwell Road, London\\\" width=\\\"400\\\" height=\\\"266\\\" \/> <em>Cromwell Road. Dent\u2019s clinic was located on the top two floors. 99 Cromwell Road has since been demolished.<\/em>[\/caption] <p class=\\\"p1\\\">This focus on the wellbeing of his patients, as well as his genial manner, established his reputation as a man who could successfully treat alcoholics whom others had failed. As his income rose, he moved from a single consulting room to renting two floors in a nursing home at 99 Cromwell Road, where he developed an intense seven-day treatment plan for alcoholics. Always supervised by nurses and following a strict regime, the patient was given a continuous course of apomorphine injections every two to four hours for the first two days and his or her preferred alcoholic drink. Only when the patient had overcome their urge to drink alcohol was the patient offered a non-alcoholic drink and some food. The regime of repeated apomorphine injections continued for a further two days to ensure no alcohol remained in the patient\u2019s system. This whole process took some 5 weeks less than conventional sanatorium treatment at the time. (7)<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">But why alcohol and apomorphine <i>at the same time? <\/i>The answer lay in his encountering an unfortunate idea at the wrong time; that of the \u201cconditioned reflex\u201d. In the late 1920s and early 1930s researchers, mainly Russian, were publishing a series of papers discussing the application of Pavlovian principles of psychology to humans. (8) This meant attempting to associate particular actions or objects with unpleasant feelings in order to discourage the person from pursuing them; classic \\'aversion therapy\\'.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">Dent, who had been attempting to discover why apomorphine had its effects on his patients, found these papers and seized upon them as a rationale for his treatment. This was a mistake that would haunt him and the reputation of his treatment for the rest of his career. In the short run, however, it was a useful way to legitimise his approach; in 1934 his paper \u2018Apomorphine in the Treatment of Anxiety States with Especial Reference to Alcoholism\u2019 was published in the Journal of the Society for the Study of Inebriety.* (9)<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">It would take some 15 years or so for Dent\u2019s ideas to evolve to the point where he was willing to abandon the idea of aversion, partly because of his success in treating patients who had not vomited at all. In the meantime, he published \u2018The Reactions of The Human Machine\u2019 (10)\u00a0and \u2018Anxiety And Its Treatment\\' (11), two works in which he discussed both what he saw as the addict\u2019s physiological problems - imbalances of hormones and blood composition - and the psychological problems - most notably anxiety. He took an exceptionally progressive approach, discarding the moralising of the temperance movement to address what he saw as the disorders underlying alcoholism. And, within this framework, apomorphine addressed both elements of the disorder; helping addicts physically, calming them down and eliminating their craving.<\/p> [caption id=\\\"attachment_7100\\\" align=\\\"aligncenter\\\" width=\\\"400\\\"]<img class=\\\"wp-image-7100\\\" src=\\\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/01\/Anxiety-and-its-treament-300x256.jpg\\\" alt=\\\"\\\" width=\\\"400\\\" height=\\\"341\\\" \/> <em>Anxiety and its Treament, by John Yerbury Dent<\/em>[\/caption] <p class=\\\"p1\\\">He increasingly involved himself with the Society for the Study of Inebriety, becoming editor of its journal in 1941. He used this position to advocate better treatment for addicts and spread what he saw as the good news about apomorphine in his many editorial pieces, which was becoming strongly associated with him.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">It was shortly after this that Dent finally fully committed to his new understanding of how the treatment worked: <\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\"><i>I have been forced to the conclusion that apomorphine has some further action that the production of vomit. \u2026<\/i><\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\"><i>I have now given this treatment to over two hundred and fifty alcoholic patients and about 3% of these have produced no vomiting at all. Some others did not vomit the spirit given to them during the first stage (of the treatment)\u2026. but vomited their tea during the second stage, and I thought, \\'Here I am producing an aversion for tea.