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Andrei Snezhnevsky

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529:. It entailed the extremely broadened diagnostics of sluggish (neurosis-like, psychopathy-like) schizophrenia. Despite a number of its controversial premises and in line with the traditions of then Soviet science, Snezhnevsky's hypothesis has immediately acquired the status of dogma which was later overcome in other disciplines but firmly stuck in psychiatry. Snezhnevsky's concept, with its dogmatism, proved to be psychologically comfortable for many psychiatrists, relieving them from doubt when making a diagnosis. That carried a great danger: any deviation from a norm evaluated by a doctor could be regarded as an early phase of schizophrenia, with all ensuing consequences. It resulted in the broad opportunity for voluntary and involuntary abuses of psychiatry. But Snezhnevsky did not take civil and scientific courage to reconsider his concept which clearly reached a deadlock. 407:, believes his teacher was honest in his diagnosing dissenters. In 2011, Tiganov said it was rumored that Snezhnevsky took pity on dissenters and gave them a diagnosis required for placing in a special hospital to save them from a prison, but it was not true, he honestly did his medical duty. The same ideas are voiced in the 2014 interview by Anatoly Smulevich, a pupil of Snezhnevsky, full member of the Russian Academy of Medical Sciences; he says what was attributed to Snesnevsky was that he recognized the healthy as the ill, it did not happen and is pure slander, it is completely ruled out for him to give a diagnosis to a healthy person. 337:"soft" schizophrenia but later promoted the same idea under a different title: "slow-flowing", or "sluggish." The term "sluggish schizophrenia" was invented by Snezhnevsky and became widespread by the 1960s. The prevalence of Snezhnevsky's theories directly led to a broadening of the boundaries of disease such that even the mildest behavioral change could be interpreted as indication of mental disorder. Despite his power and virtual monopolies on textbooks and conferences, some prominent Soviet doctors were unwilling to accept Snezhnevsky's methods, such as Iosif Polishchuk in 399:, thousands of social and political reformers—Soviet "dissidents"—were incarcerated in mental hospitals after being labelled with diagnoses of "sluggish schizophrenia", a disease fabricated by Snezhnevsky and "Moscow school" of psychiatry. The belief that career development depended on loyalty to the Party and that the Party and its interests were cardinal can partly explain why Snezhnevsky, who earnestly defended the rights of his patients at the frontline hospital during the massive destruction of 499:, the so-called "nosological" approach in the Moscow psychiatric school established by Snezhnevsky boiled down to the ability to make a single diagnosis, schizophrenia. Such psychiatry, said Danilin, is not science but a system of opinions to which people by the thousands fell victim. Millions of lives were disabled by virtue of the concept "sluggish schizophrenia" introduced by Snezhnevsky, whom Danilin called a state criminal. However, the founder of the 22: 1225:"Спорные и малоизученные вопросы практического использования антипсихотической фармакотерапии у больных шизофренией (анализ результатов интерактивного опроса врачей) [Controversial and poorly understood issues of the practical use of antipsychotic drug therapy in patients with schizophrenia (analysis of the results of the online survey of physicians)]" 476:
Snezhnevsky worked together with Smulevich every day for 20 years. In the Soviet Union, Snezhnevsky's school alone had the exclusive right to truth and held key positions in psychiatry. Doctors who wished to gain more knowledge were unable to do so, because all textbooks and handbooks on psychiatry described only the views of Snezhnevsky's school.
551:. He asserted that Snezhnevsky was wrongly condemned by critics and argued that it was time for psychiatry in the Western countries to reconsider the accounts of political abuse of psychiatry in the USSR in the hope of discovering that Soviet psychiatrists were more deserving of sympathy than condemnation. 484:
According to the psychiatrist Marina Voikhanskaya, Academician Snezhnevsky and his "school" have debased, reduced Russian psychiatry to a semi-amateur level and single doctrine about schizophrenia, in the terms of which alcoholic psychoses and alcoholism are considered schizophrenia; congenial idiocy
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The Royal College has taken a very dubious function of intervening into the inner affairs of national psychiatric associations and using mentally-ill patients for political purposes. I sincerely hope that none of the members… seriously believes that in the Soviet Union mentally-healthy people could
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in 1978, charged Snezhnevsky with involvement in the abuse and recommended that Snezhnevsky, who had been honoured as a Corresponding Fellow of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, be invited to attend the college's Court of Electors to answer criticisms because he was responsible for the compulsory
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At the height of his power, Snezhnevsky dominated the whole of Soviet psychiatry. He forced the psychiatric community in the USSR and in many of its Eastern European satellites to adopt the diagnosis of sluggish schizophrenia as dogma. Starting in the early 1950s, Snezhnevsky opposed the concept of
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notes that the concept of Snezhnevsky's school allowed psychiatrists to consider, for example, schizoid psychopathy and even schizoid character traits as early, delayed in their development, stages of the inevitable progredient process, rather than as personality traits inherent to the individual,
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Abuse of psychiatry in the Soviet Union: hearing before the Subcommittee on Human Rights and International Organizations of the Committee on Foreign Affairs and the Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, House of Representatives, Ninety-eighth Congress, first session, September 20,
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Snezhnevsky created his own school in psychiatry. The disciples of his school are Ruben Nadzharov, Taksiarkhis Papadopulos, Gregory Rotstein, Moisey Vrono, Marat Vartanyan, Nikolay Zharikov, Anatoly Anufriev, Nikolay Shumsky, Alexander Tiganov, Irina Shakhmatova-Pavlova, Anatoly Smulevich.
