Ever since I was diagnosed with bipolar disorder, I have been on a quest to understand my illness the best way I can. So when I stumbled upon this book by the Irish psychiatrist and psychopharmacologist, David Healy, I knew I had to read, and it did enrich my knowledge not only of the illness, but also of what I live through. Healy builds a biography of the illness that we now know as Bipolar Disorder, tracing the ancient sources and words related to this illness such as mania and melancholy and he presents is with a different historical contrasts of how such traits were perceived. You see, a fundamental aspect of this book is that bipolar disorder (and many other diseases) are actually creations of their times and historical contexts. This is demonstrated by the advent of modern psychopharmacology, which created a rift between modern medicine and ancient medicine. So even though, for instance, a word like mania can be traced back to ancient Greece, the ancient Greek physicians according to Healy described something different than what contemporary physicians would describe, this will eventually completely influence the treatment, if there is a treatment to be had, and the entire perception of the manic person. Society, culture, and industry (pharmaceuticals) all play a rule in defining the disease (with the scientific research, of course). So we are taken on a journey from how different states such as mania and melancholy became the states we know, to how historical links were made between the two as “single illness” called folie circulaire (circular madness), to manic-depressive illness, and eventually to bipolar disorder.
While the book does follow a general chronological order, it isn’t a chronology per se. Healy aims to show how different historical instances in psychopharmacology and general pharmacology were key for the identification of bipolar disorder and mood disorders in general as independent illness from other mental disorders, such as schizophrenia. Sometimes these instances are different contemporary researches influencing each other, sometimes building on the works of the past, and sometimes breakthroughs happening simultaneously at different parts of the world… without the researches and doctors are aware of the others’ breakthroughs. Furthermore, I enjoyed how Healy never hesitated to show how difficult and slow it is for scientific research. The story of lithium and its usage in treatment was really fascinating, and it showed all the hardships researches go through. Yet at the same time, I liked how Healy does not hesitate to take shots, which I personally consider to be legitimate, at big pharmaceutical industries in their illness mongering for profit. Yet at the same time, the rule of such industries cannot be ignored.
Bipolar disorder is still one of the most intriguing, peculiar, and hardest illnesses out there. It combines two extremes, which is one of the main reasons it was and still is hard to identify as a single illness, and work on it is still continuing. Healy’s book was a very interesting read indeed. Nevertheless, it seemed to me that the book is destined more for medical scholars and those with important knowledge of bipolar disorder and psychiatry in general. For instance, if you don’t know what terms such as neuroleptic or a central term to this book, psychopharmacology, then you’ll find it hard to follow. It is a good book to advance your knowledge about the history of the illness and what surrounds it and the illness itself per se.