\\' Yet these people lost their craving for alcohol, developed no aversion to tea, and did as well as the others. If the main object were to produce a conditioned aversion to alcohol, the risk would not be taken of giving apomorphine during the second stage after the patient has been cut off his alcohol.\u00a0<\/i>(12)<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">Dent reported a 60-70% rate of full abstinence in his patients 1 year after treatment, with only a 10% rate of what he described as \\'complete failures\\' (13). With knowledge of his method spreading and his editorial control over the main journal of alcohol researchers in the UK, renamed the \u2018Journal of Addiction\u2019 in 1946, everything seemed to be going very well.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">Dent\u2019s views were, in many ways, ahead of their time. He quickly recognised the dangers posed by barbiturates and was profoundly worried by the possibility of the UK adopting a US-style prohibition approach to heroin. Although his practice was operated mainly from a private clinic he was interested in making the apomorphine treatment available to all who needed it. His willingness to experiment to achieve a version of the treatment that could be administered quickly at home resulted in ridicule when it was revealed he had tried crushed apomorphine tablets inserted into the nose (apomorphine can be absorbed through the membranes of the nose), but it was a demonstration of his desire to help as many people as possible. (14)<\/p> [caption id=\\\"attachment_7103\\\" align=\\\"aligncenter\\\" width=\\\"300\\\"]<img class=\\\"wp-image-7103\\\" src=\\\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/01\/JYD-239x300.jpg\\\" alt=\\\"John Yerbury Dent\\\" width=\\\"300\\\" height=\\\"376\\\" \/> <em>John Yerbury Dent<\/em>[\/caption] <p class=\\\"p1\\\">Dent was beginning to assemble a rigorous evidence base for apomorphine treatment. The Cantonal Hospital in Switzerland under Dr Harry Feldmann, undertook a study of his method on 150 alcoholics and found it to be highly effective, spreading the idea in Northern Europe. (15)\u00a0Dent procured funding for research at the Burden Institute on how apomorphine affected the physiology of rats. (16)\u00a0Apomorphine was even listed as an approved treatment for alcoholism in the first report by the Alcoholism subcommittee for the nascent World Health Organisation. (17)\u00a0Despite Dent\u2019s unconventional roots, he was undertaking the conventional scientific and medical work to make apomorphine an accepted treatment.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">Then came Antabuse. Developed in Denmark in 1947, the new (patentable) drug swept across the addiction world. It was cheap, seemingly effective and had a reassuringly punitive aspect \u2013 if you drank while under its effects, you would feel violently ill. It even chimed well with the idea of the conditioned reflex \u2013 drink, feel bad \u2013 classic aversion therapy. And, even better for doctors, it neither required an expensive seven-day in-patient procedure nor caused vomiting. Despite Dent\u2019s attempts to promote apomorphine, Antabuse rapidly became the drug of choice. (18)<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">This came to a head with the arrival of the newly-founded National Health Service; Dent campaigned as hard as he could for the NHS to use apomorphine, but Antabuse was preferred. Britain\u2019s laws which banned a doctor from advertising, which included using their name in the media, prevented him from making his treatment better known, and his repeated use of the Journal to spread the word began to irritate other British experts in the area. His attempts to get better training for junior doctors in the treatment of addiction were blocked. Dent respected the anonymity of his patients \u2013 many were the great and the good in the establishment. However, he was disappointed that they didn\\'t use their influence to support the cause for better provision. Discussing one\u2019s own medical problems remained socially unacceptable amongst the upper classes, especially when speaking of the treatment involved admitting that they were an alcoholic.