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Helen Lavretsky supposes that a totalitarian regime, the lack of a democratic tradition in Russia, and oppression and "extermination" of the best psychiatrists during the 1930–50 period prepared the ground for the abuse of psychiatry and Russian-Soviet concept of schizophrenia.
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As reported by the psychiatrist Boris Zoubok, who worked at the Kashchenko hospital under Snezhnevsky and afterwards settled in the US, Snezhnevsky and his colleagues genuinely believed in their concept of dissent as mental disease and in the method of diagnosis.
376: 363:. He was charged with cynically developing a system of diagnosis which could be bent for political purposes and, in dozens of cases, he personally signed a commission decision on legal insanity of mentally healthy dissidents including 322:(1950–1951), the director of the Institute of Psychiatry of the USSR Academy of Medical Sciences (1962–1987), and the director of the All-Union Mental Health Research Center of the USSR Academy of Medical Sciences (1982–1987). 461:. The concept came to be increasingly used in schizophrenia research and classification since the 1970s, citing his colleague I.F. Ovchinnikov that the symptoms appear to exist "as if on two levels". 1253:
Snezhnevsky AV. The symptomatology, clinical forms and nosology of schizophrenia, in Modern perspectives in World Psychiatry. Edited by Howells JG. Edinburgh, Oliver and Boyd, 1968, pp 425–447
403:, also employed his scientific regalia and academic title to legitimate the psychiatric confinement of dissenters. However, Alexander Tiganov, a pupil of Snezhnevsky and full member of the 198: 383:. Some of Snezhnevsky's employees say that one day in a selected auditorium, when discussing the situation in the country, he also gave the diagnosis of sluggish schizophrenia to 391:
with the same disease and concluded that he was "not a valuable person at all". As Oleh Wolansky noted, professor Snezhnevsky did not hesitate to act against principles of the
311:, the inventor of the term "sluggish schizophrenia", an embodier of history of repressive psychiatry, and a direct participant in psychiatric repression against dissidents. 1819: 1555: 1519: 440:
The evidence is now sufficient to conclude that Professor Snezhnevsky has acted unethically and no longer warrants a place of honour in the Royal College of Psychiatrists.
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has the opinion that Snezhnevsky did not willingly participate in the political abuse of psychiatry, and that the real criminal was Georgy Morozov, the director of the
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Having learnt of his diagnosis of lung cancer and facing his death within a few years, Snezhnevsky started lamenting over his making a lot of blunders at the
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Adler, Nancy; Gluzman, Semyon (December 1993). "Soviet special psychiatric hospitals. Where the system was criminal and the inmates were sane".
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According to Moscow psychiatrist Mikhail Buyanov, Snezhnevsky discovered nothing; he muddled everything he attempted, could not find anything.
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7 May] 1904 – 12 July 1987) was a Soviet psychiatrist whose name was lent to the unbridled broadening of the diagnostic borders of
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in 1970 honored Snezhnevsky by naming him a "distinguished fellow" for his "outstanding contribution to psychiatry and related sciences."
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in the children of alcoholics is considered premature schizophrenia; and dissent is considered schizophrenia with delusions of reform.
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and departed from his indisputable tone as to his own concept. He died on 12 July 1987 in Moscow and was buried in the
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Korolenko, Caesar; Kensin, Dennis (2002). "Reflections on the past and present state of Russian psychiatry".
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On dissidents and madness: from the Soviet Union of Leonid Brezhnev to the "Soviet Union" of Vladimir Putin
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the dynamics of which might depend on various external factors. The same also applied to a number of other
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See in Russian: "Снежневский ничего не открыл; все, за что он брался – запутывал, найти ничего не смог".
