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NCBI Bookshelf. A service of the National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health.
Haggett A. A History of Male Psychological Disorders in Britain, 1945–1980. Basingstoke (UK): Palgrave Macmillan; 2015.
Chapter 4 Pharmacological Solutions
Introduction
In a lengthy and well-cited article published in the Journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners in 1971,
Peter Parish, physician and medical sociologist at University College Swansea, stated that as a result of advances in
psychopharmacology and the influences of advertising, ‘large sections both of the medical profession and the general
public have come to regard psychotropic drugs as a universal panacea for a wide range of social and emotional
1
problems’. The resulting cost to the NHS was considerable. As Parish pointed out, between 1965 and 1970, 47.2
million psychotropic drug prescriptions were dispensed under the National Health Service (NHS), costing a sizeable
2
£21.5 million. The soaring cost of psychotropic drugs prompted much debate in the medical press about their use and
efficacy. Interest was particularly focused on prescribing patterns between individual doctors and between practices
across the country – and on how doctors gained information about indications for different drugs. Additionally, there
were heated debates about the efficacy of different groups of drugs. Although there was much confusion and
disagreement on these topics, research articles nonetheless reflected one consistent finding: at least twice as many
prescriptions for psychotropic drugs were issued to women than to men. From mid-century, on both sides of the
Atlantic, scholars and clinicians have attempted to account for this difference. Some have argued that, from the 1950s
there has been an epidemic of psychological illness in women. Others maintain that women are simply more likely to
3
seek medical advice and that doctors have tended to ‘code’ psychological disorders as female problems. The purpose
of this chapter is to consider a range of complex factors that lie beneath prescribing statistics. Analysis of published
research on the topic, combined with the recollections of retired doctors, suggests that there are many reasons why
women were prescribed drugs more frequently and that official data on prescribing obscures a more complicated
picture. Mental ‘distress’ in men was more common than has been previously acknowledged and was treated in
different ways, often with alternative drugs and with self-medication with over-the-counter remedies.
Psychotropic drugs from the 1950s
The post-war period was central to developments in the pharmacological treatment of mental illness and much has
been written about the evolution of new treatments from the 1950s. Numerous historians of psychiatry, pharmacology
and mental illness have published accounts of their emergence. It is not the remit of this chapter to repeat such
histories in detail; however, certain aspects of these developments deserve highlighting. During the period covered by
this book, the chemotherapeutic treatment of anxiety disorders, for example, changed significantly with the shift in
popularity from old-style hypnotic sedative drugs to the newer tranquillising agents during the 1960s. As has been
pointed out already, during the period, depression was also more commonly identified as a condition in its own right,
treated specifically with new antidepressants. This chapter will explore debates about the use of these drugs and
examine prescribing patterns between doctors.
As is well known, the late 1950s were characterised by cautious optimism surrounding the discovery of the
4
therapeutic effects of the major tranquilliser, chlorpromazine, for the treatment of serious psychosis. David Healy
cautions that histories of chlorpromazine have been too narrowly focused on whether or not the drug was responsible
for the closure of asylums. He argues that what was equally significant was that by reducing the numbers of patients
with serious symptomatic psychosis, less severe symptoms of neurosis and depression duly emerged at the forefront
5
of psychiatric practice. Indeed, chlorpromazine was followed closely by the first compound of a group of drugs that
were to become known as the ‘minor’ tranquillisers for the treatment of anxiety disorders. Meprobamate, sold in the
United States under the trademark as Miltown, and in Britain as Equanil, became the best-known drug of its kind until
6
the discovery of chlordiazepoxide (Librium), the first of the benzodiazepine tranquillisers. Diazepam, the second of
the benzodiazepines, was introduced in 1963 and its trade name Valium came to be used almost generically to mean
7
‘tranquilliser’. Commentators soon suggested that the calming effects of the benzodiazepines were ‘unique’ and even
8
‘remarkable’, and studies showed that they were much safer in overdose than existing hypnotic sedative preparations.
However, concerns were soon raised about the potential for dependence and indeed, by the 1970s, it emerged that
9
large numbers of people were addicted to benzodiazepines.
Increasingly, optimism surrounded the pharmacological treatment of both endogenous and reactive depressions. A
group of drugs known as the tricyclics proved promising in the treatment of classic endogenous depression, whereas
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‘atypical’ or reactive depressions appeared to react favourably to monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs), particularly
where symptoms of depression were aggravated by anxiety. In many cases, patients were prescribed both an
antidepressant and a benzodiazepine. As Callahan and Berrios have noted, psychotherapeutic, or ‘talking’ methods of
10
treatment for minor mental illness proved impractical in a primary care setting. As the oral testimonies in this book
from physicians suggest, doctors were faced with short consultation times, large lists of patients and minimal ancillary
support. The pharmacological treatment of depression and anxiety therefore became entrenched during this period.
It is important to remember that, although the new drugs expanded the pharmacological options available to
physicians, the use of prescribed psychoactive substances has a much longer history. Many of the older drugs, such as
amphetamines and barbiturate sedatives, continued to be prescribed alongside the newer ones. Some of them were
also used in combination preparations alongside other compounds for the treatment of a wide range of psychological
and physical complaints ranging from appetite suppressants to treatments for gastric discomfort. By the time of
Parish’s seminal study of psycho-pharmaceutical prescribing published in 1971, the benzodiazepines, tricyclics and
MAOIs were the drugs of choice; however, significant numbers of prescriptions for phenobarbitone and sodium
amytal (barbiturates) were still being administered (see Table 4.1).
Between 1965 and 1970, the prescribing of all tranquillising drugs increased from 10.8 million prescriptions to 17.2
million. This rise was largely due to a 110 per cent increase in prescriptions for the minor tranquillisers. During this
five-year period, for example, the annual prescribing of Librium increased by 1.15 million and Valium by 4.1 million.
Parish noted that such a significant rise could not be accounted for by the concomitant decrease in the use of the
11
older-style sedatives, which had declined only moderately. The period also saw a considerable rise in the use of non12
barbiturate hypnotics, particularly the drugs Mandrax and Mogodon that were prescribed for sedation and insomnia.
Antidepressant prescribing increased consistently during the five-year period; however, a pronounced rise in the use
of antidepressants did not occur until later in the 1970s and into the 1980s.
