TTTEJ - SUNDAY OREGOTfTATT, PORTLAND.' "MAT S3, 1915. C Habit Defined Disease As m 1RST INTERVIEW WITH DR. ERNEST S BISHOP BY SPECIAL PERMISSION OF DR, KATHERINE DAVIS, COMMISSIONER OF CORRECTIONS BY A. R. PARKHURST, Jit. NEW YOKK, May 22. "Unless we are to become a nation of drug? addicts give us Federal legislation that will put a stop to the illicit sale of narcotics." That was the concluding sentence of an Impassioned address made on the floor of the House of Representatives by one of its members in the bitter fight -waged there for the passage of the Harrison bill, an act to curb the f rowinff menace from drugs tha.t is threatening the country. The Harrison bill finally was enacted, and as a re sult there were bared even more amaz ing revelations of the drug evil than were dreamed of by the police of the larsest cities. eiince then crusades have been start ed all over the country and when police officials of New York City emphat ically stated that 74 per cent of the criminals arrested here are drug ad dicts the police of other cities awoke to a realization that their comrades in New York were on the right track in their effort to check crime. Lieutenant Scherb, chief of the nar cotic squad. Department, ment of such cases In the infirmary at the workhouse, and as much credit is due the intelligent corps of nurses who are co-operating with me and the resident physicians as to the medicine that is prescribed. "Just what those results are, how ever, you will have to discover for yourself, for I cannot discuss them with you. Neither can I discuss what others are doing in their efforts to cure the habit. I -have my own meth ods. So far I am thoroughly convinced I am on the right track. Results have proved that. But I want It clearly stated that I don't profess to have' 'a cure." Find out for yourself and in your own way what has been done and let it go at that." it did not take me long to realir.e that I was confronted by a forceful and unusual man of medicine. Dr. Bishop is a strapping, broad shouldered six footer, who, as tackle, had battered his. way through many an opposing line when he played on Brown's varsity football eleven. After overcoming Mingle with the various groups of prisoners, and you will come in con tact with a great many who have been treated and are cured. Talk to them. nd maybe their experience will furnish want to bay this: In morphinism wa have what will before many years b and curable diseases ' in Treatment which is based upon almost insurmountable obstacles, he of the New York Folice has not .only a splendid private prac and his men have been tice, but also occupies the chair of making scores of arrests daily of drug professor of medicine le Poly- addicts and those venders who pander to them. The Boy lan law. and more recently the Block act, both enacted in New York State, have made it extremely hazardous for any venders to peddle their poison about the streets. Hun dreds of arrests have been made and few have escaped conviction. The good Work done by this squad and the valiant aid the police generally are lending are doins more toward stamping out violence here than any step taken by the uniformed force in years. Com missioner Woods awoke to the peril of the situation and the creation of the narcotic squad speedily followed. A day rarely passes now but that teome unfortunate appears in one of the police courts and asks the Magistrate to commit him to an institution where treatment may bo obtained for the "habit." Oftener the victim requests that he be sent to the workhouse, on Randalls Island, where many remark Able cures have been effected. Determined to visit the Workhouse wards and at the same time have a talk with Dr. Bishop, I went to the office of Miss .Katherine Bemont Davis, the new Commissioner of Charities, under whoso rule the Workhouse comes. 1 found Dr. Davis just as deep ly interested in the drug evil as any official to whom I had talked, and while she preferred, that I obtain from Dr. Bishop the information desired on the perplexing problem, she consented to discuss conditions as they were and do exist. "There is in the Workhouse no class of prisoners which is receiving more attention from us just now than the drug addict," said Dr. Davis. "The ac tivity of the police in checking the sale of drugs has increased tenfold the number of these poor unfortunates who come under our care. We are meeting the need, however, and I think we are not without a measure of success. We are trying to apply sane and common sense methods rather than theory and the result Is very gratifying to me. Our physicians and nurses are untiring in their efforts to alleviate the suffering' of the poor unfortunates they have under their care, and I am confident ( Dr. Bishop, who supervises the work, is as well if not better qualified for it than any other man I know. A visit to the wards where these patients are undergoing treatment would soon cou vince you of this, I am sure." It was here that I interrupted Dr. Davis with the