Coping Behavior Under Extreme Stress
- 1 November 1961
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of General Psychiatry
- Vol. 5 (5) , 423-448
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archpsyc.1961.01710170001001
Abstract
Introduction The life-threatening impact of severe poliomyelitis has been vividly described both in the scientific literature and in popular reports about polio patients. Here, for instance is a patient's description of his experience in the acute phase of illness. The realization that I was paralyzed came to me with a merciful gradualness. As the extreme lassitude and weakness left by the fever and the pain wore off, the irritations took over. I yearned to change my position, to move ever so slightly onto a cooler spot on the sheet, and I couldn't. My heels itched and I couldn't even move them up and down on the bed. Three weeks ago there had been nothing to any of it—breathing, speaking, eating, evacuating, sleeping. I had accepted my body as if it were myself. If I wanted to eat, I ate—whatever and whenever I liked. If I wanted toKeywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Emotional Aspects of the Respirator Care of Patients with PoliomyelitisPsychosomatic Medicine, 1954
- PSYCHOLOGIC ASPECTS OF POLIOMYELITISPediatrics, 1949