From the records of forty-eight GPs examined in Parish’s study, 17.1 per cent of prescriptions were for women and 8
13
per cent were for men. For women, the trend showed a progressive increase in prescriptions up to the age of fortyfive. After this age, numbers decreased until the age of seventy when they rose sharply again. Trends in prescribing to
14
men illustrated a more steady, but moderate increase throughout their lifetime. The male to female ratio remained
relatively consistent between doctors and between practices (see Table 4.2), but there were inter-practice variations in
the overall percentage of patients prescribed psychotropic drugs and large differences in the use of different
15
psychotherapeutic groups. Some physicians preferred to use tranquillising drugs; others opted more commonly for
antidepressants. One doctor, for example, used none of the popular psychotropic drugs, and gave most of his patients
‘Beplete Syrup’ (a vitamin and barbiturate combination). These differences led Parish to caution that reports of
16
overall prescribing were therefore of rather limited value. Stimulants and appetite suppressants were in all cases
much more frequently prescribed to women, usually for weight loss, although overall prescribing of amphetamines
17
decreased through the period due to increasing concerns about tolerance and addiction. Parish’s study reflected the
findings of research undertaken during the previous decade that revealed large variations in prescribing patterns
between doctors. A study of prescribing patterns in three northern towns, for instance, also illustrated that ‘not only
the choice of individual remedies but also the proportion of remedies in different therapeutic groups show much
18
difference between individuals, as do the rates per thousand patients on the doctor’s lists’. Ultimately, such studies
raised many questions about the true extent of psychiatric morbidity but provided few answers. As Parish noted at the
end of his discussion, the results of his study had highlighted some interesting problems that required further research.
First and foremost of these, he asked, was the question: ‘Why are twice as many women as men prescribed
19
psychotropic drugs?’
Behind the data: a complex picture
There are a number of reasons why it was impossible to determine the true extent of psychiatric morbidity in the
community, or draw conclusions about the gendered distribution of illness, based on prescribing data. First of all,
from the 1960s, doctors were ill-prepared for the sudden increase in therapeutic preparations. Doctors entering
practice in the late 1950s and early 1960s had few pharmacological choices available to them. General practitioners
recalled that, until the mid-1960s, they primarily used a range of ‘tonics’ that were dispensed in a variety of colours
and available in different strengths. Giles Walden, upon arriving at his first post in 1963, found that the three existing
doctors dispensed two types of tonics – one that was dark brown, the other light brown: ‘What was in it, I just don’t
20
know, but I mean that was their armament really, barbiturates and these tonics with a bit of strychnine in, you know.’
Among the medical profession, the term ‘tonic’ in this period indicated a preparation with muscle-building or ‘toning’
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properties, often containing strychnine; however, the word was used more loosely by the public who perceived tonics
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to improve health more generally or to remedy some kind of ‘deficiency’. Christian Edwards remembered
prescribing tablets he described as ‘pink, blue and white aspirins’, and added that ‘the pink worked much better than
22
the blue and not as good as the white, or something’. Richard Stanton, who, after qualifying, fulfilled a number of
locum posts, said that he would never forget what he encountered in one doctor’s consulting room:
On this guy’s desk-blotter, he had written about twenty drugs around the edge, and that was his whole pharmacy.
That was all he ever gave out. I asked one of the partners, ‘What’s this all about?’ He said, ‘That’s all he ever
23
uses, those twenty drugs.’
A number of doctors pointed out that tonic preparations often acted as a kind of placebo and that in some respects the
demand for them was patient-led. Stanton recalled:
They might actually come in and one of the words that people used was ‘Doctor, I think I need a tonic . . .’ which
of course was put into their minds, because doctors prescribed a tonic. ‘Let’s go down [to] the doctor and get a
24
tonic, then I’ll feel better’. So we responded to that. I mean that, that was the traditional approach.
Giles Walden described a very similar situation:
All they wanted was their bottle of the usual red stuff, or green stuff [laughing] – or even the blue medicine.
‘That’s all I want Doc’ – you know. And this used to be prescribed and off they went. And to begin with there
was little emphasis on trying to find out what it was for or why they needed it. I sort of found myself having to
go along with this to begin with . . . but I soon began to question what it was that we were dishing out, and for
25
me, things began to change.
As new drugs for anxiety and depression were developed, the range of treatments became increasingly sophisticated
and general practitioners (GPs) were largely required to do their own research into the pharmacological properties of
the various groups of drugs. A quick glance at the pharmaceutical reference book, the British National Formulary
(BNF), used widely by GPs, illustrates the marked increase in preparations between the early 1950s and the 1970s.
The only drugs listed for psychological disorders and insomnia in the 1952 edition were categorised under the
heading, ‘Drugs acting on the central nervous
system’. These included barbiturates, potassium bromide,
26
amphetamines, analgesics and anaesthetics. Other drugs noted to be of use in stimulating appetite, and as acting in
part ‘through psychological mechanisms’, were listed under the heading ‘Bitters and tonics’. Preparations included
strychnine and iron, gentian with alkali or acid, and Nux Vomica with alkali. These mixtures have a long history of
medicinal use in tonic preparations – strychnine, 27
for example, in non-toxic doses was regarded as a stimulant and
often used for respiratory and cardiac conditions. By 1957, the major anti-psychotics, chlorpromazine and reserpine,
were added to the list of drugs acting on the central nervous system, and in 1960, a new category of ‘sedatives and
tranquillisers’ appeared. By 1960, there were new warnings about drug dependence and a dedicated section28of the
reference book entitled, ‘ Habit-forming drugs’ (largely composed of hypnotics, sedatives and analgesics). In 1963,
the catalogue of entries expanded extensively to include the new benzodiazepine, Librium; the tricyclic 29
antidepressant, imipramine; a range of MAOI antidepressants; and the minor tranquilliser, meprobamate. Although a
new distinct category of ‘Antidepressants’ appears in 1963, the broad format of the publication remained the same.
The new drugs were simply listed in the front section as ‘additions’, with no detailed discussion about individual
preparations. In less than ten years, thus, the pharmacological options available to physicians expanded considerably –
yet data on their efficacy was to be hotly debated, and at times disputed, for many years to come. The BNF did not
change its format significantly until 1974, when the publication split into two separate sections: the first, entitled
‘Notes on drugs’, provided detailed information and discussion about drugs under specific pharmacological
classifications; the second provided a summary of preparations with specifications regarding dosage and
contraindications to their use. It is notable that, by the 1974 edition, all reference to the psychological component of
tonic preparations disappears altogether as the category of ‘Bitters and tonics’ disappears, to be replaced with the
heading ‘Nutrition and blood’ – perhaps a discernible marker of the increasing shift towards a reductionist medical
model of mental illness.
