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Subject: PPEN # 389: Think They Don't Electroshock People Anymore? Think
Again.

 


Preventive Psychiatry E-Newsletter # 389


Think They Don’t Electroshock People Anymore? 


Think Again–Even toddlers and pregnant women are being shocked


By Dr. John Breeding, author of The Wildest Colts Make the Best Horses

http://waronyou.com/topics/think-they-don%E2%80%99t-electroshock-people-anym
ore-think-again%E2%80%93even-toddlers-and-pregnant-women-are-being-shocked/

Ask the average person about the use of electroshock treatment in today’s
society and 9 out of 10 will respond, “They still shock people?”

They do. It’s estimated that more than 100,000 Americans are electroshocked
each year; half are 60 and older, and two-thirds are women. In Australia, it
was recently revealed that psychiatrists had electroshocked 55 toddlers age
four and younger. In the UK, three year olds have been brutalized with it.
And one of the country’s leading mental health “patients’ rights” groups—the
National Alliance of Mental Illness (NAMI)—recently endorsed the use of
electroshock on pregnant women. One would wonder why a patients’ rights
group would endorse such an obviously harmful procedure if not for the fact
that the group has recently been exposed as a major front for the
psycho/pharmaceutical industry.

The FDA reports pregnant women miscarrying following ECT, while studies show
that in addition to the risk of death, the fetus can suffer malnutrition,
dehydration and violent injury. Electroshocking children, pregnant women and
the unborn is tantamount to torture and should not only be banned but those
administering it prosecuted.

Given the factual truths of sending up to 360 volts of electricity searing
through the brain – the obvious question is why the “treatment” has not gone
by the wayside like its psychiatric sister treatments during the 1940s and
1950s, insulin coma shock and lobotomy.

Electroshock was indeed challenged, and its low point pretty much coincided
with the release in 1975 of the Academy Award-winning film version of Ken
Kesey’s One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest and Jack Nicholson’s portrayal of
the feisty Randle Patrick McMurphy. The horrible scene of his undergoing
“unmodified” shock treatment, i.e., without anesthetic and muscle-paralyzing
drugs, along with his reduction to a vegetative state was seared in the
public’s mind. This, together with public exposure of the shameful state of
psychiatric institutions, certainly gave electroshock treatment a bad
name—so much so that the treatment was renamed Electroconvulsive Therapy
(ECT). The bad publicity caused its use in public institutions to fall
sharply, and its overall use was also considerably diminished. It would be
naïve, however, to think that this curtailment was strictly due to increased
public awareness about the brutalities of the procedure. The advent of
neuroleptics (nerve-seizing drugs) was perhaps the major factor in this
development. The indiscriminate use of these drugs replaced the
indiscriminate use of ECT as the primary means of subduing and pacifying
inmates who resisted incarceration and wouldn’t cooperate.

In the last two decades, however, electroshock has made a comeback.

Most electroshock is insurance-covered. ECT specialists on average have
incomes twice that of other psychiatrists. The cost for inpatient ECT ranges
from $50,000 to $75,000 per series (usually 8 to 12 individual sessions).
Electroshock is a multibillion-dollar-a-year industry—yet its damaging
effects are well known to those who endorse it.

Max Fink, a professor of psychiatry and the “Grandfather of American ECT”
believed the “therapeutic” effect from ECT is produced by brain dysfunction
and damage. “Effects on memory, common in ECT, come in two flavors,” wrote
Fink in Psychiatric Times in 2006. “Delirium is common with each seizure and
is well documented by immediate measurable changes in brain chemistry and
physiology” and “the second complaint is of a persistent loss of personal
memories…They do not recall the names of their children, family holidays, or
personal events….Their complaints cast a public shadow on ECT practice.”

The Procedure

Electroshock is a psychiatric procedure that involves the production of a
grand mal convulsion, similar to an epileptic seizure, by passing from 70 to
upwards of 600 volts of electric current through the brain for one-half
second to four seconds. Before application, ECT subjects are typically given
anesthetic, tranquilizing and muscle-paralyzing drugs to reduce fear, pain,
and the risk (from violent muscle spasms) of fractured bones (particularly
of the spine, a common occurrence in the early history of ECT before the
introduction, in the mid-1950s, of the muscle-paralyzing drug
succinylcholine [Anectine]). The ECT-induced convulsion usually lasts from
thirty to sixty seconds and may immediately produce disorienting, painful,
and even life-threatening complications, such as apnea (temporary suspension
of breathing) and cardiac arrest. The convulsion is followed by a period of
unconsciousness of several minutes’ duration. Electroshock is usually
administered in hospitals because they are equipped to handle emergency
situations that often develop during or soon after an ECT session.