request for permission to visit these wards. "No, I won't give you such a per mit," Dr. Davis replied. "Dr. Bishop is In charge of the work and under no circumstances will I override his au thority. I would suggest that you go to see him and anything he might do, or say. will be all right. He is in charge and it is for him to decide." When I left Dr. Davis' office bearing a, card to Dr. Bishop, I lost no time in calling upon Dr. Bishop at his home, No. 151 West Eighty-fifth street. Be fore taking up his story I wish to say I was little prepared for what I later learned from him. Practically all phy sicians and specialists to whom I have talked about drug cases referred to the victims as "fiends" or "dopes." To them the drug habit was a vice, a can cer that was gnawing at and fast de stroying the vers- vitals ot society. All drug victims were essentially identical and all were treated in exactly the tame way.- There was a prescribed course through which the sufferer must go, and his physical condition at the time of starting in on the cure mat tered little. The addict, who had been . user of drugs for 25 years, was treated in precisely the same manner as an addict of as many months. They were poor unfortunates, who had sank eo low that they were social pariahs. Incompetents, and in most cases out- clinic and Medical School and Hospital. yet finding the opportunity to devote a great deal of time to the human derelicts who find their way to the city workhouse, ills late post as resident physician in charge of the narcotic and alcoholic wards at Bellevue Hos pital gave him the opportunity he needed to study the drug addict at close range, and there he accumulated ideas,- conceived thr.ough practical ob servation, which made it possible for him to accomplish what is now being done at the island. "When some years ago I was resi dent physician of the alcoholic and prison wards of Bellevue," Dr. Bishop continued, "my definition of narcotic drug addiction would have voiced the popular and generally accepted con ception. I should have called it a con dition based on some inherent weak ness of will power and mental stamina; a condition arising from the habitual conditions as they appear in the indi vidual case will give surprising results. Most of the past treatments have aimed at the withdrawal of morphine and at the bolstering up by whatever means were at command the supposedly de fective mentality and will power. "I want to state emphatically that the use of morphine does not consti tute morphinism nor does the with drawal of the drug constitute the cure for morphinism. The desire for mor phine is in the majority of cases simply the expression of body need as the desire for water is an expression of body need. The fundamental con dition is the changed physiology which makes morphine a necessity for or ganic function. If this were not so we would have long ago reached the solution of our problem. "Withdrawal of morphine has been accomplished in many ways, and the average patient will live through al nost any method of so doing. Expe dience shows, however, that following treatment which depends upon and ' ... f J ,w f - , - .r - i f - - . . . , V " v" ' ' :.-: jt I ' - . . . y ' ' f - - r s yj mi ' V ff ktat tmSK?11 IN THS CARE OP THE rT?TMTv " 7 ADDICTS .'ygTBp treating what he so flatly character- der supply it so long as it exists, nor to izes "disease." eliminate, without artificial support, the "When you visit the workhouse in- conditions which create this need and firmary," he answered, "you will see to leave the patient well enough to many patients under course of prepara- react the strain and readjusted to nor- tlon for treatment for narcotic addic- inal functioning. tlon. You also will see a great many "All this can be done, and if I were in the actual course of treatment. If at liberty to do ho without harm to you look far enough you will see a them 1 could summon the testimony of score or more men and women who "able physicians, past patients. For its have undergone the treatment now be- accomplishment 1 liuve no mugi'.' cure, ing built up to follow a normal life, no routine treatment or universal method to advance. I know of no drug or combination of drups which prop erly can be called a specific. "Morphinism, fundamentally. Is a dis ease. It shows stages ami variations better and more graphic reading than Just as do other diseases. It is compll anythtng I can tell you. cated by or complicates other dlseai-s "But while we are on the subiect I exactly as do other morbid processes. and every case is absolutely individual. It ia just as reasonable to treat nil recognized as one of the most definite "lies ot Pneumonia or typhoid or car- medicine UIac "'"eases accoruing to otic routine tHg. as 11 is so 10 treat morphinism. I i on- recognition and removal of fundamental """? J. experience j.i as im- iuiLMe io nnnesiiy promise a snort duration euro for all cases of morphin ism as it would be to do so in any other disease. Rational treatment and