Given the considerable expansion in available treatments for psychological symptoms, general practitioners were
provided with a limited range of methods for keeping abreast of new drugs. Many of them turned to pharmaceutical
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prescribing reference publications such as the BNF and the Monthly Index of Medical Specialities, referred to as
MIMS. Some asked for advice from local hospital consultants in an attempt to gain specialist knowledge, and others
conferred with their colleagues in primary care. GPs recalled that, during these years, the BMJ and the Lancet
30
published very little on psycho-pharmaceuticals that might assist doctors with the day-to-day realities of prescribing.
At the centre of debates on sources of therapeutic information was the concern that undergraduate medical training
focused primarily on the basic medical sciences and less on pharmacology. During preregistration training and
31
thereafter, the acquisition of knowledge in this area was primarily the responsibility of the individual doctor. One
research article noted specifically that the rapid advances in pharmacology had made a very large number of
compounds available for medical treatment, but that there was ‘no necessity for a doctor to acquaint himself with any
information about these new compounds. If he does attempt to do so, where and how he does this is wholly his own
32
decision’. The study, which included a sample of prescribing over one week by a group of GPs in Liverpool,
indicated that when treating serious physical disease, general practitioners were more inclined to rely on their former
clinical training. This was predominantly the case for heart disease, for example, with advice from consultant
cardiologists where necessary. In contrast, when presented with psychological disorders, peptic ulcer and dyspepsia,
doctors were more likely to consult handbooks such as the BNF – and take advice from pharmaceutical
33
representatives. The study suggested that British doctors, particularly older doctors, depended on information from
34
drug companies where advances in therapeutics had occurred since their medical training had ceased. Dunnell and
Cartwright’s study, Medicine Takers, Prescribers and Hoarders, published in 1972, reflected these findings,
suggesting that one of the most important sources of information about new drugs was the literature produced by drug
firms. In this research, 45 per cent of doctors questioned had seen five or more drug-firm representatives in the
35
previous four weeks and only 6 per cent had not seen any.
The growing range of drugs available, the lack of training, the proliferation of advertising and the concurrent increase
in prescribing, caused considerable concern and attracted criticism in the medical press. This was summarised
opportunely by Derrick Dunlop, Chair of Therapeutics and Clinical Pharmacology at Edinburgh University, who
noted: ‘Nowadays, when we are Jove-like in the therapeutic thunderbolts we hurl – drugs potent for evil as well as for
good – it is of paramount importance for us to be thoroughly conversant with the pharmacological tools of our
36
trade.’ Parish, in his comprehensive study of pharmaceutical prescribing, raised specific concerns about the sources
of information available to general practitioners, warning that:
It is difficult to see how the general practitioner can have access to concise and unbiased information and how he
has time to sift out objective data, which he needs if he has to make rational therapeutic decisions. Huge sums of
money are spent annually to advertise drugs to prescribers, and the prescribing patterns and rates of general
37
practitioners indicate how effective these promotional efforts are.
In May 1965, the Ministry of Health set up a Committee of Enquiry into the Relationship between the Pharmaceutical
Industry and the NHS, under the Chairmanship of Lord Sainsbury. In its conclusion, the committee confirmed many
of the concerns articulated in the medical press, which stated that some of the sales material produced by
pharmaceutical manufacturers failed to measure up to the required standards in informing doctors adequately about
38
new (and existing) preparations. Parish was critical that the claims made by manufacturers placed significant
pressure on general practitioners because, with ‘such a torrent of information pouring on to him, [he] can cope only by
39
having details of a particular drug and its effects brought clearly to his notice’. Ultimately, Parish maintained that
responsible and appropriate prescribing could only be promoted by a system of continuous therapeutic education at
40
undergraduate and postgraduate level.
The influence of pharmaceutical advertising on doctors ultimately contributed to the eclipse of male psychological
illness. Manufacturers reinforced and exploited stereotypical gender roles in their marketing material, prompting
doctors to prescribe drugs from within a traditional framework that assumed women were more commonly affected by
mental disorders. Additionally, drug firms produced combination preparations that were less obviously ‘psychotropic’
in their action because their primary agent was designed to treat an organic condition, such as peptic ulcer or appetite
loss. Many of these drugs were not classed as ‘psychotropic’, yet they often contained psychoactive compounds –
which might either sedate or stimulate.
Studies on psycho-pharmaceutical prescribing during this period were undertaken within the framework of the
WHO’s classification of psychotropic drugs. The operational definitions were divided into five groups: neuroleptics
(major tranquillisers); anxiolytic sedatives (minor tranquillisers); antidepressants (tricyclics and MAOIs);
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psychostimulants (amphetamines); and psychodysleptics (hallucinogens). A number of other drugs were also being
investigated at this time, among them being lithium for use in what was then known as manic-depressive disorder, and
methadone for use in the treatment of narcotic addiction. However, preparations for other physical conditions that
combined two compounds, one of which was a psychotropic drug, were invariably excluded from the WHO
classification framework and subsequently from studies on psycho-pharmaceutical prescribing trends. Parish, for
example, stated clearly at the beginning of his study that, ‘admixtures’ in which the psychotropic drug was not the
42
main constituent were excluded. In broader studies of prescribing trends, combination drugs most usually fell under
43
the classification ‘drugs acting on the digestive system’ or under the ill-defined category, ‘others’. The most
commonly prescribed admixtures were those used to treat gastric discomfort from peptic ulcer or indigestion and
were, as such, most commonly prescribed to men. They usually contained a compound to reduce stomach acid and a
tranquillising agent to reduce anxiety, which, as this book has suggested was strongly associated with peptic ulcer
during the period. The manufacturers Roche, for example, widely marketed a drug called Libraxin during the late
1960s and 1970s, which contained the benzodiazepine Librium and clidinium bromide, a compound that reduces
stomach cramping and acid production. The company claimed that ‘By reducing anxiety and aggression, and by its
anticholinergic activity, Libraxin blocks reactions which increase gastric secretions and inflame gastric mucosa.’ In
44
fact, claimed Roche: ‘Libraxin usefully calms both the stomach and the patient’. The drug, Nactisol, produced by
Beecham Laboratories, acted in a similar fashion, containing a compound for ulcer management combined with a
45
barbiturate sedative for cases ‘where anxiety complicates ulcer management’. Stelabid, promoted widely during the
1960s by Smith Kline and French, claimed to ‘settle the matter’ in a ‘wide range of gastro-intestinal disorders’. This
drug contained an anti-spasmodic with an anti-psychotic compound, and the marketing material claimed that it ‘exerts
a beneficent calming action which effectively allays the background stress and worry that so often provoke or
46
aggravate such conditions’. Another widely promoted admixture was the drug, Durophet M, which was a
47
sedative/stimulant combination, used to aid the ‘psychological difficulties of dietary restriction’ in obesity.
