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Arthur Crisp,
one of the most distinguished psychiatrists of his generation,
died on Friday, 13th October 2006. He was Professor Emeritus
of the University of London. Until his retirement in 1995
he was Professor and Chairman of the Department of Psychiatry
at St George’s Hospital Medical School and Vice-President
of the Royal College of Psychiatrists.
It was in the field
of anorexia nervosa that Arthur’s international reputation
for clinical research was founded. He defined anorexia in
its modern-day terms. He determined its psychopathology,
its aetiology and pathogenesis. His statement that the core
pathonomonic feature of anorexia is a phobic avoidance of
normal body-weight has stood the test of time. His treatment
programme for anorexia was considered, in its day, the international
gold standard.
Arthur’s research
was always unashamedly clinically focused and anchored in
psychosomatic medicine. He explored the relationship between
sleep and nutrition, investigated migraine and the psychosomatic
aspects of myocardial infarction, irritable bowel and even
writer’s cramp. He conducted experimental studies of
psychotherapeutic processes, overcoming the formidable difficulties
of conducting a controlled evaluation of interprettative
psychotherapy.
To Arthur, research
was dominant. He claimed it was impossible for a good clinician
not to be a researcher. He even researched his hobbies. One
of these was a study of the River Wandle, a river that goes
through the part of London in which St George’s is
situated. On one occasion he wished to photograph the river
at dawn as it flowed close to our psychiatric hospital.
The best view could
be got from the roof above the locked ward which contained
some of its more disturbed patients. Unfortunately, the door
to the roof was blown shut by the wind and automatically
locked, leaving Arthur stranded on the roof. No-one was around,
save for the milkman delivering to the hospital. Arthur called
out to him that he must be let out! The milkman nodded wisely.
Arthur shouted he was the Professor of Psychiatry! The milkman
nodded even more wisely ....
Arthur Hamilton
Crisp was born on the 17 th June 1930 in London. It is to
psychiatry’s inestimable gain, that he was deflected
from his first career choice of engineering when he was hospitalized
following an accident whilst playing rugby for the English
Schoolboys XV1. This early recognition that life-events can
govern the expression of disease led to the study of medicine
and subsequently psychiatry. Although offered a place at
The Maudsley and Institute of Psychiatry, he chose instead
to train at St George’s. I once asked him if he ever
regretted his decision. He did not answer, his look said
it all.
Arthur was a private
person, but one who had a deep and well-thought out personal
philosophy which drove his life at work and at play. He fought
his corner without rancour and was a powerful advocate for
psychiatry, as it has found its place in modern medical practice.
A doctor, Arthur
once said, is primarily a teacher. Throughout most of his
career, Arthur’s name was associated with undergraduate
and postgraduate medical education in Britain and continental
Europe. It was Arthur who integrated the examination of psychiatry
into the Final Medical Examination of the University of London.
This led to his election as Dean of the Faculty of Medicine
at the University.
During his stewardship
of the Education Committee of the General Medical Council,
the medical curriculum acquired a broader base. There was
a firmer recognition that medicine had its roots in sociology
and psychology, as well as physiology and anatomy – concepts
which now do not seem contentious, but were then. Arthur
Crisp united his colleagues in a recognition that the modern
doctor needed to draw deeply on a holistic understanding
of the patient, encompassing mind, body and society; that
in high-tech world, a doctor must retain core clinical skills
and remain comfortable in an empathic relationship with the
patient.
Arthur created an
undergraduate psychiatric education programme at St George’s
that was embarrassingly popular with students, reflected
in the large percentage of St George’s students who
went on to choose psychiatry as a career: a testament of
his clinical example.
Arthur Crisp emphasised
that psychiatry required the acquisition of a broad range
of knowledge, skills and attitudes based on an eclectic mix
of general and speciality experience. Not for Arthur the
dogmatic, limited preoccupations of sectarian psychiatry.
For him behavioural,
psychodynamic and pharmacological approaches were equally
relevant when based on a diagnostic interview which attempts
to answer the question “why?” as well as “how”.
The week before he died he reprimanded me for curtailing
my assessment interview to two hours, telling me firmly that
three hours, if not four, was required to fully understand
the anorectic patient within the concept of her family. How
right he was!
The humanistic St.
George’s approach, developed by Arthur Crisp, in which
psychiatrists must carefully define the social, biological
and psychological features of a patient and be able to harness
them in treatment, using pharmacology and a broad spectrum
of psycho-therapies, had a profound influence on a generation
of psychiatrists.He took this work to the European Union
when, as Chairman of the Committee of Medical Training, he
laid down plans for Europe-wide medical postgraduate training
which saw fruition in all the member countries.
Arthur Crisp was
Editor of the British Journal of Medical Psychology; Chairman
of the London Professors of Psychiatry; Chairman of the GMC’s
Education Committee; and Dean of the Medical Faculty of London
University. He was Visiting Professor in various universities
including Harvard and Sydney; and external examiner in universities
around the globe. He was WHO Advisor on Medical Education
and advised the Governments of China and of Japan. During
Arthur’s “retirement” he took on the massive
brief for the Royal College of Psychiatrists, dealing with
stigma as it pertains to psychiatric patients.
He also became an
accomplished sculptor, exhibiting his work, together with
other members of his family. His funeral last week -- in
the exquisitely beautiful church of St Mary in the village
of Friston, in Suffolk, in the heart of what was Saxon England,
and from which his family derived -- was a warm, moving family
affair. The service was also attended by his contemporaries
and students, many of whom have gone on to distinction.
Professor Arthur
Crisp achieved high office and rightly so. He was one of
psychiatry’s great pioneer educationalists and certainly
the one who brought psychiatry and psycho-logical ideas into
the mainstream of medicine. He was an international authority
in his research field and diagnostic criteria for anorexia
originally proposed by him have been incorporated into the
two main systems of classification.
Arthur was a family-man
and was supported by his wife Irene and their three sons.
His grandchildren were his special pleasure and to each on
their fourteenth birthday he gave a framed copy of Polonius’s
speech to Laertes in Hamlet. In this speech Shakespeare gives
much good advice and ends with the injunction:
This
above all: to thine ownself be true,
And it must follow, as the night the day,
Thou canst not then be false to any man.
Arthur, to your
friends and colleagues, this is your epitaph.
Professor J Hubert Lacey
St George’s, University of London
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