prognosis must depend in it. as in other diseases, upon its history, H.i stase and development, upon Its com plicated complicating factors, upon th condition of tho patient, mental ami physical, in the individual case. "Modern medicine lias been for omo time getting away from the blind fol lowing of routine and the search foi the specifics, and aiming at the dis covery and consideration of, and treat ment of fundamental cause and under lying conditions. When this method ot research is applied widely to morphin ism and other narcotic conditions, aird the facilities of our great charity hos pitals properly directed to Its furtlier-am-e we shall rearrange our conception of morphinism. Restraint and custod ial care and psychiatric classification will be a;. plied more sparingly ami more intelligently. Many worthy ill persons, instead of betnst refused ad mission and turned back into tho has for its sole aim withdrawal of the streets after inadequute Ireatment. more hopeless and less efficient, ad'ling to the municipal burden of the care of Its unfit, will be rationally treated aiel returned to health and telf-Mippoi ting competency. "The primarily normal sulTeier. inno cent victim of circumstances or of mis guided or unavoidable med icn t ion. will bo treated us any other pHtlenl. in hi:i home, in the general hospital or in reputable sanitania, accoirlm to i,Im wishes and purse ni the desire of his physician. With unbiased study siiiri education, medical and lay. will come a rearrangement of our attitude toward morphinism and toward tho treatment of its victims, and In its pla., will stand as a part of the ethical rational practice of medicine the treatment of a new disease." drug comes1 months of suffering and endurance of physical Inadequacy so great and so constant that there are few who do not relapse. "Withdrawal should be simply one step in the patient's treatment, under taken and executed with due knowl edge and understanding of the disease and not by routine procedure. The important factor is to sufficiently un derstand the disease and its symptom atology, so as accurately to estimate the patient's actual body need for mor phine, to neither oversupply nor un- use of a narcotic drug which caused deterioration, or degeneration of the physical, mental and moral being; an abandonment of the individual to the pleasure derived from sensuous indulg ence; a habit, a vice, a morbid appetite to pander to which the debauche would go to any lengths, and, lost to self respect, did not wish to escape from his degrading thralldom. "A few months of bedside observa tion and effort showed me how far this conception fell short of clinical fact. Literature and questioning of existing authority failed in explanation of obvious manifestations. In the end I put preconceived bias and previous con ception out of my mind and approached the plentiful clinical material for my solution. What I have learned is from the study of the narcotic drug addict as a clinical problem, viewing him as a sick man, listening to his history and his statements of narcotic drug action, watching his clinical mani festations and interpreting them in the light of physical action and reaction. "Since leaving Bellevue I have re tained my interest in narcotic drug ad diction and in the cases "r TrophlrM in llrrnnnfl. Indianapoli News. Curio dealers from 10ntcl.iii4 and from the Continent are reported to be In the vicinity of battlefields in Northern France endeavoring to buy trophies of the war which they hope In time may be valuable. They find, it Is suid, some difficulty In" driving bargains. Am ateurs who have come into possession of trophies hold them for lilitli prices or will not sell tin any consideration. It is recalled that after t!i. American Ci11 War c-atne to an end a bookseller in tile Bermudas when the carries of the blockade runners in th,. harbor nl Hamilton were sold at uu. tlon bought a number of package cases without the least knowledge. of their conlenls. Among these were several boxes oC brass buttons consigned to tlte Confed erate army for use. on soldiers' uni forms. ,ome 2i) years later totirlHM discovered these old Confederate but tons. A New York dealer made a hluli bid for the entire supply. This bl. wh refused and theau'buuuns, for which in the succeeding years a. small fraction of a. cent was paid, have been telling at 75 cents and tl each. WOMEN IN FIELD OF LABOR from them despite my earnest desire to do so. "We will deal with the morphtne.ad dict, for example," said Dr. Bishop in resuming. "The facts I have gained IRLS who are in business differ from business men principally in thejr physical resources. In all other directions they can challenge compari son with the masculine side of the working world with perfect impunity. Nowadays when we have women work ing in almost all the fields which for merly belonged exclusively to men we may well ask if there is anything done by man which cannot be equally well done by woman. The answer is no, with a