It is difficult to say precisely how widely GPs prescribed these drugs. The position held by editors of the BNF on their
efficacy was definitively negative, and it is noted in the 1974–6 edition that, compared to other publications from the
industry, there were fewer compound preparations discussed in the handbook. Describing them as ‘a relic of the
whimsical mixtures of our predecessors’, the editors were of ‘the austere view that such preparations pander to bad
practice’, and it was recommended instead that, ‘each drug should be given in its optimum dosage, which is not
48
possible in a fixed combination’. The same message was reiterated in the subsequent issue (1976–8) under the
section on drugs that act on the alimentary system, where the advice was unequivocally that combination drugs should
49
be avoided. This position was supported by a number of doctors during interview where the criticism laid against
combination preparations was that if the patient improved following the administering of the drug, it was not possible
to tell which compound had produced improvement. Christian Edwards, for example, stated that he was ‘brought up
on single-drug prescribing’ and avoided combinations – ‘tempting though it was’. His concern was about side-effects
and he put forward an analogy to describe the potential problems: ‘It’s like riding two bicycles at the same time, you
50
don’t know which one to brake on.’ Another doctor recalled that the drugs were ‘very heavily advertised’ but that he
had not prescribed them because they ‘clashed’ with his attitude to medicine, noting that, ‘If the patient got better, you
51
had no clue which bit of it was helping.’ In contrast, other doctors used them routinely and spoke favourably about
the broad concept. Glen Haden maintained that the combination drugs for stomach disorders were ‘very effective’,
52
and he recalled that he used to prescribe Libraxin in ‘vast quantities’. Rupert Espley confirmed that during his early
years in practice, the convention of ‘putting a little bit of sedative into things’ was relatively widespread, and,
laughing, he recalled one dispensing surgery where colleagues would ‘put a little bit of phenobarbital in the bottle of
medicine, according to the amount they felt was needed’. When asked to clarify to which medicines this might apply,
53
Dr Espley replied, ‘Oh, in a bottle of medicine for magnesium trisillicate for dyspepsia or something like that.’
Undoubtedly, some in the medical community frowned upon the use of combination drugs; nevertheless, the
proliferation of adverts for such preparations does suggest that a considerable market existed for those who favoured
the approach. As Roger Lea (a West Country GP) observed, the pharmaceutical companies collated large amounts of
data on prescribing trends. He eventually refused to meet with drug representatives, because ‘they would come in with
a headful of data about my prescribing habits, and what I did – you know – how to make me feel good … I reckoned
54
they were too good at it.’
Since research suggested older GPs were more likely to rely on information from drug companies, it would be
reasonable to suggest that these drugs were probably prescribed in significant numbers, and most commonly to men,
where anxiety featured as an aspect of some physical disorder. Yet official data on the prescribing of psychotropic
drugs did not reflect the use of these preparations and continued to provide compelling evidence that women
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consumed significantly greater amounts of drugs in all psychotropic categories. In the late 1970s, the Canadian
researcher Ruth Cooperstock, who published widely on gender and psychotropic drug use, suggested that the use of
these compounds was being underestimated in data; however, little attention was paid to the topic in Britain.
Cooperstock claimed that, in Canada, the use of mixed drugs had expanded throughout the 1970s ‘to include all
55
varieties of somatic disorders and their emotional sequelae’. Using the drug, Stelabid, as an example, she observed
that:
In 1973, there were as many prescriptions for Stelabid, a mixed psychotropic, as for Stelazine, the pure
tranquilizer. Stelabid, however, is termed an antispasmodic drug and is never identified as a psychotropic,
56
consequently deflating the actual proportion consumed.
A year later, in a sociological study of gender-role conflict and benzodiazepine use, Cooperstock maintained that male
use of tranquillising agents tended to be related to conflict regarding work performance, ‘or more typically, the need
to contain somatic symptoms in order to perform an occupational role’. She argued that men in her study were less
emotionally expressive than women, ‘a consequence of which appeared to be greater emphasis on reports of somatic
57
problems’.
Self-medication
Parish’s study of pharmaceutical prescribing patterns revealed that not only had the taking of prescribed medicines
increased, but the use of non-prescribed or so-called ‘ over-the-counter’ drugs had also increased dramatically. In
58
1968, £80 million of non-prescribed medicines were purchased. He pointed out that since only one-third of illness
episodes were presented to the general practitioner, it would appear that the practice of self-medication was not
influenced by doctors’ attitudes and concepts. Dunnell and Cartwright’s extensive study of medicine-taking revealed
that, of those interviewed, three-quarters of the women and three-fifths of the men had taken some self-prescribed
59
medicine in the past two weeks. The authors emphasised that higher numbers of women taking over-the-counter
medicines might be accounted for by the fact that women generally took responsibility for the family shopping and
were therefore the ones exposed to persuasive advertising for remedies in shops. They further cautioned that reported
behaviour was not necessarily actual behaviour and evidence from the previous chapters in this book suggests that
60
men might well have been reluctant to admit taking remedies for ailments. The figures for non-prescribed
medication certainly led Dunnell and Cartwright to conclude that a large ‘iceberg’ of illness existed in the community
61
at any one time that was not known to the medical profession.
A survey of advertising for home remedies throughout the 1950s and 1960s certainly suggests that there was a
sizeable market for medicines and tonics that claimed to relieve stress, and symptoms of indigestion and other
digestive disorders. Prior to the 1950s, pharmaceutical companies exploited the wartime market, both in Britain and
abroad, expounding the positive effects of tonics to markets in West Africa and Burma, for treatment post-malaria and
62
other tropical illnesses. Adverts were framed within stereotypical gender roles. Sanatogen tonic, for example, was
targeted at women for promoting and maintaining beauty. One advert claimed: ‘The bloom of youth often leaves a
woman early through fevers and the weakening influence of the climate.’ Another reminded audiences that: ‘A
healthy youthful wife is a joy to her husband.’ The makers of the tonic also claimed that it would ‘banish weakness’
63
and ‘restore health’ in men. At home, the makers of Rennies indigestion tablets used images of military personnel in
their adverts, which appeared regularly in national newspapers. They claimed that ‘ war-time indigestion’ was caused
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by ‘worry, suspense and hurried meals’. ‘A couple of Rennies’ would help ‘stomach pains to stop naturally’. Other
adverts drew upon images of suited businessmen and the notion of acid stomach caused by stress at work. One
alarming advert released in national newspapers featured a picture of a large burned carpet, accompanied by the text:
‘The acid in your stomach would burn a hole in a carpet.’ The notion that men should ‘stand up’ to their indigestion
was implicit in all adverts and demonstrated in a promotional piece for Rennies, which depicted a hard-working
warden, looking for ‘easy instant relief’, whose ‘job was tough, but his indigestion was tougher’. Another image
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prompted men not to become ‘indigestion martyrs’. War workers, business executives and working class men all
appeared in adverts for the same products, but could be distinguished by their dress: military uniform, suits and hard
hats or flat cloth caps respectively. Women appeared occasionally in images during the war years, referring to
traumatic circumstances such as air raids and appearing in images of factory work, where time pressures and
unappetising meals were seen to cause a problem with digestion. However, during the war, the images were
predominantly of men.
