J R Soc Med 2004;97:86-89
doi:10.1258/jrsm.97.2.86
© 2004 Royal Society of Medicine
Shell shock, Gordon Holmes and the Great War
A D Macleod FRANZCP FAChPM
Psychiatric Consultation Service, Christchurch Hospital, Private Bag
4710, Christchurch, New Zealand
E-mail:
admacl{at}clear.net.nz
 |
INTRODUCTION
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Gordon Holmes (1876-1965), an athletic choleric Irishman, was
appointed
consultant neurologist to the British Army in France
in early 1915 and served
until soon after the Armistice. After
the war he established himself as a
leading British neurologist
and a master of systemic clinical neurological
examination.
1 Holmes
wrote nothing of his views or experience with shell-shock
patients in this
war; his submission to the Committee of Enquiry
into shell shock in 1922 was
negligible.
2 Yet
McDonald Critchley's
last conversation with Holmes indicated that, even
at the age
of 89, memories of these experiences were still upon
him.
3
It was on the battlefield that he began his work on the representation of
vision in the cerebral cortex, perhaps his greatest
achievement.4 His
medical role in the army was an important one, for it was neurologists who
attended the nervous patientnot psychiatrists, who worked in the
asylums with the psychotic and organically impaired. We know from the bitter
memoirs of Dr Charles
Myers,5 whom Holmes
appointed as 'specialist in nerve shock' and subsequently clinical
psychologist to the British Army, that Holmes was highly influential in the
management of shell-shock cases. This article proposes that Holmes
participated in, and may have masterminded, a radical change of clinical
practice.
 |
QUEEN SQUARE
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Gordon Morgan Holmes, born in Dublin of Protestant and Yorkshire
heritage,
was a shy, solitary, dyslexic child, a lover of the
countryside and of
nature.
1 His
intelligence was recognized
by the village schoolmaster, and examination
success paved his
way to medicine at Trinity College, where he graduated in
1897.
1 A scholarship
in mental and nervous disease enabled him to study
comparative and human
anatomy under Edinger in Frankfurt for
two years. Holmes' artistic skills
and perfectionism were early
recognized, as were his remarkable powers of
observation and
concentration.
6 He
was appointed house physician to Hughlings Jackson at the
National Hospital,
Queen Square, and there he subsequently completed
his clinical neurology
training. By the age of 30 he had been
appointed director of research at Queen
Square and at the outbreak
of war in 1914 he was on the staff of four London
hospitals
and had published 55
papers.
1 Critchley
described him as 'a
big man in stature, brusque, and
demanding.'
3
Never the philosopher,
he tended to distrust speculative thinking and relied
rather
on accurate recording of clinical observation and its correlation
with
pathological data.
6
He was according to Critchley 'no ogre
although many would have said
rough, even terrifying, and yet
he was so warm hearted that he could never
understand why he
was regarded as a bully, as indeed he
was.'
3
 |
NEUROLOGIST TO THE ARMY
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When war broke out, Holmes applied for a commission in the Royal
Army
Medical Corps (RAMC) but was rejected on account of myopia.
Determined to
serve in France he and Percy Sargent, a surgical
colleague, joined the staff
of a Red Cross Hospital just behind
the front line. Sargent was a dextrous
surgeon with a special
interest in brain surgery, and his results with Holmes
soon
attracted the attention of the War
Office.
1
Holmes' medical
disqualification from military service was revoked and he
and
Sargent set up a neurosurgical unit in No. 13 General Hospital
just south
of Boulogne. Harvey Cushing, a visiting American
surgeon, wrote an account of
this appalling and busy hospital
environment with 900 acutely ill soldiers,
lice, maggot infestations,
giant rats and an overwhelming number of head and
spinal wounds.
7
While
Sargent operated, Holmes clinically assessed, documented and
recorded
the neurological findings. In the evenings he wrote
his articles, wrapped in a
thick great coat with mittened
hands.