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">Something good did come out of the whole Antabuse situation for Dent though; a friendship with the doctor who had conduct the clinical study on Antabuse to begin with, Oluf Martensen-Larsen. They corresponded, and Dent convinced him that apomorphine was more than merely an aversive drug. (19)\u00a0After becoming disillusioned with Antabuse over the decade after its discovery \u2013 Martensen-Larsen returned to apomorphine and fathered a surge of interest in Scandinavia in the 1970s. This, however was too late for Dent.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">Dent died in 1962, aged 73. By the end he had become a spent force, viewed as eccentric and old-fashioned by the ascendant guard of psychiatrists who were framing the direction addiction services were going to take. A few private GPs continued to use apomorphine to treat addiction, but the treatment had petered out completely in the UK by the early 1970s. By the 1980s he, and his method, had been largely forgotten outside Scandinavia.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">Dent was the possessor of a legendarily good bedside manner. He inspired great devotion in his patients, several of whom went on to publish books discussing Dent and his method positively, among them the publisher Alan Maclean (20)\u00a0and the composer Ursula Lutyens (21). Most important of all was his treatment of the American author William Burroughs in 1956, whose writings inspired later addicts to seek out the Dent method to treat addiction, from their own doctors. (22)<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">Before Dent, few people knew that apomorphine could be used to treat alcoholism, and fewer still had attempted to allay craving with it. By the time of his death he had established that doses of apomorphine by itself reduced anxiety and craving in alcoholics over both the short and longer term, with no need to make the patient vomit. His non-aversive method was the basis for much of the work done on apomorphine and alcoholism in the 1970s, some prompted by patients who had read works by Burroughs.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">It is fitting that, stymied by the medical establishment with whom he had never got on, Dent\u2019s method would find its justification in the writings of brave former addicts whom it had helped.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">*Now \u2018Addiction\u2019.<\/p> [caption id=\\\"attachment_7104\\\" align=\\\"aligncenter\\\" width=\\\"270\\\"]<img class=\\\"wp-image-7104\\\" src=\\\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/01\/Dent-Cartoon.jpg\\\" alt=\\\"John Dent cartoon by his daughter Ann Dent.\\\" width=\\\"270\\\" height=\\\"543\\\" \/> <em>John Dent cartoon by his daughter Ann Dent. \u00a9 Antonia Rubinstein 2018<\/em>[\/caption] <p class=\\\"p1\\\"><b>References<\/b><\/p> <p>1. Revilliod, H. The Third Kelynack Memorial Lecture. Some Aspects of The Problem of Alcoholism in Switzerland. The British Journal of Addiction, Vol 41, No 1. 1950.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">2. Dent, J.Y. Draft 1, Memoirs. \u20181 Kings\u2019, Dent family archive.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">3. Dent, J.Y., Draft 1, Memoirs. \u20182 Kings\u2019, Dent family archive<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">4. Dent, J.Y. Draft 1 \u20182 Lamentations\u2019, Dent family archive<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">5. Dent, J.Y. Autobiographical notes, Chronicles, p.2. Dent family archive<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">6. Dent, J. Y. 1934. Apomorphine in the treatment of Anxiety States, with Especial Reference to Alcoholism. The British Journal of Inebriety. Vol.32. No.2.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">7. Dent, A. 2010. Anecdotal reminiscence of Dent\u2019s practice.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p2\\\">8. Choudhury, S. Slaby, J. Condition and Suggest: Narcology\u2019s Therapies. Critical Neuroscience. A Handbook of the Social and Cultural Contexts if Neuroscience. John Wiley &amp; Sons 2011<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">9. Dent, J. Y. 1934. Apomorphine in the treatment of Anxiety States, with Especial Reference to Alcoholism. The British Journal of Inebriety. Vol.32. No.2.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">10. Dent, J.Y. The Reactions of The Human Machine, V. Gollancz, Ltd,1937.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">11. Dent, J.Y. Anxiety and Its Treatment, John Murray, 1941.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">12. Dent, J.Y. Apomorphine Treatment of Addiction. Some Recent Developments. The British Journal of Addiction. Vol 46. No 1. January 1941.