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Post-war, manufacturers of tonics and indigestion remedies employed a range of strategies to engage with the male
market. Arguably, the theme of defeating weakness and regaining strength was the most common way in which
advertisers resonated with the beliefs and values associated with contemporary masculinity. Socialisation into the
male role began early, evident in marketing images that depicted small children, such as the advert for Horlicks shown
in Figure 4.1.
In this instance, the manufacturers claim explicitly that ‘Little boys are made of GOOD STRONG BONES, good
tough muscle, and of loving care’. A mother’s loving care therefore required that she provide her sons with the correct
nutrition so that they may ‘build their bodies into that strength on which health and happiness depend. Setting already
the wise habit of a lifetime’.
As numerous authors have noted, advertisements are one of the most important cultural factors reflecting, moulding
66
(and remoulding) everyday life. Although, from this study it is not possible to measure their influence, the
motivational psychology behind such adverts is clear from archival collections of draft drawings and copy text filed in
advertising agencies’ guard books. Figures 4.2 and 4.3, for example, are images in the early stages of design for the
product Iron Jelloids, which was a tonic preparation sold widely during the 1950s.
As Figure 4.2 suggests, this product claimed essentially to do two different things. Where a woman is pictured, the
adverts suggests that Iron Jelloids might make her look ‘lovelier every day’, in contrast to the image of a man seen
participating in a tug of war, where it is intimated that the product might make men ‘feel stronger every day in every
way’. For the suited gentleman who featured in the guard book image in Figure 4.3, Iron Jelloids appear to transform
the man’s sullen, grey complexion, from ‘Weakness’ to ‘A1’ condition, the metamorphosis duly represented by a
much brighter, healthier and stronger looking appearance.
Advertisers increasingly began to draw on well-known figures and television personalities to endorse their products.
The makers of Macleans indigestion tablets employed the television host, Gilbert Harding, to advertise their product
in 1959. During the 1950s, Harding hosted the BBC Radio show, I Beg to Differ, and became infamous for his abrupt,
outspoken and sometimes rude behaviour. He went on to feature as a regular panellist on the BBC light-entertainment
programme, What’s my Line? Harding’s brusque and direct approach was applied skilfully in marketing Macleans
Tablets, where he appeared to be expressing his frustration with ‘people who just don’t bother to think for themselves’
and who ‘never stop complaining’. For indigestion sufferers, according to Harding, there was simply no excuse for
complaining, or for ‘ suffering’ from pain – Macleans Tablets were the obvious answer. Harding claimed to always
67
carry some in his pocket and suggested that ‘anyone with any sense’ should do the same (See Figure 4.4).
Although the majority of advertisements directed at men harmonised with the theme of restoring physical strength,
vitality and vigour, manufacturers increasingly indicated that men were also vulnerable to psychological stress.
Drawing on contemporary scientific studies of stress, and on broader cultural anxieties about the negative health
consequences of modern living, the makers of the tonic, Phosferine, produced numerous adverts depicting men with
what they described as ‘nervous exhaustion’. The testimonial featured in the advert for Phosferine in Figure 4.5
indeed states explicitly that nerve trouble, for this particular gentleman, caused him to fear train and bus journeys. The
cause of ‘stress’ nonetheless, in this case, was located in the ‘gastric nerves’, causing loss of appetite and lack of
sleep. This was in contrast to the claims increasingly put forward by pharmaceutical companies for prescribed
68
psychotropic drugs, which claimed to act directly on chemicals in the brain and not the nervous system.
Advertisements for over-the-counter preparations also reflected the social changes that took place from the end of the
Second World War. Although most women, certainly through the 1950s and into the 1960s, still fulfilled their primary
role at home as wives and mothers, men had begun to increase their engagement with family and domestic life. A
series of fictional, drama-style advertisements for Horlicks mirrored the developments in gender roles, featuring men
in roles as husbands and fathers. The male protagonist in these adverts would invariably be ‘grumpy’ and exhausted,
often upsetting his wife and children. In one advert, published widely in the national press during the mid-1950s, a
father is pictured rejecting a hand-made wooden gift from his son, irritated by the noise the boy had created when
constructing it. Another scene depicted a policeman whose tiredness had caused him to neglect his son, resulting in
delinquent behaviour. Both examples reflect the increasing social and cultural importance of the male role in the home
and at the centre of the family. In all cases nonetheless, male protagonists needed prompting by their wives to seek
help from the doctor, who invariably confirmed that drinking Horlicks at night might aid sleep and relaxation.
Miraculous transformations to mood and manner ensued. The makers of Horlicks also utilised the charms of the wellknown actor, novelist and columnist, Godfrey Winn, in a ‘problem page’ style advert during the late 1950s. Winn was
known for his popularity with a female audience and regularly contributed to the BBC Radio show, Housewives’
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Choice. An advert for Horlicks in 1957 featured a letter from a gentleman seeking Winn’s advice about insomnia. Not
only was the complainant ‘miserable’ himself, but he confessed that he ‘made the whole family the same – especially
[his] wife who became a bundle of nerves and had to seek medical aid’. It is likely such letters were entirely fictitious;
however, it is interesting that this scenario echoed the accounts put forward by many family doctors who maintained
that women often sought medical help for stress and nerves caused by living with a family member with
psychological problems. At the end of Winn’s advice page, he cautioned against ‘taking sleeping pills’, reassuring
readers that his ‘Horlicks postbag’ was full of similar cases – yet taking Horlicks would undoubtedly ensure that life
69
would become a ‘better and happier thing’.
The manufacturers of indigestion remedies either drew an association with poor diet and irregular meals and
dyspepsia, or, as was the case with Maclean’s Tablets and Rennies, increasingly they claimed a link between worry
and indigestion. In Rennies’ adverts, the tagline: ‘Dyspepsia – sometimes started by worry, invariably stopped by
70
Rennies’ appeared often. One promotional advert released by the same company and published in the Daily Mail
and the Daily Express claimed to carry a medical seal of approval and featured a cartoon image of a doctor with a
stethoscope around his neck, who had ostensibly ‘cured his own stomach trouble after hospital treatment failed’.
