James Vance May

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

James Vance May (1873–1947) was an American

mental diseases. He was among the first to recognize mental disease as a public health
problem, a view that did not gain recognition and acceptance for many years.

May was born in

).

Following his Army service, he began to work at the New York State Mental Hospital System in Central Islip, New York, but after a short stay, he transferred to the Binghamton State Hospital and stayed until 1911. He became superintendent of the Matteawan State Hospital for the Criminally Insane in 1911, and then moved to another position as medical member of the New York State Hospital Commission. In 1916, he moved to Massachusetts to become the superintendent of the Grafton State Hospital. Soon thereafter, he transferred to the Boston State Hospital where he stayed as superintendent from 1912 to 1936.

In 1913, the

mental disease which was adopted by the organization and became a basis for future change in keeping with advancements in psychiatric research
and practice.

May contributed numerous research articles to the scholarly literature. He spoke German and nearly completed a German-English dictionary of psychiatric terms. He translated a book on schizophrenia by the German psychiatrist Karl Wilmanns.

He was a member of many professional and civic groups including the New England Psychiatric Society (president, 1931–1934), the American Psychiatric Association (president, 1932–1933), board of directors of the Massachusetts Society for Mental Hygiene, the Boston Occupational Therapy Society, the Boston City Club, the American Legion, and the Royal Medical Psychological Society of Great Britain.

May died in 1947.

Works

  • May, James V. "A Review of the Recent Studies of General Paresis", Proceedings of the American Medico-Psychological Association (1909): 333–340.
  • —— "The Juvenile Form of General Paresis, with Report of a Case", The Medical Record (1910): 404–407.
  • —— "The Laboratory Diagnosis of General Paresis", The Archives of Internal Medicine 8 (1911): 183–192.
  • —— "Mental Diseases and Criminal Responsibility", State Hospitals Bulletin (1912–1913): 339–371.
  • —— "Statistical Studies of the Insane", American Journal of Insanity 70 (Oct. 1913): 427–439.
  • —— "Functions of the Hospital in Nervous and Mental Disorders", The Modern Treatment of Nervous and Mental Diseases 1 (1913): 811–854.
  • —— "Uniform Statistical Reports on Insanity now Assured: An Official Classification of Psychoses", Journal of Nervous & Mental Disease 50 (1919): 42–50.
  • —— "The Functions of the Psychopathic Hospital", American Journal of Insanity 76 (1919–1920): 21–34.
  • —— "Pathology as Related to Psychiatry", State Hospitals Quarterly (1920–1921): 452–466.
  • —— "Laws Controlling Commitments to State Hospitals for Mental Diseases", Mental Hygiene (1921): 536–544.
  • —— Mental Diseases: A Public Health Problem. Boston, Badger, 1922. https://archive.org/details/39002065886047.med.yale.edu
  • —— "The Importance of Psychiatry in the Practice of Medicine", The Boston Medical and Surgical Journal (1923): 965–969.
  • —— "The Psychoses of the Period of Involution", Bulletin of the Massachusetts Department of Mental Diseases (1926–1927): 2–66.
  • —— "The Dementia Praecoxschizophrenia Problem", American Journal of Psychiatry (1931): 401–446.
  • —— "Presidential Address: The Establishment of Psychiatric Standards by the Association", American Journal of Psychiatry 90 (1933): 1–15.

References

  1. ^ Trapp, C. E. (1 February 1948). "In memoriam: James Vance May (1873–1947)" (PDF). The American Journal of Psychiatry. Retrieved 5 August 2013.

Further reading

  • Campbell, C. MacFie. "James Vance May, M.D., President, 1932–1933, Boston, Mass.: A Biographical Sketch", American Journal of Psychiatry 90 (1933): 16–19.