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| May 28, 2009 10:51 AM EDT | Reads: |
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"The FDA has allowed shock machines to be used for 33 years without any evidence of their safety," said
The FDA has known since 1979 that ECT poses serious risks, including brain damage and permanent memory loss. Andre's book chronicles the decades-long battle between former patients harmed by shock treatment and organized psychiatry over whether the shock machine should be investigated for safety, and includes first-person accounts from patients who were, Andre says, "guinea pigs for an untested device."
These patients formed their own organization to petition the FDA for brain-scan studies and for a consent form informing potential ECT patients of the known risks of ECT, and offered their own brains for study. They were joined by thousands of concerned citizens in a simple plea: If shock treatment is as safe as the American Psychiatric Association claims, why not investigate it?
In the past, bending to pressure from the APA, the FDA refused to conduct its own studies or require the manufacturers to prove safety. The agency said it would, instead, simply declare the device safe by reclassifying it as low risk (Class II).
"That is still the likeliest outcome," warns Andre.
Contact:
SOURCE Committee for Truth in Psychiatry
Published May 28, 2009 Reads 1,057
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