What really caused encephalitis lethargica, the mysterious disease described in the movie 'Awakenings'?

Revisiting a disease that affected a million people might provide answers we need for the future.

A still from the movie "Awakenings"
(Image credit: COLUMBIA PICTURES / RGR Collection / Alamy Stock Photo)

"People have forgotten what life is all about," Robert De Niro's character says in the film Awakenings after being revived from the shut-down state he had been in for 30 years. "They've forgotten what it is to be alive."

Based on a true story told by Dr Oliver Sacks, Awakenings focuses with exquisite detail on the experiences of a few extraordinary people affected by a disease known as encephalitis lethargica, or the "sleepy sickness". Yet far from being a rarity, this disease affected a million people worldwide during and after the first world war. Then it vanished and has remained a mystery for the past century. The question that has never been answered is: what caused it?

Jonathan Rogers
Clinical Lecturer in Psychiatry, UCL

Jonathan Rogers is a Clinical Lecturer in General Adult Psychiatry in the UCL Division of Psychiatry. He studied medicine at the University of Cambridge, completed Core Psychiatry Training as an NIHR Academic Clinical Fellow at the Maudsley Hospital and King's College London, and is currently a Specialty Registrar in Neuropsychiatry at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery.