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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) from CTIPEverything you ought to know about ECT. The ECT Frequently Asked Questions from CTIP (Committee for Truth In Psychiatry, an international organization for shock survivors.) Learn more about this organization for shock survivors. National Mental Health AssociationNMHAhas come out with a strong statement on ECT and urges increased, rigorous and objective research on ECT. NMHA also advocates the establishment of a national data bank. (Nice job, NMHA!) SCI resolution on electroshock passed Support Coalition International today passed a
resolution condemning electroshock as a human rights violation. The Board of
Directors agreed that electroshock "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." NIH Consensus StatementThe National Institute of Health put together an extensive conference on electroconvulsive therapy. The conference not only included the top shock docs, but also survivors and doctors who speak out against ECT. At times it was heated, but the resulting document, the NIH Consensus Statement, is the best "official" statement in existence. American Psychiatric AssociationHere are three versions of the APA's statement on ECT policy and practice. The first is the statement available to the public, the second and third are for practitioners. (1990 version and an upcoming version)
A few points stand out in this report:
And from the Canadian Psychiatric Association, the official position paper. Center for Mental Health Services (CMHS)Censorship at CMHS advertisement CMHS Report
is released Among the findings:
What went on at CMHS (Center for Mental Health Services)? A review, a meeting between the feds and ECT recipients, and lots of behind-the-scenes action. In the beginning, the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill (NAMI) expressed anger that CHMS would even review the subject! The Food and Drug Administration (FDA)What's going
on with the FDA? Dr. Peter Breggin discusses the history of how the psychiatric lobby keeps ECT devices from undergoing FDA-approved testing. Read a sampling of reports of adverse effects reported to the FDA. Consider writing to the FDA yourself and asking the question: What scientific evidence have you provided to the National Institute of Mental Health and the Surgeon General that supports their statement that "ECT is safe and effective?" (Division of Neurological Devices, Richard Munzer, the person in charge.) The Surgeon General's ReportBy now you've heard about the Surgeon General's report on mental health. It has been another political hot potato, with some segments applauding, others hissing. And so with pressure from the office of the Vice President, the Surgeon General hastily issued this report. He wasn't given the time needed to prepare the report in a thorough manner, and apparently didn't see the need to fully examine the issues. Before the report was finished, the section on ECT was leaked to activists and ECT survivors. In the section on ECT, Surgeon General David Satcher says ECT is both effective and safe. This outraged ECT survivors and activists, who immediately began a public campaign to the Surgeon General. He refused to budge, only saying that his report was final. Reuters News Service and the New York Times immediately picked up on the unrest among survivors and activists. Reuters: Preliminary information from the US Surgeon General's Report on Mental Health, due to be released in December, has evoked a critical response from consumer advocates who claim that the report offers a "sugar-coated" description of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), a controversial treatment for depression. New York Times: A preliminary draft of the U.S. Surgeon General's Report on Mental Health, not yet released to the public, has touched off an uproar among some consumer advocates, who say it gives too rosy and uncritical a picture of electroshock therapy. Eventually, other news sources picked up the
story: British Medical Journal: Although still in preliminary draft form and yet to be released officially to the public, the long awaited US surgeon general's report on mental health has already created an uproar, after a consumer health group released excerpts highlighting the efficacy and safety of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) in the treatment of depression. MedscapeWire: "Unscientific" Surgeon General's Report Misrepresents Research, Minimizes Risks of Electroshock, Say Advocates. Surgeon General David Satcher's Report on Mental Health, released December 13, is said to be a rigorously science-based document, yet at its center was a political struggle between patients who have been harmed by mental health treatment and doctors with a vested interest in promoting it. Susan Rogers, of the Mental Health Association of Southeastern Pennsylvania, compiled a lengthy rebuttal to the section of the report. It's very detailed, and analyzes the scant data the Surgeon General surveyed. David Oaks, head of the world's largest psychiatric survivor organization Support Coalition International, wrote a scathing letter to the Office of the Surgeon General. An
editorial from the
Baltimore Sun blasts the report as "inaccurate and misleading." The National Council on DisabilitiesFrom Privileges to Rights: People Labeled with Psychiatric Disabilities Speak for Themselves" All the recommendations in this report emphasize the basic principle that people with psychiatric disabilities are, first and foremost, citizens who have the right to expect that they will be treated according to the principles of law that apply to all other citizens. All laws and policies that restrict the rights of people with psychiatric disabilities simply because of their disabilities are inharmonious with basic principles of law and justice, as well as with such landmark civil rights laws as the Americans with Disabilities Act. "...public policy should move toward the elimination of electro-convulsive therapy and psycho surgery as unproven and inherently inhumane procedures. Effective humane alternatives to these techniques exist now and should be promoted." top | sitemap | send page to a friend about me |
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