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The "SAMARITAN TREATMENT" |
The 1937 "Cleveland City Directory" listed it as vacant
but the 1938 issue listed it as:
SAMARITAN TREATMENT, THE. Harold Greenbaum MD Medical Director. John W Gruver
Business Manager. 48 Hour Institutional Treatment for Alcoholism 7609 Euclid av.
Tel Henderson 4415
I don't know how long they survived but the Encyclopedia of Cleveland History
(online as http://ech.cwru.edu) shows Dunbar Life insurance company relocated to
that address on Aug. 1945.
I discussed this research as an aside when talking with Judit Santon, GSO
Archivist. She was very interested in it and in turn sent me a couple items on
Samaritan Treatment from their archives. After giving some thought as to whether
there is any reason these documents should not have wider distribution, I've
OCR'ed them and am enclosing them here--GSO has the originals. I'd gladly Xerox
my copies to anyone expressing a need for them.
The first is an undated, unnamed old-timer's recollection of their experience in
the Cincinnati, Ohio Samaritan Treatment [neither spelling nor grammar were
edited]:
SAMARITAN INSTITUTE--- TREATMENT PROGRAM FOR ALCOHOLICS
I believe the name of the Samaritan Treatment Program you asked about is the
Samaritan Institute. To the best of my knowledge there were two or three such
facilities during the 1930’s and 1940’s. One was in Cincinnati, Ohio another I
think in Florida and one somewhere in the East-- perhaps in New Jersey.
Though I lived in Montclair, New Jersey during the late 20’s and early 30’ s--I
don’t remember hearing of this facility at that time.
In 1938 I attended the Samaritan Treatment Institute in
Cincinnati, Ohio--which in it’s day was quite popular as a ‘drying out’
resource. It was regularly used by those who needed occasionally to regain
temporary sanity and health between bouts of drinking. They offered the aversion
form of treatment-- or as it was often called ‘the upchuck’ method.
Patients received a physical examination on entry, and a detoxification
procedure was initiated. Most alcoholic patients were in pretty rough shape.
As early as possible, patients were tapered off and injected with a drug which
caused them to throw up. Patients were given their favorite beverage alcohol at
regular intervals throughout the day and in between injections of the aversion
drug. The throwing up process became routine-- arduous and very disturbing to
say the least.
So much so that after a while as the nurse would come down the hail with the
shot glass of the favorite drink on the saucer-- the very rattling of the glass
against the saucer-- could start the throwing up process-- in other words, one
became conditioned against the use and almost totally against the sight of the
drink.
With some, this aversion would last quite some time and with a few even
permanently. However with all too many, sooner or later the alcoholic would take
and try a drink. If it ‘stayed down,’ one felt one was cured-- which was my
experience after seven months.
The Schick/Shadel Institute in Seattle is essentially the same procedure. I
believe the Medical Director there is Dr. Arthur Smith.
While most such programs allegedly cooperate with the Fellowship of A.A. . this
varies from place to place dependent upon the attitude of the current
management. Some such Centers also attempt to provide counseling services to the
patient and family.
Originally however, they were all known as ‘Drying Out’ resources. Many patients
would in fact make advance reservations when they planned or went on an extended
drunk. The length of stay naturally depended on the condition of the patient.
Though most people went through withdrawal and then the treatment within ten
days to two weeks. Mind you, all these tactics are of course changing and being
updated as new drugs and new methods make their appearance.
Legitimate Treatment Centers offer counseling-- referral and follow up with A.
A.., and point to permanent sobriety as against the temporary ‘drying out’ or
short term procedure.
In my own case, while there, I was told by the nurse, that I need no longer be
‘that way’ any more. That something new was available-- which the nurse's
brother had found in Akron, Ohio-- and it was called A.A. So that was my first
contact with the Fellowship-- through the nurses brother. So at least the seed
was sown and following three relapses, I found personal recovery and sobriety as
of November 11, 1944.
