Trending...
- A rare chance to own a multi-family property in the heart of Bay Ridge
- CORPORATE IMMIGRATION PARTNERS, PC ANNOUNCES ANNE NAKAMURA HAS JOINED THE FIRM
- IRF Builders Forum Brings Global Leaders to Washington, D.C. to Advance Religious Freedom Through Cooperative Engagement
After a public records request revealed that children in the under 5 age group are given electroshock, the Citizens Commission on Human Rights is calling for a ban its use citing a lack of lack of clinical studies on safety and effectiveness.
TAMPA, Fla. - illiNews -- Concerned citizens, business leaders and parents took to the streets during Mental Health Awareness Month protesting the use of electroshock following the announcement that, in Florida, children in the under 5 age group are given electroshock also known as electroconvulsive therapy or ECT.
What was once thought to be a barbaric vestige of past psychiatric abuse, is today, a too common occurrence around the world. Psychiatrists prescribe ECT for approximately 100,000 people a year in the US alone.
For the uninformed, the effects of ECT seizures are similar to grand mal seizures where the body stiffens, arms and legs often jerk, sometimes the face turns pale blue and the individual loses consciousness.
While today's shock treatment is touted as being a kinder, gentler shock treatment compared to earlier days because it utilizes anesthesia, muscle relaxers and mouth guards, the FDA has never required clinical studies to prove safety and effectiveness.
Given that ECT can result in up to 460 volts of electricity being shot through a person's head and the fact, that the amperage and voltage are actually greater than formerly used, the Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR) is calling for a ban on the use of the device.
Why would such a drastic and potentially dangerous procedure still be in use today?
Paula Bolton, program director of McLean's Psychiatric Neurotherapeutics Program, is quoted in an article promoting that scientists claim seizures can "reset" brain function. Because brain activity involves electrical signals passing through neurons, ECT "is like when you reboot your computer when something has gone awry." In the same sentence she adds, "although there are a lot of theories, no one is really quite sure why it works." This same article also fails to mention that this unproven theory of rebooting the brain comes with devastating side effects including death and brain damage.
More on illi News
Diane Stein, president of the Florida chapter of CCHR points out, "The hard cold truth is that psychiatrists know that this is a dangerous and unproven process yet ECT is pushed as a treatment for depressive resistant depression and suicide when there is no evidence that ECT prevents suicide and patients in a study group who received ECT were 16 times more likely to attempt suicide than the non-ECT patients."
Stein continues, "Bolton's statement is not only presumptive and incorrect but it is dangerous. At best it is experimental guesswork for profit, which sometimes leaves the patient with severe memory loss and confusion, the long-term effects of which, are not known. The utter lack of effective and safe solutions by psychiatry over the years cannot continue to be tolerated."
"That a person's distress could come from something more than short-circuiting or miswiring in the brain seems to have eluded the psychiatric community," says Stein. "Though they have tried to adopt a medical model they have fallen short of proving any causal relationship to an individual's emotions and their dangerous treatments."
There is, as well, the issue of forced shock, such as the case of a psychiatric patient in 2021 by the name of Henley, who attempted escape from Shands psychiatric hospital. Like a scene out of a "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" sequel, Henley was cornered by staff and forcibly shocked for weeks with resulting memory loss, confusion, nerve pain and depression even long after he finally left Shands.
Ron Bassman, executive director of MindFreedom International, also forced into shock therapy when he was 25, lost his memory for about a year and a half and believes shock hindered his creativity.
Bassman's experience motivated his wanting to assist others. He's said that often people who've undergone shock will ask him if their memory would return. "It's unpredictable," he has said. "There's usually some fragments that don't come back. Despite rationalizations about side effects, studies reveal the damage shock does," says Bassman. He suggests there is no such thing as true informed consent, because doctors don't tell patients the irreparable damage shock does. "This is pretty much an ongoing fight to inform the public."
More on illi News
Jim Gottstein, an attorney and founder of Psychrights, stated "shock causes permanent memory loss and closed head injury. He added electroshock doesn't treat mood disorders. It may work for a day or two because of the euphoria from a head injury, but once effects wear off, doctors have to keep performing it, causing progressive brain damage and memory loss. Most people not forced to undergo electroshock were angry they weren't told the truth about it. Electroshock is as barbaric as it seems," says Gottstein.