1 He even
provided smoked-drum illustrations for his paper on
the effect of gunshot
wounds of the
cerebellum.
8 A
particular
neurological interest was the effect of occipital lobe trauma
on
vision, culminating in his classic papers on the
subject.
8
 |
AN EPIDEMIC OF SHELL SHOCK
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It was estimated that, by December 1914, 7-10% of all officers
and 3-4% of
other ranks in the British Expeditionary Force were
'nervous and mental
shock'
casualties.
9
Holmes' self-proclaimed
ineptness with psychological
problems
5and
perhaps the
early influence of Edinger, who had established a psychological
department
in Frankfurtpersuaded him to seek the support and
psychological
expertise of Dr Charles Myers (another Army reject, in this
case
because of age) who was practising in a private hospital
in France. Myers had
published three case reports of shell shock
in
The
Lancet,
10 and
this paper doubtless suggested to Lieutenant
Colonel Holmes that Captain Myers
was the appropriate expert
to address the burgeoning crisis.
Shell shock referred to a clinical spectrum of neuropsychiatric conditions
ranging from 'concussion to sheer
funk.'11
Concussion, confusional states, hysterical (conversion) neurosis,
neurasthenia, exhaustion and malingering represented this spectrum. Probably
60-80% of shell-shock patients displayed 'acute neurasthenia',
subsequently termed acute war neurosis (and the major focus of this paper),
about 10% had conversion symptoms such as mutism, fugue, paraplegia, and
abasia astasia, and 5% were considered to have concussive brain
injuries.12 Dr
Aldren Turner, dispatched by the War Office to investigate this 'new
disorder', submitted in May 1915 the following description. Shell shock
he said is:
'... a form of temporary 'nervous breakdown' scarcely
justifying the name of neurasthenia, which would seem to be characteristic of
the present war... ascribed to a sudden or alarming psychical cause such as
witnessing a ghastly sight or a harassing experience... the patient becomes
'nervy", unduly emotional and shaky, and most typical of all his
sleep is disturbed by bad dreams... of experiences through which he has
passed. Even the waking hours may be distressful from acute recollections of
these events. Recovery is satisfactory, especially if the patient is sent home
for complete
rest.'13
This brilliant description of acute stress disorder (the DSM III term) can
be criticized only for the opinion on management. Such medical viewpoints, and
more particularly pressure of public opinion, persuaded the Army Council to
classify shell shock as a 'wound' late in 1915 and rather than risk
'lunatics at the loose in their rear' it organized rapid evacuation
of these cases.9 The
epidemic of acute psychiatric casualties, which nearly paralysed the British
Army after the Battle of the Somme in July 1916, forced upon the medical
establishment the desperate need for prevention and rapid treatment. The
British Army could not cope with this 'human wastage'. In the year
to April 1916, 24 000 of these casualties had been sent back to Great
Britain.9 Some 40%
of casualties in the Battle of the Somme were shell
shocked,14 adding
enormously to the loss of manpower. Myers was struggling to dissuade the Army
from their evacuation policy and to establish 'receiving centres'
near the front where specialist medical officers could formally diagnose,
initiate treatment and determine who should be evacuated.
 |
IMMEDIATE TREATMENT
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The principles of immediate treatment, in the front-line, of
acute
psychiatric casualties had been established by Russian
doctors during the
Russo/Japanese War of 1904-1905, and the
French Army had in place a system
that intentionally obstructed
the easy evacuation of such casualties; they
subscribed to the
theory of Babinski that suggestion was the predominant
aetiology
and were not experiencing in the difficulties afflicting the
British
(and indeed German) armies. Myers set up four receiving
centres and, having
discarded the term shell shock, introduced
methods of individual
psychotherapy, including hypnosis, as
acute treatment. These measures created
considerable distrust
in the Army hierarchy; toughness had been replaced by
tenderness,
9 yet
neither the war effort nor the nervous casualties were doing
well. A solution
was desperately needed and as consultant neurologist
to the British Army in
France Holmes must have been a critical
adviser to General Haig and his staff.