Worried and overworked, dealing with a large list of patients and struck down with gastric symptoms, the ‘doctor’
(whose name was omitted) claimed that gastric pain, heartburn and acidity ‘disappeared in a matter of seconds after
taking a couple of [Rennies]’. Promoting the ‘unusual medicinal qualities’ of Rennies tablets, the manufacturers
claimed that in addition to this doctor, 1,193 other doctors had also written to say they were prescribing the tablets for
71
their patients as the most effective treatment.
Although it is not possible to quantify with any accuracy the extent to which men were purchasing home remedies for
minor ailments, the widespread and consistent advertising of such products suggests that a strong and viable market
existed. Accounts from doctors certainly suggest that men were more comfortable treating minor ailments themselves
than attending the doctor’s surgery, and as we have seen, women played a central role in persuading men to seek
medical help and in stocking the medicine cabinet as part of the weekly family shop. Over-the-counter remedies
certainly afforded men the opportunity to treat conditions themselves and manufacturers often exploited the idea that
they were reluctant to seek medical help. An advert for a product called Hemotabs, indicated for use in the treatment
of haemorrhoids, provides a typical example. Depicting an image of a male, the makers noted that ‘after years of
72
suffering in silence’, the product would bring relief.
Reflections
Parish observed in his study during the early 1970s that research on the topic of psycho-pharmaceutical prescribing
had been unable to produce ‘any firm conclusions’. Results, he pointed out:
. . . depend upon the size of the sample, the diagnostic classifications, the indices of morbidity, the system of
sampling, the methods of recording data, and above all, upon the attitudes towards mental illness of the
73
researchers and the general practitioners being investigated.
74
Until the development of computerised records, not all doctors kept accurate records of prescribing data. Studies
were therefore reliant upon those who kept records and were willing to submit them for research. Such doctors were a
self-selected group and we know very little about the prescribing habits of those doctors who did not keep accurate
records. Reports of mental illness were also only based upon patients who attended their GPs. As Parish pointed out,
these too were ‘a self-selected group of persons whose attitudes and expectations may differ from those who do not
75
attend and yet suffer from symptoms’. In his report, Parish neatly summarised many of the methodological obstacles
faced in previous research:
In the past, many of these survey findings have not been corrected for age and sex differences, and the period of
the surveys has varied from anywhere between one week and five years. It is also obvious that the parameters on
which reports of mental disorders in general practice are based need challenging, particularly the present
definitions of what is abnormal and what is normal mental health … When does a ‘person’ become ‘a patient’?
Where is the cut-off point in deciding whether a person is ‘neurotic’? … Further, there is little doubt that the
estimated extent of ‘mental illness’ is higher when assessed in the community than when assessed from general
practitioners’ consulting rooms, and this difference can only be explained by differences in attitude towards
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mental illness and towards general practitioners.
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Research published during the early 1980s began to consider some of these factors in more detail and to reflect on the
influence of gender stereotyping upon prescribing. In a longitudinal study of psychotropic drug prescriptions
undertaken at the General Practice Research Unit, Institute of Psychiatry in London, doctors were asked to record the
complaints presented to them by patients at the initial consultation. The study found that a much greater proportion of
women ‘described’ classical symptoms of depression, whereas a larger proportion of men complained not of
77
depression, but of other physical symptoms – and frequently of sleep disturbance. The study also revealed that more
women than men received a tranquilliser for depression (in addition to, or in place of an antidepressant). The
researchers were unable to explain why this might be and subsequently urged that this be explored more fully in
78
future research. Commentators began to suggest that psychotropic drugs, and tranquillisers in particular, were being
prescribed to remedy symptoms caused by social and not medical problems. As Kevin Koumjian noted in the early
1980s, social problems related to family, work and other spheres of social life were increasingly being defined as
79
medical problems – for which a medical solution could be sought. Sociological, psychological and political interest
focused on this topic, in part prompted by claims put forward by the feminist movement that suggested the limited
80
opportunities afforded to women were stifling and oppressive, causing them to experience depression and anxiety.
Historians of medicine now debate the extent to which this was in fact the case. However, a point made less
frequently was that women were certainly more at ease articulating social problems to their doctor and would seek
help and advice in situations where men were more reticent. Much of the research undertaken on both sides of the
Atlantic from the late 1970s suggests that women were more comfortable confiding in doctors about strains in family
81
groups, marital difficulties and the pressures of raising children. The increasing medicalisation of daily problems
meant that it was therefore almost inevitable that more women would be prescribed psychotropic drugs. Research
undertaken by Joanna Murray, again from the General Practice Research Institute, revealed that women on long-term
drugs felt that they required medication for a wide range of daily functions, including: travelling, shopping, mixing
82
with people and running their homes. The more intensely commentators focused on women’s consumption of
psychotropic drugs, the less likely it was that the spotlight might shine on presentations of male distress and the
reasons why men were prescribed drugs less frequently.
As the other chapters in this book have shown, there is some evidence that doctors’ views about the gendered
83
distribution of mental illness influenced consultations with their patients and subsequent prescribing habits. The
view that women were hormonally predisposed to psychiatric symptoms, for example, remained prevalent throughout
the 1960s and 1970s – a point that featured in many of my interviews with doctors. Parish too, noted in his study, that
disorders of menstruation and the menopause were common physical disorders for which psychotropic drugs were
prescribed – in particular the minor tranquillisers, Librium and Valium. According to his research, one in twenty of all
patients prescribed such therapy were women with these ‘disorders’ which included not only puerperal depression and
menopausal depression, but also dysmenorrhoea in younger women and other menopausal symptoms which, it was
84
noted, ‘appeared to cause much suffering’.
Published sociological research certainly began to suggest that tranquillisers were used increasingly to help
individuals tolerate difficult personal circumstances. Many of these individuals were women who were living with
partners who might have been displaying psychological symptoms but remained undiagnosed. Researchers pointed to
cases, for example, where women were prescribed drugs to help them adapt to conflict in marriage and to intolerable
85
behaviour by alcoholic husbands. Although many women saw no alternative to pharmaceutical treatment, others
86
expressed anger about their physicians’ approach and found alternative solutions to their problems. Increasingly, sex
role research revealed that male patients, when they did seek medical help, tended to discuss the onset of somatic
symptoms – often in relation to work stress. In such cases, psychotropic drugs alleviated incapacitating symptoms,
enabling them to continue work. Consistently in research, the most common symptoms related to chest palpitations
and gastric symptoms. In rare studies that included combination preparations, the drug Librax emerged as commonly
8
prescribed to men in such situations.
