Popular on TelAve
- Oklahoma and Starlink Local Installers getting it done! / now offering digital menu board installs
- Starlink Local Installers working with state of Minnesota (now offering digital menu board installs)
- Starlink Local Installers helping Wisconsin stay wired (now offering digital menu board installs)
- Phinge CEO Ranked #1 Globally by Crunchbase for the Last Week, Will Be in Las Vegas Jan. 4-9, the Week of CES to Discuss Netverse & IPO Coming in 2026
- The 7 Visibility Problems Costing Independent Hotels Thousands Every Month
- Rio Bela Cosmetics Launches Inclusive Line of Organic Skincare Products
- ATL Free WiFi Brings Free Public Internet to Atlanta's BeltLine and Local Neighborhoods
- BEC Technologies Expands MX-220 5G Industrial Router Series for Edge Connectivity
- Star Sleep & Wellness Expands to Pearland, Texas — Bringing Life-Changing Sleep Care to More Communities
- T-TECH Partners with Japan USA Precision Tools for 2026 US Market Development of the New T-TECH 5-Axis QUICK MILL™
Similar on TelAve
- A Well-Fed World, Youth Climate Save and PAN International Launch PHRESH: A Global Directory of Plant-Based Hunger Relief Organizations
- Guests Can Save 25 Percent Off Last Minute Bookings at KeysCaribbean's Village at Hawks Cay Villas
- Trump's Executive Order Rescheduling Cannabis: Accelerating M&A in a Multibillion-Dollar Industry
- Documentary "Prescription for Violence: Psychiatry's Deadly Side Effects" Premieres, Exposes Link Between Psychiatric Drugs and Acts of Mass Violence
- Nextvisit Co-Founder Ryan Yannelli Identifies Six Critical Factors for Behavioral Health Providers Evaluating AI Scribes in 2026
- Renowned Alternative Medicine Specialist Dr. Sebi and His African Bio Mineral Balance Therapy Are the Focus of New Book
- Psychiatric Drug Damage Ignored for Decades; CCHR Demands Federal Action
- Why Millions Are Losing Sexual Sensation, And Why It's Not Age, Hormones, or Desire
- Pinealage: the app that turns strangers into meditation companions — in crowdfunding phase
- "Micro-Studio": Why San Diegans are Swapping Crowded Gyms for Private, One-on-One Training at Sweat Society
The Collapse of Electroshock: ECT's Brain-Damaging and Torturous Effects Exposed
TelAve News/10838643
Encouraged by its decline, CCHR, a patients' rights watchdog, launches a series exposing the downfall of electroshock treatment and its long-term dangers, including brain injury.
LOS ANGELES - TelAve -- The Citizens Commission on Human Rights International, which helped get electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) banned on minors in California nearly 50 years ago, hails the current decline in the use of shock treatment. Fewer psychiatrists are willing to administer ECT and in October 2023, the World Health Organization (WHO) and UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) reported that there has been a dramatic decline in its use.
CCHR argues that growing consumer awareness and court rulings on informed consent—including making electroshock device manufacturers liable for failing to inform of brain damage—could spell the practice's demise—which CCHR urges.
It disputes the current claim that 100,000 Americans receive electroshock treatment each year, as it is based on a study that is 30 years old. No federal agency tracks the number of people electroshocked, despite the practice causing severe memory loss and brain injury. It has often fallen to CCHR to obtain the information through Freedom of Information Act requests to states.
A sample of 27 states providing statistics on the use of ECT under Medicaid in 2023, revealed only 3,641 people given it at a cost of nearly $9 million—no longer the multi-billion-dollar money spinner it has been. Compared to 2020, for example, Vermont decreased its use by 57.7% and Massachusetts by 40.4%, making the practice redundant.
"The truth is that a very small minority in the medical community still accept and strongly advocate for ECT shock therapy," according to one Los Angeles law firm litigating on behalf of ECT survivors. "It was recently estimated that fewer than 1,000 psychiatrists practice ECT in the U.S., out of a national total of approximately 49,000 psychiatrists."[1]
CCHR recently distributed its documentary, Therapy or Torture: The Truth About Electroshock to thousands of attorneys across the country, offering facts that consumers are not told by those administering ECT.
More on TelAve News
The amount of involuntary use of ECT in the U.S. is unknown, yet a July 2018 UN Human Rights Council report determined that forced ECT constitutes "torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment." The 2023 WHO and OHCHR guidance on Mental Health, Human Rights, and Legislation reiterates that ECT without consent "may constitute torture and ill-treatment."
