| |
|
||||||
|
SHOCKED! ECT Home
|
Patient Challenges Forced ElectroshocksBy Jeremy Laurance, Health Editor 17 February 2003 Doctors' powers to force severely depressed patients to have electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) will be reviewed by a High Court judge this week. In the first case of its kind, a woman aged 41 who has refused ECT against her doctors' advice has been granted a judicial review of their power to impose it on her.
advertisement The woman, identified only as K, was admitted to Springfield Hospital in south-west London in January where doctors planned to administer emergency ECT. But her lawyers obtained a temporary injunction on the evening of 8 January preventing the treatment, and the next morning applied for a judicial review of the case. Although the woman is suffering from a mental illness, it is accepted by the doctors that she has mental capacity, said her barrister, Stephen Field. "She doesn't want her head plugged into the mains and she is quite capable of giving cogent reasons for her decision.'' followup story: UK ECT case halted top | sitemap | send page to a friend about me |
effects of ect | news
stories | personal stories HealthyPlace.com Depression Center Links home ~ site map |
advertisement |
|||||
| HealthyPlace.com Homepage We subscribe to the HONcode principles of the Health On the Net Foundation. © 2000-2006 HealthyPlace.com, Inc. All
rights reserved. |
|||||||