Brain Damage

The brain naturally operates in millivolts of electricity, and ECT
administers on average between 150 and 400 volts of electricity to the
brain, a force sufficient to induce a grand mal seizure, rupture the
protective blood-brain barrier and incite glutamate toxicity (glutamate is a
powerful neurotransmitter released by nerve cells in the brain and is
responsible for sending signals between nerve cells. In glutamate toxicity
there is too much glutamate that leads to over-excitation of the receiving
nerve cell, which can cause cell damage and/or death). It is prima-facie,
common sense obvious fact that ECT causes brain damage. After all, the rest
of medicine, as well as the building trades, do their best to prevent people
from being hurt or killed by electrical shock. People with epilepsy are
given anticonvulsant drugs to prevent seizures because they are known to
damage the brain. The Electroshock Quotationary, a collection of quotations,
excerpts, and essays about the history and nature of electroshock, by shock
survivor Leonard Roy Frank, includes the testimony of Peter Sterling, a
University of Pennsylvania neuroscience professor, describing the nature of
ECT-caused brain damage, dated May 31, 2001, to the New York Assembly
Standing Committee on Mental Health at a public hearing on ECT.

Sterling affirms the obvious: that massive amounts of electricity directly
into the brain cause profound damage.

Lack of Efficacy

Not only does electroshock directly violate the Hippocratic oath to do no
harm, the practice has never been proven effective. There are no lasting
beneficial effects of electroshock; sham-electroshock (anesthesia but no
electroshock) has the same short-term outcomes as electroshock (Ross, 2006).
Even leading shock researcher and advocate Harold Sackeim now provides a
proof. In an article from 2001, he and his colleagues conclude, “Our study
indicates that without active treatment, virtually all remitted patients
relapse within 6 months of stopping ECT.” (Italics mine)

The FDA

The battle against electroshock has been ongoing since its advent. The two
recent chronicles by electroshock survivor activist leaders, Leonard Roy
Frank (The Electroshock Quotationary) and Linda Andre (Doctors of
Deception), tell the story best. Just now, the fight has centered on the FDA
review of the “efficacy and safety” of ECT machines.

Many activists, including myself, have submitted testimony urging the FDA
NOT to reclassify these devices from Class III (high risk) to Class II (low
risk). I have worked with scores of electroshock survivors, and I can tell
you the damage is consistent and terrible. I can also tell you as a
psychologist that there are methods so much gentler, safer and more
effective to help people with depression.

A Repackaged Product

The reason for electroshock’s endurance and resurgence is best described by
Linda Andre, shock survivor and leader of the Committee for Truth in
Psychiatry, in her masterful new work, Doctors of Deception: What They Don’t
Want You to Know About Shock Treatment—it is simply the triumph of public
relations over science. A concerted PR campaign has allowed electroshock to
continue despite clear scientific evidence of its dismal and tragic record
on safety and efficacy.

The industry repackaged the product to keep it selling. They touted a “newer
and safer ECT,” bragging about improved equipment and the introduction of
anesthesia and muscle paralysants, which actually came on the market in the
1950s. While the muscle paralysants greatly reduced the risk of broken bones
from unrestrained convulsions, there was no lessening of permanent damage to
the brain caused by the electroshocks. The drugs made the procedure appear
much more benign because they suppressed the body’s natural, violent
reaction to a grand mal convulsion. However, as Doug Cameron (1994) and
other researchers have shown, the new machines, because they are more
powerful than ever are capable of releasing greater amounts of electricity
into the brain thus causing more damage than the older devices.

With the newer technique modifications there is also an added risk. The
drugs used to prevent bone complications raise the seizure threshold so that
more electrical current is required to induce the convulsion, which in turn
increases brain damage. Moreover, whereas ECT specialists formerly tried to
induce seizures with minimal current, they commonly use suprathreshold
amounts in the belief that they are more effective. Again, the more current,
the more brain damage. Proponents, and the public, have missed the point
that the supposed “effectiveness” of ECT is in direct ratio to the amount of
brain damage it causes.