------------------------------------------------------
The second was a copy of an early pamphlet from their national headquarters
in Chicago:
LETTERHEAD
I FIRST PHASE -- HOSPITALIZATION
II SECOND PHASE -- SUPPORTIVE
III THIRD PHASE -- NON-ALCOHOLIC READJUSTMENT
IV INSPIRATIONAL SUPPORT
SAMARITAN UNITS
| BALTIMORE, MD. 1304 St. Paul. St. Tel. Vernon 2617 |
DALLAS, TEXAS 2600 Maple Ave. Tel. 2—6266 |
OAKLAND, CALIF. 1222 Lake Shore Blvd. Tel. HIghgate 6622 |
| CINCINNATI, OHIO 622 Oak St. Tel. Woodburn 1972 |
HOUSTON, TEXAS 3402 Fannin St. Tel. Jackson 2-5159 |
PHILADELPHIA, PA. 220 E. Lancaster Ave. Tel. Ardmore 5860 |
| CLEVELAND, OHIO 7609 Euclid Ave. Tel. HEnderson 4415 |
LOUISVILLE, KY 402 West Ormsby Ave. Tel. Magno1ia 6240 |
PITTSBURGH, PA. 27 N. Negley Ave. Tel. HI-land 7756 |
| CHARLESTON, W. Va. 312 Broad St. Tel. 36—211 |
LONG BEACH, CALIF. 4201 E. 10th St. Tel. 85941 |
RICHMOND, VA. Broad Street Road, W. Tel. 6-1556 |
| CHATTANOOGA, TENN 1305 Bailey Ave. Tel. 2-5453 |
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 3350 Wilshire Blvd. Tel. DR-1242 |
KANSAS CITY, MO. |
SUGGESTIONS TO CONVALESCENT PATIENTS
First Phase—-Hospitalization
In the first phase of our treatment, it is our object to see that the patient
acquires an aversion to alcohol in the average period of 48 hours, and at the
same time, medications are given which we believe to be the best and most
scientific yet discovered for the elimination of alcohol toxins from the system.
In establishing an aversion to alcohol and eliminating the toxins, the necessity
for liquor no longer exists and the patient is able immediately to carry on his
regular work on a non-alcoholic basis.
Second Phase--Supportive
The second phase of our treatment consists of 3 treatment appointments per week
for the first month at our institution and one treatment appointment per week
for the second month. This is called the supportive phase of the treatment. It
is designed to correct glandular imbalance and to eliminate nervousness and, at
the same time, psycho-therapy is resorted to in an endeavor to correct real or
imaginary mental disturbances. We desire to emphatically impress upon all our
patients the importance and lasting benefit to be derived from this supportive
phase of our treatment.
Our experience has been that within a short time after the first phase of the
treatment, the patients experience such an exhilaration by return of a hearty
appetite, sound sleep, and all normal bodily functions, free and unobstructed by
a craving for alcohol, that many of them feel that in their individual case the
supportive treatment is not necessary. However, the bodily impairment,
especially vitamin B deficiency, brought about by the ravages of alcohol still
remain even though camouflaged by a return of better health and happiness than
the patient has experienced for years. Every phase of our supportive treatment
is carefully and scientifically worked out and is subject to variation to suit
each patient’s own particular needs as our physician may decide. You have paid
for this supportive treatment, you will be benefited by it, and you might as
well avail yourself of it to the fullest even though at the expense of some
inconvenience to you.
In short, we want to render you the fullest service possible in correcting the
physical disturbance and impairment brought about by an excessive and continued
use of alcohol. And in this connection we feel that it is proper to warn you
that neither this treatment, nor any other treatment known to medica1 science,
can restore your system so that you can ever drink alcohol again, even in
moderation. Alcohol first attacks the cortex or covering of the nervous system,
including the brain. When this cortex or covering of the nerves becomes
impaired, it is non-resistant to alcohol and allows alcohol to make a direct
attack on the nervous system. Originally your nerves were protected by a fatty
substance called the lipoid. When this has been dissolved through the continued
use of alcohol, your nerve endings lack that protection that once nature
provided for you. Once weakened or impaired by the excessive use of alcohol,
this protective covering of the nerve cells can never be restored to its normal
functions. Even after years of abstinence, our patients, like all other
alcoholics, find that any attempt to drink socia1ly or in a normal manner
results in dire consequences. You can leave it alone altogether, but you will
never be able to drink in a controlled manner.