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">13. Ibid. (12).<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">14. Dent, J.Y. Self-Treatment of Anxiety and Craving, By Apomorphine, Through the Nose. The British Journal of Inebriety, Vol 41. No 2. 1944.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">15. Morsier, G. Feldmann, H. The Biological Treatment of Chronic Alcoholism by Apomorphine. Study of 150 Cases. The British Journal of Addiction. Vol 42, No 2. 1950.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">16. Ibid. (12)<\/p> <p class=\\\"p2\\\">17. Word Health Organisation Technical Report Series. No.42. Expert Committee On Mental Health, Report on the First Session of the Alcoholism Subcommittee. Geneva, 11 -16 December 1950. (5). Means of Treatment. Pages 13\/14<\/p> <p class=\\\"p2\\\">18. Personal communication, Hore. B.D, (Manchester conference organizer,1974) with Rubinstein A. 19.04.2017.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p2\\\">19. Martensen Larsen, O. private correspondence with Dent, A. 18.10.90. Dent family archive.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">20. Maclean, Alan. No I tell a Lie, It Was the Tuesday. Kyle Cathie Limited, 1997.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p1\\\">21. Lutyens, Ursula. A Goldfish Bowl, Littlehampton Book Service Ltd, 1972.<\/p> <p class=\\\"p2\\\">22. Schlatter, E.K.E. Treatment of alcoholics with apomorphine using Dent\u2019s Method; A Preliminary Study. Quebec Psychopharmacological Association 08.02.1966.<\/p><\/li><li><h4>Nurse\\'s Story<\/h4><p><strong>The Nursing Of Alcoholic Patients,\u00a0by an Associate of the Society<br \/><\/strong><em>Published in The British Journal of Addiction, <a href=\\\"http:\/\/onlinelibrary.wiley.com\/doi\/10.1111\/add.1947.44.issue-2\/issuetoc\\\">Volume 44,\u00a0Issue 2,<\/a>\u00a0pages 75\u201378,\u00a0July 1947.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>The nursing of addicts falls into three stages:<\/p> <ol> <li>Intoxication<\/li> <li>Treatment<\/li> <li>Convalescence and rehabilitation<\/li> <\/ol> [caption id=\\\"attachment_6252\\\" align=\\\"aligncenter\\\" width=\\\"246\\\"]<img class=\\\"wp-image-6252 size-medium\\\" src=\\\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/10\/Nursing_Dent-246x300.jpg\\\" alt=\\\"\\\" width=\\\"246\\\" height=\\\"300\\\" \/> <em>Morsey, one of Dent\u2019s Nurses<\/em>[\/caption] <p>The nurse must be a versatile person. She must be intuitive and tactful in the stage of intoxication: very purposeful in the carrying out of treatment; shrewd and quick to note deceit and lack of personal hygiene in her, temporarily, demoralized and childish patient. \u00a0She must possess imagination and resource in the long boring period of convalescence. She must have power to infuse new hope and desires in flaccid, weary personalities, yet, at the same time, keep herself detached so that they do not cling to her longer than is necessary. Her aim must be, not only to wean them from a vicious habit, but to arouse them once more to the healthy joys of duty and social obligation. Needless to say she must possess patience to an unlimited degree!<\/p> <p>We will take the three stages in turn.<\/p> <p><b>Intoxication<br \/><\/b>The patient may be brought to her by friends or she may have to deal with some undesirable entourage. It takes hours very often to get an inebriated person into the only safe haven \u2013 bed. No force, no hurry, no impatience must be shown. Once anger is aroused the game, for the moment, is up. As there is no real will-power just now, however, in spite of much outside bluster, the nurse in the end can usually get her own way, if she hides her determined purpose under an unruffled manner and with endless patience.<\/p> <p><b>Treatment<br \/><\/b>Nowadays, once safely in bed, for the moment all is fairly simple. A hypodermic injection of apomorphine soon quietens the most excited person. \u00a0As a rule all patients fall asleep almost at once. They must not be left a minute as they may vomit while unconscious. Even if they are only unconscious for a few minutes they awake calmed. The doctor will have ordered a sedative \u2013 strong \u2013 small doses are useless for inebriates. They must take this and any nourishment they fancy. \u00a0Many like tea or milk only for the first few days: others have large appetites and will take anything. It is very important to fall in with their whims at first as if any real good is to be assured, it must be accomplished with co-operation, not force of any kind. The same advice applies to the aperient which they much should ensure the removal of the poison from their system: if they have a favourite one, let them have it: few things upset people more than tampering with their aperients. As a rule, when thus comfortable in bed, patients fall asleep or at least doze quietly; they often wake up surprised to find that they have been so long without their drink yet feel so little distress.