Her treatment played an important role in the establishment and development of psychoanalysis.

Anna O’s Real Name

Bertha Pappenheim

Best Known For

Anna O. was a patient of physician Josef Breuer.She coined the phrase “talking cure.“Made significant contributions to social work in Germany.

Birth and Death

February 27, 1859 - May 28, 1936

Anna O’s Significance in Psychology

Bertha Pappenheim, referred to as Anna O. in the case history, came to Josef Breuer for treatment for what was then known as hysteria. While caring for her dying father, Pappenheim experienced a range of symptoms that included partial paralysis, blurred vision, headaches, and hallucinations. While Freud never actually met Pappenheim, her story fascinated him and served as the basis for Studies on Hysteria (1895), a book co-written by Breuer and Freud. Breuer’s description of her treatment led Freud to conclude that hysteria was rooted in childhood sexual abuse. Freud’s insistence on sexuality as a cause eventually led to a rift with Breuer, who did not share this view on the origination of hysteria. “The plunging into sexuality in theory and practice is not to my taste,” Breuer explained. While the friendship and collaboration soon ended, Freud would continue his work in the development of talk therapy as a treatment for mental illness. Freud himself once described Anna O. as the true founder of the psychoanalytic approach to mental health treatment. Five years later, Freud published his book The Interpretation of Dreams, which formalized much of his psychoanalytic theory. While Breuer and Freud may have painted the picture that Breuer’s treatment cured Anna O. of her symptoms, records indicated that she became progressively worse and was eventually institutionalized. “So the famous first case he treated together with Breuer and which was vastly praised as an outstanding therapeutic success was nothing of the sort,” Carl Jung, a former Freud disciple, noted in 1925. Pappenheim eventually did recover from her illness and went on to become an important force in German social work. In 1954, Germany issued a postal stamp bearing her image in recognition of her many accomplishments.