The British Government
had another reason for alarmthe huge impending
pension
bill entailed by those who did not recover. It favoured a
psychological
model that blamed the individual rather than the external
factors,
and by mid-1916 the Army viewed shell shock as a contagious
psychological
response of the 'weak' to protracted fighting. But
Holmes had
himself witnessed the pitiful breakdown of loyal and brave
soldiers.
Impatient with psychological interpretation he must have struggled
to
comprehend the various states of shell shock and their clinical
fluidity
(commented upon by Wiltshire in June
1916),
15 its
association
with states of exhaustion and the intensity of battle, its
recognition
in soldiers who had not even served at the front, its
attractiveness
as a 'wound' and the rarity of such symptoms in
soldiers seriously
physically wounded. During this period he would have been
compiling
the clinical data on spinal injuries and the disorders of the
visual
system caused by traumatic brain injuries. Holmes concluded
in his paper on
visual representation 'it is not uncommon...
in France where the early
stages of gunshot injuries to the
head can be observed to find a complete
hemianopia or a large
area of total blindness disappearing during the course
of a
few days or weeks. To what can these defects which tend to recover,
more
or less quickly, be
due?'.
8 Holmes
argued (correctly) the
role of secondary oedema around the anatomical lesion.
Monakow's
concept of 'diaschisis', proposed in the early 1900s,
and referring
to a period the damaged neurons required to adjust before
subsequent
spontaneous recovery, would have been familiar to Holmes. In
his
daily neurological practice he was observing a physiological
state with
obvious similarities to the observed natural history
of many of the
shell-shock soldiers. The dangerousness of the
oedema for the traumatized
brain may have been considered analogous
to that of suggestion. After a few
hours, days or weeks, symptoms
usually resolved spontaneously with rest and
time, and irrespective
of physical and psychological therapies, provided that
the symptoms
had not been behaviourally reinforced.
In June 1917, with the Battle of Passchendaele looming, General Routine
Order 2384 was issued by General Haig's adjutant Lt General Fowke. This
order determined that diagnoses of mental symptoms were not to be made on the
battlefield. A definitive diagnosis could be made only after several days of
observation and only by a specialist (neurologist). The natural history of
acute fear responses was by then being recognized, as was that of acute stress
disorder and acute post-traumatic stress disorder. Holmes' position of
influence at this period, his current neurological research and his belief
that suggestion could fixate and reinforce post-traumatic symptoms, may well
have been a factor in the decision of the Director General of Medical Services
in France, Sir Arthur Sloggett, to support this tougher approach. Though the
British Army briefly toyed with the possibility that shell shock was
psychogenic, it was more comfortable with a biopsychosocial conceptualization
(with a neurological emphasis).
