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Erschienen in: Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 1/2014

01.02.2014 | Scientific Contribution

On deciding to have a lobotomy: either lobotomies were justified or decisions under risk should not always seek to maximise expected utility

verfasst von: Rachel Cooper

Erschienen in: Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy | Ausgabe 1/2014

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Abstract

In the 1940s and 1950s thousands of lobotomies were performed on people with mental disorders. These operations were known to be dangerous, but thought to offer great hope. Nowadays, the lobotomies of the 1940s and 1950s are widely condemned. The consensus is that the practitioners who employed them were, at best, misguided enthusiasts, or, at worst, evil. In this paper I employ standard decision theory to understand and assess shifts in the evaluation of lobotomy. Textbooks of medical decision making generally recommend that decisions under risk are made so as to maximise expected utility (MEU) I show that using this procedure suggests that the 1940s and 1950s practice of psychosurgery was justifiable. In making sense of this finding we have a choice: Either we can accept that psychosurgery was justified, in which case condemnation of the lobotomists is misplaced. Or, we can conclude that the use of formal decision procedures, such as MEU, is problematic.
Fußnoten
1
For discussion of the information given to patients and families see Silbermann and Ransohoff (1954). Popular texts aimed at lay people, including families and patients, repeated the statistics found in medical papers and textbooks - that with lobotomy 1/3 recovered, 1/3 improved, and 1/3 failed to improve, and that the mortality rate was 3 % (Polatin and Philtine (1951)).
 
2
In 1890 Gottlieb Burckhardt, director of the Swiss asylum of Préfargier, operated on six patients and reported some success. Burckhardt was condemned and the operations discontinued. (Burckhardt 1891) for contemporary condemnation see Semelaigne (1895). For a review of later and more sophisticated psychosurgical operations see Valenstein (1976) for a review of practices in the 1970s, and Binder and Iskander (2000) for a review of later practices.
 
3
Although some early controlled studies had already been performed, eg Kopeloff and Kirby (1923) performed a trial of Henry Cotton’s surgical treatment for mental disorders. The need for controlled trials of psychosurgery was felt by at least some; in his memoir, Sargant (1967) says that a controlled study of transorbital lobotomy was planned at Tuskegee VA Hospital, but that the planned operations were stopped by the VA administration.
 
4
White (2003) claims Seabrook was admitted to Bloomingdale but provides no references to support this.
 
5
When the probabilities are unknown then different methods are required, such as maximin, or some version of the precautionary principle (Resnik 2004).
 
6
Some patients had more than one lobotomy, as if an operation was unsuccessful a surgeon might decide to re-operate and sever more brain tissue.
 
7
I am grateful to Jonathan Wolff for pointing out the importance of the variance of outcomes to me.
 
8
A related approach is Kahneman and Tversky (1979) “prospect theory”.
 
9
If post-lobotomy “recoveries” are judged only 15 % as good on average as spontaneous recoveries then the expected utility of the two options are equal.
 
10
For discussion see Valenstein (1976), pp. 63–64.
 
11
Though some, for example, Sargant and Slater (1964) continued to claim that psychosurgery played a useful role in psychiatry.
 
12
El-Hai (2005) describes how Walter Freeman gradually shifted from thinking of lobotomy as the “last resort” to advocating its use comparatively early, before “deterioration” had set in. In My Lobotomy: A Memoir (2008) Howard Dully relates how he came to be lobotomised at aged 12 though his behaviour was far from unusual (he was naughty and anxious).
 
13
Ford and Jameson (1955), quoted in Pressman (1998), p. 440.
 
14
Furthermore, bureaucratic constraints may mean that those who are given one therapy are then excluded from further clinical trials.
 
15
For example, in the UK data is now collected on Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs), and this data might be of some use if, for example, I am considering whether to undergo a hip operation.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
On deciding to have a lobotomy: either lobotomies were justified or decisions under risk should not always seek to maximise expected utility
verfasst von
Rachel Cooper
Publikationsdatum
01.02.2014
Verlag
Springer Netherlands
Erschienen in
Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy / Ausgabe 1/2014
Print ISSN: 1386-7423
Elektronische ISSN: 1572-8633
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11019-013-9519-8

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