<\/p> <p>Without the preliminary apomorphine there is a very different tale to tell! Double quantities of every sedative and hypnotic will often hardly keep a heavy drinker even drowsy: the struggle can go on for days.<\/p> <p>If all goes well, however, now is the time to make friends. There is a long weary period ahead. Alcohol in excess means damaged tissues, gastritis, congested liver, clogged kidneys, neuritis, insomnia, and nervous fears. In addition to more or less of these, the removal of the accustomed large quantities of fluids often means the added, and perhaps new, discomfort of obstinate constipation.<\/p> <p>No patients are to be trusted at this stage: however repentant and friendly they may appear, they can deceive even themselves \u2013 they are subconsciously craving for alcohol and will get it, if any loop- hole is allowed. The nurse must be an amateur detective! In this short article there is no time for digression, but adventures of all kinds may now ensue. \u00a0These first weeks are often a battle of wits. A sense of humour is a great asset but it must be kept well in hand.<\/p> <p>Any treatment ordered by the doctor must be carried out with pomp, emphasis, and regularity. Both patients and friends have great faith in \u201ctreatments,\u201d and this must be encouraged. The whole force of suggestion must now be brought to bear on this treatment which is going to cure.<\/p> <p>While it is proceeding the usual lines of nursing will be followed: all small ailments and minor discomforts alleviated, insomnia and constipation bought under control. The nurse now, often has to act as a Citizens\u2019 Advice Bureau. Finance, domestic life, emotional affairs, usually are in complete disarray: women are often much cheered by a visit to the hairdresser, and pawn brokers sometimes are really important people. \u00a0There are, usually, many problems to unravel before the patients\u2019 minds are at rest and ready for new suggestions of health.<\/p> <p><b>Rehabilitation<br \/><\/b>This is the most trying time of all for a nurse. There is no actual nursing now to do; in fact, the utmost care must be taken to wean patients from dependence. Risks must be taken. They must go out alone, think and decide for themselves, learn to endure small discomforts without flying to remedies.<\/p> <p>The hardest part of all is the infusing of new energy and initiative. Left to themselves alcoholics so often wish to sit about and smoke and potter. They shrink from effort, mental or physical and have lost interest in the world of affairs. They must be relentlessly kept at a timetable, learn to get up again at a reasonable hour, be polite and punctual at meals, play games, got to concerts and classes, etc. They must be encouraged in any hobby they fancy. Should mind, and body all need strengthening. The nurse will often feel she is pushing a heavy body endlessly uphill only to feel it falling back on her again. If any suspicion is aroused of relapse the utmost tact must be used. \u00a0An open accusation with no <i>proof<\/i> is no good whatever. Once drinking starts the old habits of deceit start with it. The first glass is the only one taken with a fully conscious brain. The bottle must be <i>found<\/i>, or the bill <i>produced<\/i>, and the attack made suddenly with this in hand as proof positive. The sudden shock will open the patient\u2019s own mind to what is happening, and after a paroxysm of shame and despair the way will be open for a fresh beginning. If proofs are not forthcoming, the only alternative is to wait for the inevitable time when the truth has become evident to everyone and the patient is too confused to conceal the facts any longer.<\/p> <p>While convalescence is proceeding, a sharp eye must be kept for the signs of a recurring dipsomania. This circular compulsive form of drinking is akin to manic-depression. Drinking is usually proceeded by a change in character; a cheerful, active personality sinking into depression, irritability, sloth, and vicious habits. This phase gradually gives way to unlimited self-assurance, boastfulness, mono-mania, and dislike of all restraints. It is now a physical compulsion: nothing but force, at the present time not lawful in certified persons, will keep a person in this state from escaping to alcohol. The doctor must be notified at once of the premonitory symptoms, and whatever steps ordered must be carried out. But these cases are the disappointment of alcoholic nursing, and we can only await, as patiently as possible, the time when the cause will have been discovered and the necessary treatment prepared and made available for all.