Furthermore, the aversion to alcohol which you have acquired by reason of the
first phase of our treatment will tend to wear off in time, depending upon the
individual—possibly a few months in some instances and years in others. And you
must be prepared to be on your guard and in fact take definite steps to overcome
that mental, emotional, or nervous phase of your nature which tends to induce
one to again take up drink, even though there is no physical craving for it and
not withstanding the knowledge that the protective covering of your nervous
system is gone and that alcohol will react as a deadly poison to you.
Third Phase--Non-alcoholic Readjustment. This brings up the third phase of
your treatment—the readjustment of your life on a non-alcoholic basis. Of
necessity this is a phase over which this institution has no control except to
give you the benefit of a few helpful suggestions derived from our years of
experience in treating alcoholics,
For a long time, many years perhaps, depending upon the individual case,
alcoholic indulgence with all its attendant frustration and handicap to your
social and business affairs, has been the most important thing in your life. You
now have reached a stage where you have no physical craving for drink and if you
are honest with yourself and sincerely desire a complete recovery you will come
to the conclusion that you are nevertheless a potential alcoholic and that you
can never again touch alcohol in any form, even in moderation. However, to
abruptly change your accustomed method and manner of life from an “alcoholic” to
a completely “non-alcoholic” basis is not an easy task. To be successful you
must of necessity find new interests and purposes in life to occupy your mind
and idle time to such an extent that the old “alcoholic’ order of things is
completely crowded out.
Whereas in the past, through the medium of alcoholic indulgence, you have found.
release and escape from the realities of life, you must now subject yourself to
rigid self-analysis and attempt to discover and correct the weakness in your
mental, spiritual, or emotional armor which in the past caused you to seek
solace and escape in drink. You will probably be able to trace the roots of this
tendency toward alcohol back to some unfortunate experience or faulty training
in your early environment, either as a child or in early adult life before your
nervous system and emotions became stabilized. Perhaps as a child your parents
were too harsh or too lenient; perhaps for any number of reasons you have
developed an inferiority complex; perhaps you have suffered severe frustration
in school or in social or economic life. Whatever the cause, you no doubt are
in sane manner emotionally immature or
one-sided, so that there is a tendency and urge upon you when the going gets
rough, or life seems dull, to want to escape; and in the past you have found
that escape, temporarily at least, in alcoholic indulgence. Try to discover and
put your finger on that “escape” tendency of your makeup so that you can either
overcome it or at least find a better and more satisfactory means of gratifying
it than that which alcohol in the past has supplied.
Many of our patients are making splendid progress in readjusting their lives on
a non-alcoholic basis through association with a group of ex-alcoholics known as
“Alcoholics Anonymous”. They stress the spiritual values of life and offer to
each other a fellowship of sympathetic understanding and helpfulness which we
believe to be sound and worthy of the highest praise. While Samaritan Treatment
is not connected in any way with “Alcoholics Anonymous” except through our
interest in the welfare of many of our patients who have joined the group, we
will be glad to put you in touch with some of the members of the local group if
you are interested.
One of our patients in particular who was a heavy drinker for twenty years and
finally found himself upon the brink of destruction is now accomplishing a
wonderful “come-back” to a normal, happy and successful life through his
association with “Alcoholics Anonymous”. He has taken up an early hobby, long
neglected through alcoholic indulgence, of collecting a scrap book of
inspirational gems of literature. He has submitted a partial result of his work
which we feel contains such potential help and inspiration to all our patients
that we reprint it herewith and trust that it will be helpful or at least
interesting to you during your hours of convalescence.
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