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and the later avowal of Soviet psychiatrists themselves and instead claimed that there were no
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Levine, Sidney (May 1981). "The Special Committee on the Political Abuse of Psychiatry".
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Probes, Lawrence; Kouznetsov, Vladimir; Verbitski, Vladimir; Molodyi, Vadim (June 1992).
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Polubinskaya, Svetlana (January 2000). "Reform in psychiatry in post-Soviet countries".
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In 1980, the Special Committee on the Political Abuse of Psychiatry, established by the
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of schizophrenia, a concept long attributed to Snezhnevky but in fact introduced by
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Healey, Dan (June 2011). "Book Review: Robert van Voren, Cold War in Psychiatry".
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Szasz, Thomas (2 January 1978). "Soviet psychiatry: its supporters in the West".
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Negative schizophrenic symptoms: pathophysiology and clinical implications
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Russia's political hospitals: The abuse of psychiatry in the Soviet Union
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and found him mentally healthy in 1979, disregarded the findings of the
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Russian/Soviet and Western psychiatry: a contemporary comparative study
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Snezhevsky wrote the letter to the president of the Royal College:
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struggle against political abuse of psychiatry in the Soviet Union
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The college's Committee on Abuse passed the following judgment:
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The Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law
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The Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law
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Snezhnevsky was long attacked in the West as an exemplar of
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Soviet psychiatric abuse: The shadow over world psychiatry
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In 1968, Snezhnevsky wrote of a distinction between the
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as a child, was kind to him and presented him the book
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Academicians of the USSR Academy of Medical Sciences
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Memoirs of a Russian Life 1432:Dangerous Thoughts. Memoirs of a Russian Life 1300:Independent Psychiatric Association of Russia 1262: 1222: 968: 699:"Trends in Soviet and Post-Soviet Psychiatry" 307:, the key architect of the Soviet concept of 281: 1509: 1229:Современная терапия психических расстройств 948:Brintlinger, Angela; Vinitsky, Ilya (2007). 661: 387:in absentia. Also in absentia, he diagnosed 189:by developing and applying the diagnosis of 1860:Deaths from lung cancer in the Soviet Union 1795:Communist Party of the Soviet Union members 1545: 1453: 1427: 1111:Smulevich, Anatoly; Morozov, Pyotr (2014). 995: 954:. University of Toronto Press. p. 92. 907: 729: 727: 671:(in Russian). Kyiv: Сфера. pp. 17–18. 638: 1280: 1278: 1276: 941: 205:against the USSR at the Congresses of the 45:. Please do not remove this message until 1616: 1590: 1539: 1166: 1164: 781: 779: 777: 775: 773: 325: 320:Serbsky Institute for Forensic Psychiatry 261:Serbsky Institute for Forensic Psychiatry 65:Learn how and when to remove this message 1140: 1134: 1123:(in Russian). No. 1. pp. 1–4. 724: 41:Relevant discussion may be found on the 1273: 1198:Tandon, Rajiv; Greden, John F. (1991). 1081:Vyzhutovich, Valeri (3 November 2011). 877: 875: 850:Bloch, Sidney; Reddaway, Peter (1985). 818:Bloch, Sidney; Reddaway, Peter (1977). 1762: 1362:Вестник Ассоциации психиатров Украины 1170: 1161: 1093:(in Russian). Week number 5624 (248). 951:Madness and the mad in Russian culture 794:Вестник Ассоциации психиатров Украины 770: 692: 690: 688: 432:be forcibly put into mental hospitals. 1618:10.1093/oxfordjournals.schbul.a033348 1421: 1390: 1291:Nezavisimiy Psikhiatricheskiy Zhurnal 1097:from the original on 2 November 2011. 