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Resolution Against Electroshock
A Crime Against
Humanity
Note: This anti-shock resolution is
the official position of Support Coalition International (SCI). The final draft
was passed by the Board of Directors on July 28,2001. The Resolution can be
found on these websites: www.MindFreedom.org, and www.ect.org
The Board of Directors of
Support Coalition
International unanimously and strongly condemns the psychiatric procedure
of electroshock ("electroconvulsive therapy","ECT") as a
serious human rights violation. It is our informed opinion, based on common
sense, personal experience and scientific knowledge, that electroshock is a
crime against humanity. It directly violates section 5 of the United Nations
Universal Declaration of Human Rights which outlaws "cruel, degrading and
inhumane treatment or punishment", and the UN Convention Against Torture.
It is our informed opinion that electroshock constitutes cruel and unusual
punishment. We also believe that virtually all electroshock is forcibly
administered - that is, without genuine, fully informed consent.
We want electroshock abolished for these
reasons:
Electroshock always causes brain
damage.
Electroshock always causes permanent memory
loss.
Electroshock always causes learning
disabilities and other intellectual impairments.
Electroshock often arouses fear or terror
in patients.
Even by conventional psychiatic standards,
electroshock has an extremely high relapse rate - over 70% within one
year.
Electroshock does not significantly relieve
"depression" or prevent suicide. In fact, several research studies
indicate that electroshock can aggravate or trigger depression and suicide
attempts: the Nobel Prize-winning author Ernest Hemingway killed himself
shortly after undergoing a second series of electroshock.
Psychiatrists frequently violate the
ethical-legal principle of informed consent when prescribing/ordering
electroshock. Subjects are not informed or misinformed about the procedure's
harmful effects. Nor are they informed about humane, non-injurious, non-medical
approaches such as counselling (including peer counselling), self-help groups,
and life-style changes.
Electroshock discriminates against highly
vulnerable people. Its chief targets are women and the elderly. Children are
also being subjected to electroshock in growing numbers. In the United States
and Canada, more than 70% of electroshock is administered to women, and upwards
of half of those undergoing electroshock are 60 years of age and older.
Electroshock machines have never been
independently inspected or approved for their medical safety. Since 1978, the
Food and Drug Administration of the United States government has officially
placed shock machines in its most dangerous medical-device category: class III,
" hazardous" or "unsafe".
Electroshock has caused many deaths. Such
deaths are routinely minimized or under-reported in the medical-psychiatric
literature. Rarely are psychiatrists or ECT facilities required to report
electroshock-caused deaths, or any other information concerning their use of
ECT to governmental regulatory bodies.
Board of Directors
Support Coalition
International
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