"The use of the ECT device in this country should be banned altogether, that is the bottom line," states Stein.
About CCHR: Initially established by the Church of Scientology and renowned psychiatrist Dr. Thomas Szasz in 1969, CCHR's mission is to eradicate abuses committed under the guise of mental health. The Florida chapter of CCHR is an award-winning nonprofit in the area of mental health human rights and government relations. L. Ron Hubbard, founder of Scientology, first brought psychiatric imprisonment to wide public notice: "Thousands and thousands are seized without process of law, every week, over the 'free world' tortured, castrated, killed. All in the name of 'mental health,'" he wrote in March 1969.
What was once thought to be a barbaric vestige of past psychiatric abuse, is today, a too common occurrence around the world. Psychiatrists prescribe ECT for approximately 100,000 people a year in the US alone.
For the uninformed, the effects of ECT seizures are similar to grand mal seizures where the body stiffens, arms and legs often jerk, sometimes the face turns pale blue and the individual loses consciousness.
While today's shock treatment is touted as being a kinder, gentler shock treatment compared to earlier days because it utilizes anesthesia, muscle relaxers and mouth guards, the FDA has never required clinical studies to prove safety and effectiveness.
Given that ECT can result in up to 460 volts of electricity being shot through a person's head and the fact, that the amperage and voltage are actually greater than formerly used, the Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR) is calling for a ban on the use of the device.
Why would such a drastic and potentially dangerous procedure still be in use today?
Paula Bolton, program director of McLean's Psychiatric Neurotherapeutics Program, is quoted in an article promoting that scientists claim seizures can "reset" brain function. Because brain activity involves electrical signals passing through neurons, ECT "is like when you reboot your computer when something has gone awry." In the same sentence she adds, "although there are a lot of theories, no one is really quite sure why it works." This same article also fails to mention that this unproven theory of rebooting the brain comes with devastating side effects including death and brain damage.
More on illi News
- The Naturist World Just Shifted — NaturismRE Ignites a Global Resurgence
- Veterans and Young Job Seekers Get a Boost Through Mentor Agile's Expanded WIOA Support Program
- Build. Repair. Refresh – Summer Pond Projects Are in Full Swing!
- Lake Street Capital Partners Establishes New Residential Services Platform HighPoint Exterior Home Services by Partnering with Choufani & Bailey Roofing & Restoration
- $796,000 in Q2 Revenue Marks Highest Earnings to Date on 3 Trailing Quarters of Profitability in Multi-Billion Homebuilding Sector: Stock Symbol: IVDN
Diane Stein, president of the Florida chapter of CCHR points out, "The hard cold truth is that psychiatrists know that this is a dangerous and unproven process yet ECT is pushed as a treatment for depressive resistant depression and suicide when there is no evidence that ECT prevents suicide and patients in a study group who received ECT were 16 times more likely to attempt suicide than the non-ECT patients."
Stein continues, "Bolton's statement is not only presumptive and incorrect but it is dangerous. At best it is experimental guesswork for profit, which sometimes leaves the patient with severe memory loss and confusion, the long-term effects of which, are not known. The utter lack of effective and safe solutions by psychiatry over the years cannot continue to be tolerated."
"That a person's distress could come from something more than short-circuiting or miswiring in the brain seems to have eluded the psychiatric community," says Stein. "Though they have tried to adopt a medical model they have fallen short of proving any causal relationship to an individual's emotions and their dangerous treatments."
There is, as well, the issue of forced shock, such as the case of a psychiatric patient in 2021 by the name of Henley, who attempted escape from Shands psychiatric hospital. Like a scene out of a "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" sequel, Henley was cornered by staff and forcibly shocked for weeks with resulting memory loss, confusion, nerve pain and depression even long after he finally left Shands.
Ron Bassman, executive director of MindFreedom International, also forced into shock therapy when he was 25, lost his memory for about a year and a half and believes shock hindered his creativity.
Bassman's experience motivated his wanting to assist others. He's said that often people who've undergone shock will ask him if their memory would return. "It's unpredictable," he has said. "There's usually some fragments that don't come back. Despite rationalizations about side effects, studies reveal the damage shock does," says Bassman. He suggests there is no such thing as true informed consent, because doctors don't tell patients the irreparable damage shock does. "This is pretty much an ongoing fight to inform the public."
