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So to the extent that hysteria seemed to become less common during the first half of the twentieth century, it was because this bloated diagnostic category inevitably shrunk as medical knowledge grew. In a process that Micale called “diagnostic drift,” what would have been called hysteria a generation ago was likely to instead fall into one of numerous newly recognized diagnoses, creating only “the retrospective illusion of a disappearance of the pathological entity itself.”
Doing Harm: The Truth About How Bad Medicine and Lazy Science Leave Women Dismissed, Misdiagnosed, and Sick
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