Footnotes
1 Parish PA. The prescribing of psychotropic drugs in general practice. Journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners. 1971;92
Supplement 4:1–77. on 1. [PMC free article: PMC2635262] [PubMed: 5143711] Parish undertook research into – and taught –
pharmacology. He stressed the importance of teaching pharmacology to GPs.
2 Parish. The prescribing of psychotropic drugs. :1. For an account of the development of prescribing policy and prescription charges, see
Baines Darrin. The prescription charge and the Hinchcliffe Committee. Prescriber (2013). 2013 November 15;:40–42.
3 See Tone Andrea. The Age of Anxiety: A History of America’s Turbulent Affair with Tranquilizers. New York: Basic Books; 2009. p.
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196. For a full discussion of women and psychotropic medication in Britain see Haggett Ali. Desperate Housewives, Neuroses and the
Domestic Environment 1945–1970. London: Pickering and Chatto; 2012.
4 For the history of this discovery, see Healy David. The Antidepressant Era. Cambridge Massachusetts: Harvard University Press; 1997.
pp. 43–48.
5 Healy David. The Creation of Psychopharmacology. Cambridge Massachusetts: Harvard University Press; 2002. p. 4. [PubMed:
15272483]
6 Smith Mickey C. A Social History of the Minor Tranquilizers: A Quest for Small Comfort in the Age of Anxiety. New York:
Pharmaceutical Products Press; 1985. p. 12.
7 Smith. A Social History of the Minor Tranquilizers. :12.
8 Today’s Drugs, Benzodiazepines. British Medical Journal. 1967 April 1;:36.
9 Malcolm Lader argues that studies in the early 1960s indicated that there was the potential for dependence if benzodiazepines were used
in large doses for prolonged periods, but that little notice was taken of negative reports due to the widespread perception of their safety.
See Lader M. History of benzodiazepine dependence. Journal of Substance Abuse. 1991;8:53–59. [PubMed: 1675692]
10 Callaghan Christopher M, Berrios German E. Reinventing Depression: A History of the Treatment of Depression in Primary Care,
1940–2004. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2004. p. 38.
11 Parish. The prescribing of psychotropic drugs. :6.
12 Parish. The prescribing of psychotropic drugs. :3.
13 Parish. The Prescribing of psychotropic drugs. :16. The survey included a total patient population of 133,081 registered with fortyeight GPs in the Midlands.
14 Parish. The prescribing of psychotropic drugs. :18.
15 Parish. The prescribing of psychotropic drugs. :19, 26.
16 Parish. The prescribing of psychotropic drugs. :26.
17 Parish. The prescribing of psychotropic drugs. :7.
18 Lee John AH, Draper Peter A, Weatherall Miles. Medical care: prescribing in three English towns. Milbank Memorial Fund.
1965;43(2, Part 2):285–290. on 288.
19 Parish. The prescribing of psychotropic drugs. :22.
20 Interview with Giles Walden.
21 British National Formulary (BNF). London: British Medical Association; 1952. p. 35.
22 Interview with Christian Edwards.
23 Interview with Richard Stanton.
24 Interview with Robert Manley. See also Moore Richard. Leeches to Lasers: Sketches of a Medical Family. Killala, Ireland: Morrigan;
2002. Moore recalled: ‘mysterious substances like Syrup of Tolu and Pulv Tragacanth – relics of a bygone age’ :220.
25 Interview with Giles Walden.
26 BNF. 1952:44.
27 For a cultural history of strychnine, see Buckingham John. Bitter Nemesis: The Intimate History of Strychnine. Boca Raton FL: Taylor
and Francis; 2008.
28 BNF. London: BMA and The Pharmaceutical Society; 1960. p. 50.p. 57.
29 BNF. London: BMA and The Pharmaceutical Society; 1963.
30 Interview with Rupert Espley.
31 See Wilson CWM, Banks JA, Mapes REA, Korte Sylvia MT. Influence of different sources of therapeutic information on prescribing
by general practitioners. British Medical Journal. 1963 September 7;:599–607. [PMC free article: PMC1872685] [PubMed: 14049985]
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32 Wilson, et al. Influence of different sources of therapeutic information. :599. [PMC free article: PMC1872685] [PubMed: 14049985]
33 Wilson, et al. Influence of different sources of therapeutic information. :601.
34 Wilson, et al. Influence of different sources of therapeutic information. :603. See also Wilson CWM, Banks JA, Mapes REA, Korte
Sylvia MT. Pattern of prescribing in general practice. British Medical Journal. 1963 September 7;:604–607. [PMC free article:
PMC1872692] [PubMed: 14049986]
35 Dunnell Karen, Cartwright Ann. Medicine Takers, Prescribers and Hoarders. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul; 1972. p. 71.
36 Dunlop DM. A survey of 17,301 prescriptions on Form E C 10. British Medical Journal. 1952 February 9;:292–295. on 295. [PMC
free article: PMC2022787] [PubMed: 14896121] Dunlop went on to become the first chairman of the Committee on the Safety of
Drugs, which was known for many years as the Dunlop Committee. Under his leadership, the Yellow Card Scheme was introduced in
1964, after the thalidomide tragedy highlighted the urgent need for routine monitoring of medicines. See The British Pharmaceutical
Society. Hall of Fame: http://www.bps.ac.uk/details/resourcesPage/6215841/Sir_Derrick_Dunlop.html?cat=bps1465bf3219c.
[accessed 7 January 2015];
37 Parish. The prescribing of psychotropic drugs. :62.
38 Parish. The prescribing of psychotropic drugs. :63.
39 Parish. The prescribing of psychotropic drugs. :69.
40 Parish. The prescribing of psychotropic drugs. :70.
41 Research in Psychopharmacology: Report of a WHO Scientific Group. Geneva: WHO; 1967. pp. 7–8.
42 Parish. The prescribing of psychotropic drugs. :14.
43 See for example, Dunnell, Cartwright Medicine Takers. Chapter 3., and Balint M, Hunt J, Joyce D, Marinker M, Woodcock J.
Treatment or Diagnosis: A Study of Repeat Prescribing in General Practice. London: Tavistock; 1970. Chapter 4.