The acute management strategies practised during the Battle of
Passchendaele were temporary respite from battle, sleep, food and (relative)
comfort followed by return to active duty. 'Without the rum ration we
would have lost the war' claimed Colonel JSY Rogers, 4/Black Watch, an
experienced front-line medical officer, for alcohol was freely used to combat
fear and to prevent the storage of traumatic
memories.16
Evacuation was only contemplated after several weeks of treatment at a forward
receiving hospital, such as Casualty Clearing Station (CCS) No. 62, which was
located within earshot of the trenches. At Passchendaele (generally regarded
as the culmination of horror) Holmes and his associate William Johnson
orchestrated, from the medicodisciplinary standpoint, a successful battlefront
psychiatric
service.17
Butler18 claimed
that a specific battle, Broodseinde, was the climax of the RAMC's acute
management and evacuation procedures evolved for shell shock. Shell-shock
casualties were much lower than at the Somme and an astutely crafted service
was operated with remarkable success and a very low rate of evacuations to
England.12 The
Fifth Army centre during the four months of the Battle of Passchendaele was
sent 5346 cases of shell shock, of whom 90% were first time shell shock
victims. This army of 22 divisions comprising about half a million soldiers
thus had a shell shock rate of about 1%. Of these 60% were acute neurasthenia,
10% hysteria and 4-10% confusion or 'commotional'
cases.12
Cases actually became less frequent as the battle continued, though shell
fire never
slackened.18 3963
of those cases treated at CCS 62 were sent back to the line, normally after a
very brief period, though sometimes up to one month's agricultural work
was needed for full
recuperation.12
Discipline and forceful 'encouragement' to return to the line was
needed according to Captain
Johnson.9 16% were
evacuated to specialist based hospitals and 10% were eventually returned to
England.18 Holmes
subsequently claimed that about 10% of shell-shock casualties relapsed once
and 3% relapsed twice or
more.2 Cushing,
never an admirer of Holmes, stated at Passchendaele that 'none of the
doctors knew or cared about
psychiatry';9
however Colonel Rogers claimed it was in that battle that control over shell
shock was regained by the medical profession (and the
Army).18 The
epidemic had been arrested, and in the subsequent year a very effective Allied
Army, after an anxious reversal, defeated its enemy. The crucial ingredients
incorporated in this change of medical practice were to allow an
individual's coping skills the opportunity to heal (to
'normalize' the reaction) and to minimize any possible secondary
gain from the symptoms. Holmes' physiological knowledge, his clinical
observations and his Victorian and patriotic beliefs combined to support, or
possibly orchestrate, these changes in practice.
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A POST-WAR SILENCE
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After the Armistice came a decade of forgetfulness. The survivors
were
reluctant to discuss or write of their experiences for
fear of rekindling
traumatic memories. The exceptions were the
literary and poetic publications
during the 1930s, though
Bond
19 has
challenged the biases of some of these contributions. Like
most of the
shell-shock doctors Holmes, the author of 174 scientific
papers, remained
essentially silent, contributing but a few
curt written comments to the
Committee of Enquiry in
1922.
2 He was
consulted, when William Johnson was unavailable, on one
known occasion during
the Second World
War.
9 However, his
emphasis
on the infective influence of suggestion, in a Dunkirk survivor,
appalled
his younger colleagues.
By 1918 a pragmatic and eclectic understanding of shell shock was held by
the regimental medical officers in the trenches. Shephard commented, that if
anything, the theoretical understanding of shell-shock evolved further at the
end of the war, away from a simple psychological point of
view.9 Cannon's
work linking fear and rage to
hormones20 further
hastened the end of a simplistic mind or body view. The evacuated and chronic
cases were appropriately conceptualized in a more psychological and analytical
manner and treated, if they were officers, in accordance with such theories
(Freudian theory was gaining an academic foothold).
Acute emotional reactions to traumatic experience and acute conversion
disorder are to the clinician very different psychopathological states from
their chronic forms. In the field in the last year of the war the acute
treatment of emotional cases was, as summarized by the Prideaux Report,
'reassurance combined with an appeal to personal and patriotic pride and
a large dose of
bromide.'21
Colonel Rogers commented:
'... do not send your cases down the line... when you get these
emotional cases, unless they are very bad... give him a rest at the aid post
if necessary and a day or two's sleep, go up with him to the front line,
and, when there, see him often, sit down beside him and talk to him about the
war or look through his periscope and let the man see you are taking an
interest in him, [and] you will not have nearly so many cases of anxiety
neurosis'.2
In the aftermath of the September 11 World Trade Center disaster LeDoux and
Gorman22
recommended 'active coping' and if necessary
medicationsuggestions remarkably similar to those evolved in the Great
War.
