Jean Delay (14 November 1907,
Bayonne
Bayonne () is a city in southwestern France near the France–Spain border, Spanish border. It is a communes of France, commune and one of two subprefectures in France, subprefectures in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques departments of France, departm ...
– 29 May 1987, Paris) was a French
psychiatrist
A psychiatrist is a physician who specializes in psychiatry. Psychiatrists are physicians who evaluate patients to determine whether their symptoms are the result of a physical illness, a combination of physical and mental ailments or strictly ...
,
neurologist, writer, and a member of the
Académie française (Chair 17).
His assistant
Pierre Deniker conducted a test of
chlorpromazine on the male mental ward where Delay worked, and the two published their findings (quickly, with what has been called academic gamesmanship) in 1952. Chlorpromazine turned out to be the first effective drug treatment for mental illness and it had a profound effect on the mentally ill and mental asylums.
In 1968–1970, student revolutionaries attacked his offices, and Delay was forced into retirement from medicine. In later life, he lived as a writer.
Family and education
The son of Maurice Delay, a successful surgeon and mayor of
Bayonne
Bayonne () is a city in southwestern France near the France–Spain border, Spanish border. It is a communes of France, commune and one of two subprefectures in France, subprefectures in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques departments of France, departm ...
, at age fourteen Delay earned a baccalaureate in philosophy.
He studied medicine in Paris. After studying in hospitals for twenty years, especially the teaching of
Pierre Janet and
Georges Dumas, he turned to
psychiatry
Psychiatry is the medical specialty devoted to the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of deleterious mental disorder, mental conditions. These include matters related to cognition, perceptions, Mood (psychology), mood, emotion, and behavior.
...
. He also specialized in
neurology
Neurology (from , "string, nerve" and the suffix wikt:-logia, -logia, "study of") is the branch of specialty (medicine) , medicine dealing with the diagnosis and treatment of all categories of conditions and disease involving the nervous syst ...
at the
Salpetriere. He wrote his doctoral thesis on
astereognosis in 1935. He then undertook the study at the
Sorbonne and in 1942 wrote his thesis on diseases of memory. He received degrees in medicine, literature, and philosophy.
Jean Delay was the father of
Florence Delay
Florence Delay (; born 19 March 1941 in Paris) is a French writer. She has been a member of the Académie française since 2000. She has notably written novels, essays and plays (in collaboration with Jacques Roubaud) and has translated texts f ...
, of the
Académie française (Seat 10), and of
:fr:Claude Delay, novelist and psychoanalyst.
Career
He received training in the psychiatry clinic of Henri Ey at the
:fr:Centre hospitalier Sainte-Anne. There he became the chair of the clinic of mental illness in 1946. He remained at the hospital until 1970 when he retired from medicine. With Ey, Delay organized the First World Congress of Psychiatry and founded the
World Psychiatric Association (WPA).
Today, the WPA awards a Jean Delay Prize every three years.
Delay twice served as president of the WPA (1950 and 1957), and also as president of the French language Congress of Neurology and Psychiatry (1954), the Society Medico-Psychologique (1960), the International Congress of Psychosomatic Medicine (1960), and the Collegium Internationale Neuro-Psychopharmacologicum (CINP) (1966). He was elected to the National Academy of Medicine in 1955.
He and the Soviet delegation examined
Rudolf Hess
Rudolf Walter Richard Hess (Heß in German; 26 April 1894 – 17 August 1987) was a German politician, Nuremberg trials, convicted war criminal and a leading member of the Nazi Party in Nazi Germany, Germany. Appointed Deputy Führer ( ...
during the Nuremberg trials, and found hysterical amnesia but not insanity in the strict sense.
During his scientific career, Delay published more than 700 articles and over 40 books.
In 1957, he developed with his assistant Pierre Deniker a classification of pharmacological and recreational drugs that was validated by the
World Congress of Psychiatry in 1961.
Pharmacological and recreational drugs studies
Delay pioneered research on drugs including
LSD,
mescaline
Mescaline, also known as mescalin or mezcalin, and in chemical terms 3,4,5-trimethoxyphenethylamine, is a natural product, naturally occurring psychedelic drug, psychedelic alkaloid, protoalkaloid of the substituted phenethylamine class, found ...