reservation, however, pertaining to physical ability. The work can be just as well done by woman If she is physically able. Now, there is no use discussing the fact that men are far better able physi cally to combat the difficulties and in mv service casts, who would stoop to any crime as visiting physician at the Workhouse in order to replenish their supply of HosDital. and audi us T v, i "dope." private practice or in consulation have from lons study r tneae addicts "er But what Dr. Bishop had to tell me clarified and classified mv iri, a beacon light of "hope, and convince came as a revelation. Straight off he increased my ability to relieve the ad said: "The drug habit, you know, is diet of his affliction. a disease." "My present definition of narcotic "A disease!" I echoed. "You mean a drug addiction is this: A definite Tree, don't you?" physical disease condition, presenting "Nothing of the sort." came the constant and definite physical symp- vigorous denial. "A disease. 1 repeat, toms and signs, progressing througn ami. a most pronounced and well-de- clean cut clinical stages of develop- fined one 'at that." ment, explainable by a mechanism of "Now, before we go any further," Dr. body protection against the action of Bishop continued, "I wsh you to narcotic toxins, accompanied by inhibl- understand that I am not what might tlon of function and autotoxemla, often be termed a drug specialist. I have no displaying deterioration and psychoses desire to be so classified in my pro- which are not intrinsic to the disease. but the result of toxemia, malnutrition, anxiety, fear and suffering.'' This definition was so entirely at variance witb those I had heard epe- suffering upon withdrawal of the drug and dependence, loses its power to giv hardships of a business career than . auuauj uuua.auie lWrme accom- pleasurable sensation and hc. women are. Men nave lar greater simply a part of their daily sustenance, exacting physical' agony from its non- Sering. I further learned that the de- administration.' When this occurs they wlu power What they lack in actual panied by physicl and organic disturb ances and manifestations sufficient to account for and prove the actual suf- physical resources to draw upon than the weaker sex, although very often women make up in determination and fession. I am a medical man, a prac titioner, a diagnostician, . if you will, and In no circumstances will I discuss the drug habit from the viewpoint of medicine. Neither will I tell you what cialists outline that for a time I was my treatment is. When I tell you I inclined to regard Dr. Bishop as a regard the drug habit as a disease you theorist, a dreamer, but hardly one who was getting actual "cures" from his efforts. Before I left him I was con vinced of my error, all of (which was strengthened a thousandfold before I concluded my visit to the Workhouse drug wards. And, added to this, I had opportunity to read several papers that Dr. Bishop had offered before medical bodies. These papers treated of drug addiction and the. many so-called can draw your own inferences. "You know as well as I do that no two persons afflicted with the same malady can be treated in precisely the fame way. Circumstances alter cases. The treatment given drug addicts de pends entirely upon the drug by which they are enslaved, as well as upon their physical condition when they come "Niinder medical care for treatment. We me that ultimate rescue Is possible for the majority of the so-called Incurable dope fiends.' I am firmly convinced that the majority of users of morphine have been terribly wronged in a firmly rooted and widespread opinion preva lent among both medical men and the laity. This opinion is that chronic morphinism is a. morbid habit a per verted appetite, a vice; that only he who is morally or mentally defective would allow it 'to get a hold upon him," and that its main character manifesta tions are those ofTnental, physical and moral degeneration. Morphine users are often painted as liars, full of der ceit, absolutely untrustworthy, using a dream and delight-producing drug for the sensuous enjoyment it gives them addicts who do not want 'to discon tinue its use. They are thought of as mental and moral cowards who, aAer realizing their deplorable condition, re fuse to exert will power in the endur ance of discomfort as the price of free dom. This was my opinion when I first went to the alcoholic ward in Bellevue, and for a time I worked on that theory. "From my patients themselves and from watching and studying them. I later learned truths that have since been mightily strengthened that the lightful sensations to which we attrib uted their continuance of drug use, and make no effort to control its amount'or method of use, and It. with other condi- which have formed the background for tions attendant upon their mode of life. strength. Even will power will give out eventually, however, under the save themselves! By saving themselves la not meant saving on their work, but saving on their physical