Part Ⅰ.IN WAR 1
Section Ⅰ.BACKGROUND 3
1.Psychiatry Prior to World War II 3
2.The Initial Handicaps Confronting Army Psychiatry in World War II 9
3.The problems Arising in the Further Development of Army Psychiatry 25
Section Ⅱ.THE SOLDIER 43
4.The personality of the Soldier 43
5.The Environment of the Soldier:Its Stresses and Strains 56
6.The Environment of the Soldier:Its Emotional Supports 81
7.Women in the Army 102
Section Ⅲ.CLINICAL OBSERVATIONS 121
8.Psychoneurotic Disorders 121
9.Reactions to Combat 134
10.The Psyche and the Soma 153
11.The Psychoses 164
12.Other Maladjustments 175
13.Behavior Disorders 191
14.The Lowest Eight Per Cent 202
15.Malingering 210
16.Homosexuality 222
Section Ⅳ.ADMINISTRATION AND PRACTICE OF ARMY PSYCHIATRY 232
17.The People Who Did the Job 232
18.Diagnostic Labels 256
19.Choosing the Soldier 266
20.The Treatment of Psychiatric Patients 293
21.The Evacuation of Psychiatric Patients 320
22.Preventive Psychiatry 327
23.Psychiatry in World War I and World War II 338
Part Ⅱ.IN PEACE 349
24.Everyman:Maintenance of His Mental Health 251
25.Social Reintegration of the Veteran 363
26.Mental Health in the Home 393
27.Implications for the Community 410
28.Defects Revealed in Civilian Medicine 438
29.Lessons for Civilian Psychiatry 455
30.Contributions of Psychiatry to Public Health 468
31.Academic Education and Psychiatry 475
32.Mental Hygiene in Industry and Business 486
33.Psychiatry in Criminology and Penology 502
34.Needed Changes in the Army 516
35.Research in Psychiatry 537
Appendix 546
A.Publications and Circulars 546
B.Nomenclature 557
C.The Characteristics and Attitudes of the Soldier in World War II 572
D.Reference Data 587
Index 609