During the First World War he became a lieutenant colonel in the Royal Army Medical Corps, carrying out work with men suffering from shell shock. He was appointed to the War Office Committee on Shell Shock.
In 1905, the first edition of his ground-breaking reference work Psychological Medicine: A Manual on Mental Diseases for Practitioners and Students was published and, in 1922, he founded the National Council for Mental Hygiene. In 1930, he was appointed Vice-Chairman of the International Committee for Mental Hygiene.
Sir Maurice Craig died on 6 January 1935.
References
^Bennett, Maxwell: Virginia Woolf and Neuropsychiatry (Springer Press 2013) ISBN9400757476 p.9
Further reading
Henderson, D. K (1935). "SIR MAURICE CRAIG, C. B. E., M. D. (Camb.), F. R. C. P. (Lond.)". American Journal of Psychiatry. 91 (5): 1211–a–1213. doi:10.1176/ajp.91.5.1211-a.