In addition to the propaganda effect and the financial incentives, there is
a less well-considered reason for ECT’s popularity among psychiatrists.
Although electroshock is often described as psychiatry’s “treatment of last
resort,” it is actually psychiatry’s “treatment of next resort.” Next resort
after psychiatric drugs, which are the main “treatment”—a treatment whose
lack of effectiveness and lack of safety are well documented. Like ECT,
these drugs can damage and disable the brain. Like ECT, they can cause a
fully justified resentment that goes with the experience of having been
betrayed by one’s supposed helpers.

Activist and electroshock survivor Leonard Roy Frank’s recent letter to the
FDA in regards to their review of ECT devices is one of the best. I end this
blog article with his conclusion:

As a destroyer of memories and thoughts, electroshock is a direct, violent
assault on these hallmarks of American liberty: freedom of conscience,
freedom of belief, freedom of thought, freedom of religion, freedom of
speech, freedom from assault, and freedom from cruel and unusual punishment.
Tens of thousands of people every year in the United States are deceived or
coerced into undergoing electroshock. The FDA should do everything in its
power to discourage the use of electroshock by:

·         keeping ECT’s Class III, high-risk rating;

·         insisting that electroshock psychiatrists, manufacturers of ECT
devices, and executives and administrators in hospitals where ECT is
administered, substantiate with scientific proof their claims that the
procedure is “safe and effective”;

·         and calling upon the Congress and the Department of Justice to
investigate the fraudulent and coercive use of this cruel and inhuman
procedure.

Despite the evidence of grievous harm and failure to help, electroshock’s
proponents rave on; as an example, an electroshock psychiatrist told
Washington Post reporter Sandra Boodman in 1996, that, “ECT is one of God’s
gifts to mankind. There is nothing like it, nothing equal to it in efficacy
or safety in all of psychiatry.”

Given that ECT causes brain damage, memory loss, and other serious cognitive
impairment, electroshock serves to cover up and impede any potential
malpractice or personal injury litigation. It generally takes years for a
shock survivor to recover enough to figure out what has happened to them,
and most states have a statute of limitations (usually one or two years) on
medical malpractice and personal injury suits. As a result, electroshock
survivors are effectively prevented from pursuing litigation against those
who harmed them, making electroshock psychiatrists almost malpractice-proof.


John Breeding, Ph.D. has been a counseling psychologist in Austin, Texas for
25 years.
He is an outspoken critic of electroshock treatment and has testified
against its use before legislative bodies on numerous occasions. Dr.
Breeding is also the director of Texans For Safe Education, a citizens group
dedicated to challenging the ever-increasing role of psychiatric drugs in
schools. He is the author of numerous articles and four books including: The
Wildest Colts Make the Best Horses and True Nature and Great
Misunderstandings.

For more information on the damage caused by ECT, visit
<http://www.endofshock.com/> www.endofshock.com

References

Ayd Jr., F.T. (November-December 1963). “Guest editorial: Ugo Cerletti, M.D.
(1877-1963),” Psychosomatics, Vol. 4, pp. A-6 – A-7.

Boodman, S.G. (September 24, 1996). “Shock therapy: It’s back,” Washington
Post (Health Section), pp. 14-20.

Frank, Leonard Roy, The Electroshock Quotationary, June 2006,
<http://www.endofshock.com/102C_ECT.PDF> www.endofshock.com/102C_ECT.PDF.

Andre, Linda, Doctors of Deception,  <http://www.doctorsofdeception.com/>
www.doctorsofdeception.com.

Kalinowsky, L.B. (1988). Quoted in R. Abrams, “Interview with Lothar
Kalinowsky, M.D.,” Convulsive Therapy, Vol. 4.

Ross, C.A. (Spring 2006). “The sham ECT literature: Implications for consent
to ECT,” Ethical Human Psychology and Psychiatry, Vol. 8.

Sackeim, H.A. et al. (March 14, 2001). “Continuation pharmacotherapy in the
prevention of relapse following electroconvulsive therapy,” Journal of the
American Medical Association.

Sackeim, H.A. (2001). “Memory loss: From polarization to reconciliation,”
Journal of ECT, vol. 17, no. 3, p. 229. Sackeim, H.A., Prudic, J. et al.
(January 2007). “The cognitive effects of electroconvulsive therapy in
community settings,” Neuropsychopharmacology, Vol. 32, pp. 244-2549

 

 

 

 

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