, and
psilocybin.
Delay's name came first on these papers in part because he was the leader of a department with strong
hierarchy
A hierarchy (from Ancient Greek, Greek: , from , 'president of sacred rites') is an arrangement of items (objects, names, values, categories, etc.) that are represented as being "above", "below", or "at the same level as" one another. Hierarchy ...
.
Delay's team studied
isoniazid (INH) and its effect on depression, around 1952.
Delay discovered, jointly with J. M. Harl and
Pierre Deniker, who was Delay's co-worker and also a psychiatrist, that
chlorpromazine, the first
neuroleptic, produced a considerable reduction in the agitation and aggression of those patients with symptoms of
schizophrenia
Schizophrenia () is a mental disorder characterized variously by hallucinations (typically, Auditory hallucination#Schizophrenia, hearing voices), delusions, thought disorder, disorganized thinking and behavior, and Reduced affect display, f ...
. Known first as a "ganglio-plegic", he first called the drug "neuroplégique" then finally a "neuroleptic". Deniker, with Harl and Delay, published the success with chlorpromazine in May 1952. Chlorpromazine reached common use by 1957 worldwide, except in the United States where medications were then still considered less useful than psychodynamic therapy.
While this was not his most important scientific contribution, it became the most famous.
It was, however, Deniker who shared the prestigious
Lasker-DeBakey Clinical Medical Research Award with
Henri Laborit (who first recognized the drug's applications in psychiatry) and
Heinz Lehmann in 1957. As explained in the ''
American Journal of Psychiatry'' and elsewhere, no one won a Nobel Prize for the discovery.
Student revolution
In May 1968, a group of about five hundred revolutionary student followers of
Leon Trotsky professing
antipsychiatry attacked his offices. The students felt that chemicals were
straitjackets and demanded that psychiatry be removed from medicine. Within two years they forced Delay's retirement.
He decided to work on literature, which was his first love.
Literature
Delay was elected to the Académie française in 1959 and wrote remarkable biographical studies on the ''Youth of André Gide'' (1956–1957), and his maternal ancestors in the four volumes of ''Preliminary Memory'' (1979–1986). His essay Psychiatry and Psychology ''The Immoraliste'' earned him the Grand Prix in criticism. He used the pseudonym Jean Faurel from his days at Salpêtrière until sometime before 1959.
Awards
* Commander of the
Legion of Honour
The National Order of the Legion of Honour ( ), formerly the Imperial Order of the Legion of Honour (), is the highest and most prestigious French national order of merit, both military and Civil society, civil. Currently consisting of five cl ...
* Commander of the
Ordre des Arts et des Lettres
* Grand officer of the
National Order of Merit
* Commander of the
Ordre de la Santé publique
* Elected to the
Académie française in 1959, succeeding
Georges Lecomte
Works
* ''Les Dissolutions de la mémoire'', Preface by
Pierre Janet, 1942, PUF
* ''Brain Waves and psychology'', Presses Universitaires de France (PUF) 1942
* ''The Dissolution of Memory'', Foreword by Pierre Janet, Presses Universitaires de France, 1942
* ''The gray city'', romance, Flammarion, 1946
* ''The Relaxing'', novel, Gallimard, 1947
* ''Nameless men'', news, Gallimard, 1948
* ''Medical psychology studies'', Presses Universitaires de France, 1953
* ''Youth Gide'', Gallimard, 1956–1957
* ''Brain Electricity'', Presses Universitaires de France, 1973
* ''Before Memory'', Gallimard, 1979, 4th prize Pierre-Lafue Foundation 1980
* ''The Euchre grid'', story, Gallimard, 1988
See also
*
:fr:Place Jean-Delay
References
External links
Réception de Jean Delay à l'Académie française 4-minute ina.fr video (in French), 21 January 1960
Jean Delay at the Académie française
{{DEFAULTSORT:Delay, Jean
1907 births
1987 deaths
People from Bayonne
French psychiatrists
French neurologists
20th-century French non-fiction writers
Grand Officers of the Ordre national du Mérite
Commanders of the Legion of Honour
Members of the Académie Française
Commandeurs of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres
20th-century French physicians
French medical writers
20th-century French male writers
French male non-fiction writers