44 Advert for Libraxin. British Medical Journal. 1970 January 10;
45 Advert for Nactisol. British Medical Journal. 1965 December 4;
46 Advert for Stelabid. British Medical Journal. 1969 October 4;
47 See Silverstone JT, Lascelles BD. A double blind trial of Durophet M in the treatment of obesity in general practice. Journal of the
College of General Practitioners. 1965;9:304–310. [PMC free article: PMC1878427] [PubMed: 19790565]
48 BNF. London: BMA and The Pharmaceutical Society; 1974–6. pp. 5–6.
49 BNF. London: BMA and The Pharmaceutical Society; 1976–8. p. 36.
50 Interview with Christian Edwards.
51 Interview with David Palmer.
52 Interview with Glen Haden.
53 Interview with Rupert Espley.
54 Interview with Roger Lea.
55 Cooperstock Ruth. Sex differences in psychotropic drug use. Social Science and Medicine. 1978;12B:179–186. on 182. [PubMed:
725615]
56 Cooperstock. Sex differences in psychotropic drug use. :182. [PubMed: 725615]
57 Cooperstock Ruth, Lennard Henry L. Some social meanings of tranquilizer use. Sociology of Health and Illness. 1979;1(3):332–347.
on 335.
58 Parish. The prescribing of psychotropic drugs. :66.
59 Dunnell, Cartwright Medicine Takers. :21.
60 Dunnell, Cartwright Medicine Takers. :21, 6.
61 Dunnell, Cartwright Medicine Takers. :13.
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62 Sanatogen guard book 1944, foreign market, History of Advertising Trust.
63 Sanatogen guard book 1944, foreign market, History of Advertising Trust.
64 Advert for Rennies, JWT/GD/007, History of Advertising Trust.
65 Advert for Rennies, JWT/GD/007, History of Advertising Trust.
66 See, for example, Williamson Judith. Decoding Advertisements: Ideology and Meaning in Advertising. 2002 edition. London: Marion
Boyers; p. 11.
67 Sadly, and perhaps with some irony, Harding died suddenly in 1960, at the age of 53, from a heart attack as he left BBC Broadcasting
House.
68 The tricyclic antidepressants, for example, claimed to act on levels of serotonin and norepinephrine – the MAOIs claimed to reduce the
breakdown of serotonin. For further information about the ‘marketing’ of stress, see also, Jackson Mark. The Age of Stress: Science
and the Search for Stability. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2013. Chapter 4.
69 Advertisement for Horlicks, February 1957, JWT/GD/101, History of Advertising Trust.
70 Advert for Rennies, 1958, SKB guard book 87, 1957–1958, History of Advertising Trust.
71 Advert for Rennies, 19 May 1938, JWT/GD/007, History of Advertising Trust.
72 Advert for Hemotabs (ND, circa 1950s), SKB guard book (012), History of Advertising Trust.
73 Parish. The prescribing of psychotropic drugs. :37.
74 A point made in many of the oral history interviews; however, many doctors preferred the traditional envelope style of storing patients’
notes.
75 Parish. The prescribing of psychotropic drugs. :38.
76 Parish. The prescribing of psychotropic drugs. :38.
77 Williams P, Murray J, Clare A. A longitudinal study of psychotropic drug prescription. Psychological Medicine. 1982;12:201–206. on
203, 205. [PubMed: 7079430]
78 Williams, et al. A longitudinal study of psychotropic drug prescription. :205.
79 Koumjian Kevin. The use of Valium as a form of social control. Social Science and Medicine. 1981:245–249. on 245. [PubMed:
7323846]
80 A topic covered fully in my earlier work, Desperate Housewives.
81 See for example, Cooperstock, Lennard Some social meanings of tranquilizer use. :336.
82 Murray Joanna. Long-term psychotropic drug-taking and the process of withdrawal. Psychological Medicine. 1981;11:853–858. on
855. [PubMed: 7323241]
83 Illustrated in a number of the oral history interviews.
84 Parish. The prescribing of psychotropic drugs. :41. See also, Watts. Depressive Disorders in the Community. :12–15.
85 See examples in Cooperstock, Lennard Some social meanings of tranquilizer use. :338.
86 Cooperstock, Lennard Some social meanings of tranquilizer use. :343.
87 Cooperstock, Lennard Some social meanings of tranquilizer use. :341. Such studies were usually undertaken in the United States.
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Figures
Figure 4.1 Advertisement for Horlicks, Radio Times, 6 December 1957
Source: Reproduced by kind permission of GlaxoSmithKline and the History of Advertising Trust Archive.
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Figure 4.2 Iron Jelloids advert design, circa 1950s
Source: Reproduced by kind permission from Reckitt Benckiser and the History of Advertising Trust.
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Figure 4.3 Iron Jelloids advert design, circa 1950s
Source: Reproduced by kind permission of Reckitt Benckiser and the History of Advertising Trust.
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Figure 4.4 Advert for Macleans Tablets, 1959
Source: Reproduced by kind permission from GlaxoSmithKline and the History of Advertising Trust.
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Figure 4.5 Advert for Phosferine, 1955
Source: Reproduced by kind permission from GlaxoSmithKline and the History of Advertising Trust.
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Tables
Table 4.1 Number of prescriptions, psychotropic drugs (England and Wales – in millions)
1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970
Barbiturate hypnotics
Non-barbiturate hypnotics
Tranquillisers
17.2 16.8 16.1 15.3 14.2 13.1
2.9
3.5
4.8
5.8
6.3
7.1
10.8 12.5 14.7 16.0 16.5 17.2
Stimulants/appetite suppressants
5.3
5.2
4.8
3.9
3.6
3.4
Antidepressants
3.5
3.9
4.9
5.3
5.8
6.4
Total
39.7 41.9 45.3 46.3 46.4 47.2
Source: ‘The prescribing of psychotropic drugs in general practice’, Journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners, Supplement 4
(1971), 1. Reproduced with kind permission from the Royal College of General Practitioners.
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Table 4.2 Psychotropic drug therapy, sex ratios (17.1% women to 8% of males per population at
risk)
Therapeutic sub-group
Number of treatments Ratio
Female Male Total Female to male
Barbiturate hypnotics
162
71
233
2.3 to 1
Non-barbiturate hypnotics
173
96
269
1.8 to 1
Tranquillisers
907
437
1,344 2.1 to 1
Stimulants and appetite suppressants 129
19
148
6.8 to 1
Antidepressants
264
110
374
2.4 to 1
Total treatments
1,635
733
2,368 2.21 to 1
Total sample of patients
1,140
528
1,668 2.14 to 1
Source ‘The prescribing of psychotropic drugs in general practice’, Journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners, Supplement 4
(1971), 20. Reproduced with kind permission from the Royal College of General Practitioners.
© Ali Haggett 2015.
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