THE
EMMANUEL CLINIC
Rev.
Francis W. McPeek
The
Role of Religious Bodies in the Treatment of Inebriety in the United States.
Alcohol,
Science and Society, 1945.
Illustrative of a later development in the
use of religious elements in the treatment of inebriety is the work of the Rev.
Dr. Elwood Worcester and Samuel McComb, together with that of the physician,
Isador H. Coriat, at Emmanuel Church in Boston. Begun shortly after the turn of
the century, the so-called Emmanuel Movement had a lively impact on the
thinking of churchmen and church workers in this country.
The center of the work was the clinic
operated under the auspices of the church. The philosophy was that both
medicine and religion have essential places in the treatment of any disease,
but most particularly in the treatment of the functional illnesses. In the
first book published by these three men, Religion and Medicine, they strive to
inform the public on what they are attempting:
"We believe in the power of the mind
over the body, and we also believe in medicine, in good habits, and in a
wholesome, well regulated life. In the treatment of functional nervous
disorders, we make free use of moral and physical agencies, but we do not
believe in overtaxing these valuable aids by expecting the mind to attain
results which can be effected more easily through physical
instrumentality’s."
Scientific procedures were employed in
diagnosis and case records were kept. The use of specialists was frequent. When
physical medicine was indicated, it was given, but it was accompanied by
skilled religious counseling. The then current knowledge and opinions on the
nature of the unconscious mind were freely drawn upon by specialists.
Suggestion and autosuggestion were frankly employed.
In connection with inebriety, many of the
viewpoints expressed by these workers have been subsequently rejected. They
accepted the theory of reproductive germ damage; they held that children of drunkards
suffer to an almost incredible extent from various forms of mental and nervous
diseases; that these children will inherit enfeebled or defective physical
constitutions because of their parents constant tippling, and so on. The only
differential diagnosis was between the chronic alcoholic and the dipsomaniac,
by which they distinguished between the steady drinker and the periodic. The
principal form of treatment, when abstinence was agreed to, was hypnosis and
suggestion. All this was in 1908. By 1931, Worcester and McComb, again writing
jointly, their book this time called Body, Mind and Spirit, had seen, and had
liberally used, many advances in the field of medical psychology. The older
doctrines of Charcot and Coue had given way before those of Freud, and much was
taken from the latter. But the firm belief in the instrumentality of religion
remained unshaken, and the equally firm belief that religion and medicine must
go hand in hand:
"From the beginning we have associated
ourselves with competent medical men and surgeons. Indeed, had such cooperation
been refused, I should not have dreamed of assuming responsibility for the sick
in mind and body. For many years most of our patients have been sent to us by
physicians, and in all cases which involved more than the need of moral and
spiritual advice we have left no stone unturned to procure the best diagnosis
and medical care obtainable."
In dealing with the inebriate, three
conditions were laid down. The alcoholic must wish to stop of his own volition
and not simply because his wife or someone else requires him to submit to
treatment. Only those who seriously propose total abstinence for the rest of
their lives are accepted for treatment. And no discussions are held with
persons who are in a state of intoxication.
The treatment process, after these
conditions have been satisfied, is partially in the field of therapeutic
analysis of the patients problems, the use of suggestion, and sometimes
hypnosis. Suggestion is used only when the patient has been relaxed and is in
condition to respond to it. Specifically, something like this is said:
"You have determined to break this habit, and you have
already gone. . . .days without a drink. The desire is fading out of your mind,
and the habit is losing its power over you. You need not be afraid that you
will suffer, for you will not suffer at all. In a short time liquor in any form
will have no attraction for you. It will be associated in your mind with
weakness and sorrow and sickness and failure..."
The patient is built up physically by the
use of nourishing food, exercise, outdoor living, and so on. There is a search
for new occupations and interests. "On the whole, our successes have been
far more frequent than our failures," the authors report.
Out of the Emmanuel Movement has grown a
very definite interest in the alcoholic. Mr. Courtenay Baylor, whose name is
familiar to students of the treatment of inebriety, was long associated with
Drs. Worcester and McComb. Those who wish to know more about his views and methods
may read Dwight Anderson’s article "The place of the lay therapist in the
treatment of alcoholic." The principle elements in the treatment of
alcoholics are catharsis, surrender, and relaxation -and these are carried out
or induced through the use of religion.