Regular work is one of the most valuable of the remedial agents at our command. It should be suited to the individual, and, as a rule, should not be that to which the man has been accustomed. Particularly is this true of the man who is used to mental labor only,—the clerk, the physician, the pharmacist, the merchant, etc. For them out-of-door work on the farm, lawn, or in the garden, is the very best, and next comes indoor shop-work. We must provide something that engages time and attention, that provides some new outlook upon life, and enlarges some field of endeavor in which the patient has labored before coming to the Hospital. Thus far the work has been on the farm or the improvement of the grounds, or has been carpenter, cement, or some construction work. The women do all the mending, and make all needed articles, such as bedding, towels, etc. They also work in the laundry. At present we are teaching embroidery of various kinds, no one of our patients having ever learned any such work.
The future must see us provided with shops, especially for winter work. With a capacity of ninety-nine men we are able to keep them fairly well occupied during the winter months, but any increase will have to be cared for under special conditions.
A very important factor is the length of time, as mentioned above under prognosis, that a patient remains under care. As a general thing, it is expected that the average patient will remain, approximately, six months. The period of detention is determined only after a study of the individual. An endeavor is made to consider all factors that may influence the future life of the patient,—the length of time and the amount he has been drinking, the effect on his character and physical health, the surroundings and occupation to which he must return. Some patients are paroled at the end of six months, some remain seven months. Drug users require treatment for a much longer period of time than users of liquor; and they remain from nine months to a year. The law provides that a patient shall not be paroled in less than two months, nor shall he be detained longer than two years without parole. This, of course, introduces the disagreeable aspect of the work. The detention is compulsory; and in some patients antagonism possibly over-balances the benefit of detention.
“One of the most pronounced features of inebriety is, however, the inability of many inebriates to appreciate the necessity for treatment; and the more severe the inebriety, the less easy it is first to get the patient under treatment at all, and, secondly, to get him to remain long enough for any treatment to have a permanent curative effect. One has only to work among inebriates, no matter to what class of society they belong, to know that fear of interfering with the liberty of a subject who has no real liberty, in that he is a slave habitually or periodically to the drink craze, results in the interference with the liberty of all those who have to put up with his irresponsible behavior under the influence of alcohol and other narcotic drugs.
“Were the treatment of the inebriate only possible in a free sanatorium, only a small minority of inebriates would come under treatment at all, and these would be of the less severe type.” (Pathological Inebriety, by J. W. Ashley Cooper, 1913.)
Discipline is of great importance, but great care must be taken in its enforcement. It is of more value for one to perform a certain duty because one regards it either as the proper thing or as likely to benefit one’s self or others.
The personal influence of those who come into close contact with the inebriate can hardly be overestimated. He is easily influenced, often easily led, and a few thoughtless words or careless actions can undo the result of patient work.
All factors that may influence the future life of the patient must be taken into consideration,—the length of time and amount he has been drinking, the effect on his physical health and character, and the surroundings and occupation to which he must return. Very often the cause of the commencement of the patient’s excessive drinking may be removed or may have disappeared. Such would favorably influence the prognosis.
The presence or absence of irremediable disease is important. For instance, a woman recently committed to our care suffered from what was supposed to be, or was, neuralgia. She still has occasional twinges of pain; but we believe when the dentist has finished his work these will disappear, and her prospect be reasonably bright. A man, 56 years of age, four years ago, suffering from stone in the bladder, was given morphine, following an operation. The bladder condition was permanently relieved, but he became a morphine user. Such a case is a promising one. In him the destruction of character is but little marked.
A boy, chasing around the city, acquired the cocaine habit, and became a loafer, drinker, and follower of loose women. For him the future offers practically no prospect. Were he a little younger, and had the attempt to rescue him been made earlier, there would have been much more promise. But I doubt whether he can withstand the lure of his former life. With a few drinks, his judgment becomes paralyzed, and he is back to cocaine again.