strength. There s no reason why any cirl should come borne from her office absolutely exhaus:ted each night, just depending on her night's rest to Hive her enouKli strength to get through the following day. If this condition exists something is wrong. It usually means that she is fritter ing away her strength on unnecessary things, for if she were living as she; ought and knew how to conserve her physical resources she would never feel absolute exhaustion. She mleht know fatigue, but the absolute, deadlassitud; of complete exhaustion, never! Learn how to aae yourselves, girls! You must realize that this physical dif ference in the biggest thing you have to overcome in order that your work may equal your brother man's. This can never be done by constantly wearing your strength to the limit, drawing on your resources to the last gasp. Not at all! The quickest way to overcome this all pictures of them hitherto painted, had n many if not in most of the cases with which I had come in contact, never been-experienced, or if they had ever existed, they, had long ago been lost and all that remained in morphine ef fect was support to organic processes necessary to the continuance of life relieves society of the menace of their membership. ' "As a class these are the true dope .fiends, largely incurable and hopeless; socially, economically and personally unworthy of salvage. They are not, however, hopeless and . worthless be cause they- happened' to' have acquired strain of working with an unfit body, difference ia to learn how to save your and it is an excellent "Idea to learn selves. how to conserve the physical forces and how to btrlld up and save the strength already possessed. So few business girls know how to No point is useless which may help to conserve your strength. Once a month take a whole Sunday In lied. Just for complete physical relaxation. and activity. . To be brutally plain, the morphinism, but because they are fund- morphine addict has in the majority, of amentaiiy what tney are diseased, de- cases never experienced any real enjoy ment as a result of the drug and has BROKEN HEARTS NOW MENDED generate and defective. The morphine element is an incidental to their funda- other 'diseases from which they may suffer. .... "These are the types who have fallen Into the hands' of charity hospital alienists and the workhouse and peni- endured indescribable agony because of mental condition as are many of the a non-supply. "I do not mean by this that morphine will not produce pleasant sensations or that it is never used to the end of ex periencing these sensations. . There is a class of the inherently, or otherwise degenerate -who indulge in morphine from a morbid . desire for sensuous pleasure just as they . would and do indulge in any other f orm . of perver sion. The individuals of this class are ROKEN hearts are being mended in Russia now. Not the hearts shattered by unfor- influence of ether very soon after the injury, part of the chest wall was re moved, the heart lifted fron its bed. tunate romances, , but 'the valvular or- and the utitches quickly Introduced In gans pierced by knives. Time mends tween pnlsations. The bony chest wall the first kind, but only the skillful sur- over the heart was not put tack into geon, Zeldler, can be depended on to operate successfully on the knife-torn tentiary physicians. ' The observations heart. of these physicians made In the past upon this class of addicts, have had an unwarranted Influence in the status of brought to the hospital with hearts Dr. Zeldler operates at Obuchow. Thirty-one morprinism. and the stigmatizing of the morphinist.' ' Because tho degenerate mentally incapable of self-restraint, in- class uses morphine to secure sensuous gratification is no reason for stigmatiz ing the mass of those afflicted with place, that organ being left protected only by skin and muscle. This was done to give the heart room to expand little hospital and to prevent adhesions from em barrassing the heart a at tion. Rapid convalescence has been the rule with Dr. Zeldler'a patients and ell persons dtijging jaded appetite with new stim uli! They yield themselves to any and all torms of self-indulgence and grati fication of appetite. "f5re comes a time when for them Save been very successful in the treat- "cures," but I was forbidden to quote ao-called d'scomfort we think of them morphine,', from Increasing tolerance - Question - him - about - his methods of - The- patients -were all put under tho morphinism as persons of perverted ap petite." -Here I interrupted Dr. Bishop to pierced and slashed by knife wounds have successfully had their organs re- are now going about their dally tasks paired and have recovered entirely, to as usual. all appearances, from their remarkable experiences. One patient has lived seven years and shows no sign of having been affected by the heart wound and subsequent sewing up. Warninc Bearoia, Exchange. Sometimes a man sees so many hor rible examples he decides he won't Join 'em.-