Gordon Holmes, a very unlikely psychiatric investigator and certainly an
unempathic clinician, may well have had a pivotal role in conceiving a modern
view of the management of the acute psychiatric casualties of war. Though the
change of practice was probably initiated by doctors in the field, he clearly
did not stifle these changes, which were cognizant with his own views. His
subsequent silence and that of his shellshock-doctor colleagues allowed this
knowledge to slip away. Contrary to popular myth the Army was generally well
led,19 and neither
the generals nor the medical staff were 'donkeys'. Half of the 22
000 doctors in Great Britain served the military and 1000
died.23 They
attended in France 129 675 injured or sick officers and 2 525 350 other
ranks.24 They may
not always have been popular, and their task of balancing the health of their
patient and the welfare of their army was profoundly difficult, yet the
experience and clinical knowledge they acquired was vast and remains relevant
to this day.
 |
REFERENCES
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- Parsons-Smith BG. Sir Gordon Holmes. In: Rose FC, Bynum WF, eds.
Historical Aspects of the Neurosciences. New York:
Raven Press, 1982
- Report of the War Office Committee of Enquiry into
'Shellshock'. London: HMSO,1922
- Critchley M, ed. Gordon Holmes: the man and the neurologist. In:
The Divine Banquet of the Brain and other Essays. New
York: Raven Press, 1979:228
-34
- McDonald WI. The Gordon Holmes Lecture,2001
- Myers CS. Shellshock in France 1914-1918.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1940
- Airing CD. A tribute to Sir Gordon Holmes. J Nerv Men
Dis 1965;141:497
-502
- Cushing H. From a Surgeon's Journal.
Boston: Little Brown, 1936
- Selected papers of Gordon Holmes. Compiled and edited for
the Guarantors of Brain by CG Phillips. Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1979
- Shephard B. A War of Nerves: Soldiers and Psychiatrists
1914-1994. London: Jonathan Cape, 2000
- Myers CS. A contribution to the study of shellshock. Being an
account of the cases of loss of memory, vision, smell and taste admitted to
the Duchess of Westminster's War Hospital, Le Touquet.
Lancet1915; i:316
-20[CrossRef]
- Head H. A discussion on shell shock. Lancet1916; i:306
-7
- McPherson WG, et al., eds. Official History of
the WarMedical Services; Diseases of the War, Vol.II
. London: HMSO, 1923
- Turner WA. Remarks on cases of nervous and mental shock.
BMJ 1915;i:833
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- Brown W. On the treatment of cases of shellshock in an advanced
neurological centre. Lancet1918; ii:197
-200[CrossRef]
- Wiltshire H. A contribution to the aetiology of shellshock.
Lancet1916; i:1207
-12[CrossRef]
- Maes M, Delmeire L, Mylle J, Altamura C. Risk and preventive
factors of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD): alcohol consumption and
intoxication prior to traumatic event diminishes the relative risk to develop
PTSD in response to that trauma. J Affect Disord2001; 63:113
-21[CrossRef][Medline]
- Shephard B. Shell-shock on the Somme. Royal United
Services Institute Journal1996; 141(3):51
-6
- Butler AG. Moral and mental disorders in the war of 1914-1918. In:
The Australian Army Medical Services in the War of
1914-1918, Vol. III. Canberra: Government
Printing Office, 1943:59
-147
- Bond B. The Unquiet Western Front: Britain's Role
in Literature and History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,2002
- Cannon WB. Bodily Changes in Pain, Hunger, Fear and
Rage. New York: Appelton, 1915
- Prideaux F. In: Conference of Neurologists and
Representatives of the Service Departments. Compensation in Cases of
Neurasthenia and Psychosis, 3 July 1938 (PRO PIN
15/2401.1A)
- LeDoux JE, Gorman JM. A call to action: overcoming anxiety through
active coping. Am J Psychiatry2001; 158:1953
-5[Free Full Text]
- Bosanquet N. Health systems in khaki: the British and American
medical experience. In: Cecil H, Liddle P, eds. Facing Armageddon:
The First World War Experienced. London: Leo Cooper,1996
: 462
- Gabriel RA, Metz KS. A History of Military
Medicine. Vol. II. From the Renaissance through
Modern Times. New York: Greenwood Press, 1992:247

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