More on illi News
- Cybersecurity is THE Hot Market Sector; Revenues, Earnings & Profit matter; Only 33 Million Shares + a Huge Short Position Equal an Undervalued Stock
- Despite Global Calls for a Ban, US Child Psychiatry Pushes Electroshock for Kids
- CarobWay Launches Food-Forward Prebiotic Fiber Innovation at IFT
- Franco Polished Plaster Celebrates 35 Years of Bringing Walls to Life in the UK
- Spartan & Guardians Partner with Guitar Legend Buckethead to Support Global Child Rescue Efforts
Jim Gottstein, an attorney and founder of Psychrights, stated "shock causes permanent memory loss and closed head injury. He added electroshock doesn't treat mood disorders. It may work for a day or two because of the euphoria from a head injury, but once effects wear off, doctors have to keep performing it, causing progressive brain damage and memory loss. Most people not forced to undergo electroshock were angry they weren't told the truth about it. Electroshock is as barbaric as it seems," says Gottstein.
"The use of the ECT device in this country should be banned altogether, that is the bottom line," states Stein.
About CCHR: Initially established by the Church of Scientology and renowned psychiatrist Dr. Thomas Szasz in 1969, CCHR's mission is to eradicate abuses committed under the guise of mental health. The Florida chapter of CCHR is an award-winning nonprofit in the area of mental health human rights and government relations. L. Ron Hubbard, founder of Scientology, first brought psychiatric imprisonment to wide public notice: "Thousands and thousands are seized without process of law, every week, over the 'free world' tortured, castrated, killed. All in the name of 'mental health,'" he wrote in March 1969.
Source: Citizens Commission on Human Rights of Florida
0 Comments
Latest on illi News
- Universal Destinations & Experiences Plans Second Universal Horror Unleashed in Chicago
- Colorado Scenthound Locations Partner with Humane Colorado to Give Adopted Dogs a "Clean Start"
- Big Green Egg and Ace Hardware Launch "Egg Your Neighbor" Contest to Celebrate Neighborhood Heroes
- Pi9 Becomes a Microsoft Training Services Partner
- Endoacustica Europe Unveils iPhone 13 Pro Max Spy Phone—Pure Hardware, Zero Software Changes
- Suzanne Harp named Managing Director in Texas, USA
- $10 Million Acquisition of GXR World Sports Assets Energizes Global Launch of Sports.com Super App by Online Lottery-Sports Game Provider: Lottery.com
- Shop American Made Goods: New Online Marketplace My American Goods Curates the Best of U.S. Made
- Investor Spotlight: Cycurion, Inc. (N A S D A Q: CYCU) Secures $69M in Contracts Amid Surging Demand for AI-Powered Cybersecurity Solutions
- $328 Million Global Stroke Rehab Market Opportunity Awaits AI Telehealth Leader Following Selection for NIH Funded Phase 3 Clinical Study: VSee Health
- Ascent Solar Technologies Enters Collaborative Agreement Notice with NASA to Advance Development of Thin-Film PV Power Beaming Capabilities: ASTI
- VoodooSoft Unveils SiriusLLM: The World's First ChatGPT-Like AI Malware Detection Engine
- This Ain't Press. This Is Pressure — Star Command by RansomXX is Out Now
- Emerald Reimagined: Garden Party & Fundraiser to Celebrate Englewood's Bold Next Chapter
- An Exclusive VIP Reception Honoring Vocal Prodigy Alliana Lili Yang's Remarkable Achievements and Magazine Cover Spotlight
- Joyce Carol Oates Returns to Hard Case Crime With DOUBLE TROUBLE
- New AI Academy Helps Therapists Embrace Tech Without Losing Their Humanity
- IQSTEL Surges Toward $400M Run Rate with $101.5M in Revenue—Reinforces Billion-Dollar Vision Backed by Fintech, AI, and Cybersecurity
- Alpha Modus Files 7th IP Action Against Rackspace Following $3M CEO Investment and Strategic Partnership Expansion
- Mortgage Rates And Demand Are Stuck In A Holding Pattern