<\/p> <p>Sometimes it is impossible to arrive at the stage of rehabilitation. A certain proportion of alcoholics, chiefly elderly, chronic drinkers, sink into a semi- conscious senile condition. Korsakoff\u2019s syndrome appears: they develop a low muttering delirium with a soaring temperature and signs of heart and kidney failure. The care is now one of ordinary chronic nursing and needs the usual care as to diet, elimination, and the prevention of pressure sores.<\/p> <p>The diet of all alcoholic patients should be rich in vitamin B, especially when they have neuritis. Glucose if obtainable, is a suitable adjunct to the diet of those whose gastritis prevents them from being adequately nourished. \u00a0They should all, also, be encouraged to develop a taste for \u201csoft\u201d drinks. Water as a rule should not be a horror to them, as it is most important for them to have plenty of fluids something must be found to take its place. It will be easier for them, too, when out on their own again, if they have something \u201cout of a bottle\u201d when their friends are in indulging in their favourite drinks. One must always try to build good, safe habits: it is not enough just to remove the bad ones, as one knows that, when one\u2019s patients leave, it is to be a world full of danger to them that they are returning.<\/p> <p><em>Reproduced with permission by \u2018Addiction\u2019.<br \/>Image: Dent family archive.<\/em><\/p>\n<\/li><\/ul>\n<h2>Patient Stories<\/h2>\n<a href=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/?page_id=5626\"> <img src=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/08\/Lutyens-2-300x200.jpg\" width=\"300\" height=\"200\" title=\"Elizabeth Lutyens\" alt=\"Elizabeth Lutyens\" srcset=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/08\/Lutyens-2-300x200.jpg 300w, https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/08\/Lutyens-2-2x1.jpg 2w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/> <\/a> <h3> <a href=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/?page_id=5626\"> Elizabeth Lutyens <\/a> <\/h3>\n<a href=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/?page_id=6017\"> <img src=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/06\/William_Burroughs-300x200.png\" width=\"300\" height=\"200\" title=\"William Burroughs\" alt=\"William Burroughs\"> <\/a> <h3> <a href=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/?page_id=6017\"> William Burroughs <\/a> <\/h3>\n<a href=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/?page_id=6044\"> <img src=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/08\/Patrick_Riddell-1-300x200.png\" width=\"300\" height=\"200\" title=\"Patrick Riddell\" alt=\"Patrick Riddell\"> <\/a> <h3> <a href=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/?page_id=6044\"> Patrick Riddell <\/a> <\/h3>\n<a href=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/?page_id=6008\"> <img src=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/06\/Alan_Maclean-300x200.png\" width=\"300\" height=\"200\" title=\"Alan Maclean\" alt=\"Alan Maclean\" srcset=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/06\/Alan_Maclean-300x200.png 300w, https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/06\/Alan_Maclean-180x120.png 180w, https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/06\/Alan_Maclean-2x1.png 2w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/> <\/a> <h3> <a href=\"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/?page_id=6008\"> Alan Maclean <\/a> <\/h3>","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/5603","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=5603"}],"version-history":[{"count":55,"href":"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/5603\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":7180,"href":"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/5603\/revisions\/7180"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/media\/5706"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/apomorphine.info\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=5603"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}