881: 290: 1646:(in Russian). Проект "Герои страны" 1457:Опасные мысли: Мемуары из рус. жизни 1397:Danilin, Alexander (28 March 2008). 872: 598: 15: 1130:from the original on 28 April 2014. 975:Wolansky, Oleh (27 February 1983). 685: 563:He was honored with the title of a 420:detention of celebrated dissident, 405:Russian Academy of Medical Sciences 201:by attributing the struggle to the 13: 1855:Recipients of the USSR State Prize 1692:"Behavior: the children of Pavlov" 283:Андре́й Влади́мирович Снежне́вский 14: 1881: 1865:Deaths from lung cancer in Russia 1705:Reich, Walter (30 January 1983). 1684: 1036:The British Journal of Psychiatry 882:Reich, Walter (30 January 1983). 495:According to Moscow psychiatrist 445:Other contributions to psychiatry 263:, Institute of Psychiatry of the 1850:Recipients of the Order of Lenin 1707:"The World of Soviet Psychiatry" 977:"The World of Soviet Psychiatry" 884:"The world of Soviet psychiatry" 534:American Psychiatric Association 520:academic psychiatrist professor 466:American Psychiatric Association 316:USSR Academy of Medical Sciences 265:USSR Academy of Medical Sciences 93:Andrei Vladimirovich Snezhnevsky 20: 1815:Kazan Federal University alumni 1658: 1503: 1497:U.S. Government Printing Office 1482: 1368: 1354:Polubinskaya, Svetlana (2013). 1256: 1216: 1087:[When the soul hurts]. 1026: 989: 1840:Russian people of World War II 1726:. Amsterdam—New York: Rodopi. 1319:Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica 901: 479: 468:at its annual meeting held in 451:positive and negative symptoms 417:Royal College of Psychiatrists 411:Discredit at the Royal College 395:. On the covert orders of the 1: 1835:Soviet people of World War II 1790:People from Kostromskoy Uyezd 1752:История болезни Леонида Плюща 631: 545:World Psychiatric Association 349:Political abuse of psychiatry 314:He was an academician of the 207:World Psychiatric Association 1870:Burials at Kuntsevo Cemetery 1785:Writers from Kostroma Oblast 1749:Ходорович Т.С., ed. (1974). 1676:(in Russian). 14 March 2009. 1464:] (in Russian). Moscow: 1012:10.1177/0957154X110220020802 510:, who collaborated with the 181:his active participation in 7: 1712:The New York Times Magazine 982:The New York Times Magazine 736:Anthropology & Medicine 614: 47:conditions to do so are met 10: 1886: 1845:Heroes of Socialist Labour 1720:Voren, Robert van (2009). 1436:. William Morrow. p.  352: 329: 292:[sʲnʲɪˈʐnʲefskʲɪj] 1810:Schizophrenia researchers 1597:Lavretsky, Helen (1998). 1375:Buyanov, Mikhail (1993). 748:10.1080/13648470220130017 558: 514:since his students days. 341:, and Fyodor Detengof in 282: 271: 256: 242: 235: 212: 177: 167: 146: 136: 114: 88: 81: 1666: 1456: 1399: 1377: 1356: 1083: 921:American Psychiatric Pub 788: 786:Gluzman, Semyon (2013). 582: 565:Hero of Socialist Labour 218:Hero of Socialist Labour 172:Kazan Federal University 1141:Calloway, Paul (1993). 792:[Snezhnevsky]. 1604:Schizophrenia Bulletin 1378:Между Богом и дьяволом 1223:Mosolov, S.N. (2006). 1147:. Wiley. p. 223. 573:Orders of the Red Star 455:John Hughlings Jackson 442: 434: 332:Sluggish schizophrenia 326:Sluggish schizophrenia 318:, the director of the 309:sluggish schizophrenia 226:Orders of the Red Star 191:sluggish schizophrenia 1805:Russian psychiatrists 1510:Munro, Robin (2002). 1383:Between God and devil 1049:10.1192/bjp.163.6.713 999:History of Psychiatry 662:Nuller, Yuri (2008). 527:personality disorders 501:Moscow Helsinki Group 459:John Russell Reynolds 438: 429: 369:Natalya Gorbanevskaya 1800:Soviet psychiatrists 1780:People from Kostroma 1743:Tatiana Zhitnikova, 1578:on 28 September 2011 1546:Stone, Alan (2002). 1495:. Washington, D.C.: 1454:Orlov, Yuri (1992). 1428:Orlov, Yuri (1991). 1403:[Deadlock]. 1173:Psychiatric Bulletin 195:political dissidents 100:7 May] 1904 1499:. 1984. p. 74. 1231:(1). 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Index

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O.S.
Kostroma
Russian Empire
Moscow
Soviet Union
Russian
Russian Empire
Soviet Union
Kazan Federal University
Pavlovian session
political abuse of psychiatry in the Soviet Union
sluggish schizophrenia
political dissidents
struggle against political abuse of psychiatry in the Soviet Union
Cold War
World Psychiatric Association
Hero of Socialist Labour
Orders of Lenin
Orders of the Red Star
USSR State Prize
forensic psychiatry
clinical psychiatry
Serbsky Institute for Forensic Psychiatry
USSR Academy of Medical Sciences
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