The guidance notes: "In Slovenia and Luxembourg, ECT is not available" and there are "there have been calls for it to be banned altogether." Without this, patients must be apprised of "potential short- and long-term harmful effects, such as memory loss and brain damage."
In October 2018, a California court ruled there was sufficient evidence for a reasonable jury to find that an ECT device caused brain injury. The manufacturer settled the case and posted on its website that ECT may cause permanent brain damage.[2]
In an email produced during a deposition, a psychiatrist and CEO of an ECT device manufacturing company, revealed this was not for patient protection, but the "goals of the warning statement" were "one, to prevent lawsuits, and two, not alienate psychiatrists."[3]
On June 20, 2024, the California Supreme Court made a landmark decision that a patient could sue the manufacturer for not giving a stronger warning about risks. The company did not dispute it failed to warn doctors of the risk of brain damage and permanent memory loss.[4]
Electroshock was first discovered in 1938 by Italian psychiatrist Ugo Cerletti who used it on pigs in a Rome slaughterhouse to quell their fear of being killed. Cerletti understood the effects ECT had when he experimented on patients: "When I saw the patient's reaction I thought to myself: this ought to be abolished!" Eighty-five years later, psychiatrists were still fixated on electroshocking pigs.
In a 2023 study, researchers, including the CEO of the ECT device maker, shocked a pork shoulder in an attempt to disprove cellular brain damage.
However, Kenneth Castleman, Ph.D., a biomedical engineer who has served on advisory committees for The National Institutes of Health and NASA, explains ECT-caused cell death: "Electrical energy is converted into heat inside the brain, raising its temperature. The larger the current, the more heat is produced. If the temperature gets too high the cells will suffer temporary injury, permanent damage, or even death." Additionally, through a process called "electroporation," the production of pores by electrical means, when the voltage is high enough, the "holes produced are too many and too large, thereby overwhelming the repair mechanism. Toxic material rushes in, and the cell dies. ECT risks brain cell damage both from heating and from electroporation."
More on TelAve News
A 2009 Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences study on electrical injury also notes: "Four mechanisms of cellular injury by electricity are presently known. They are the direct effects of the current, thermal burns, mechanical injury due to falls, and electroporation."[5]
Dr. Bennet Omalu, a Clinical Professor at the Department of Medical Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at the University of California, Davis, says that "The amounts of electrical energy introduced to the human brain by ECT machines can be nothing but harmful and dangerous" and can be "expected to cause cellular physiologic, biochemical, and anatomic injuries to the human brain."[6]
ECT device manufacturers have never undertaken clinical trials to determine the safety and efficacy of their machines and psychiatrists admit they don't know how ECT or "electricity" works.
Experts say electroshock is more brutal today than how it was portrayed in the Academy-Award-winning film One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest in 1975 because the voltage and amperage used is higher than in the past.
CCHR calls for all electroshock treatments to be prohibited.
If you or someone you know has been harmed or damaged by electroshock, please submit a report to CCHR here.
CCHR was established in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and professor of psychiatry, Thomas Szasz, securing hundreds of laws providing patient protections in the mental health industry, including banning deep sleep treatment involving electroshock.
[1] www.wisnerbaum.com/defective-medical-device-injuries/ect/
[2] www.madinamerica.com/2019/06/ect-litigation-patients-not-warned-brain-damage-risk/
[3] www.wisnerbaum.com/blog/2023/august/electroshock-therapy-ect-trial-jury-finds-somati/
[4] www.wisnerbaum.com/blog/2024/june/wisner-baum-prevails-in-landmark-win-for-patient/
[5] Brandon C. Bryan, et al., "Electrical Injury, Part 1: Mechanisms," Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences, Vol.1, No. 3, 1 July 2009
[6] www.wisnerbaum.com/defective-medical-device-injuries/ect/
CCHR argues that growing consumer awareness and court rulings on informed consent—including making electroshock device manufacturers liable for failing to inform of brain damage—could spell the practice's demise—which CCHR urges.
It disputes the current claim that 100,000 Americans receive electroshock treatment each year, as it is based on a study that is 30 years old. No federal agency tracks the number of people electroshocked, despite the practice causing severe memory loss and brain injury. It has often fallen to CCHR to obtain the information through Freedom of Information Act requests to states.
A sample of 27 states providing statistics on the use of ECT under Medicaid in 2023, revealed only 3,641 people given it at a cost of nearly $9 million—no longer the multi-billion-dollar money spinner it has been. Compared to 2020, for example, Vermont decreased its use by 57.7% and Massachusetts by 40.4%, making the practice redundant.
"The truth is that a very small minority in the medical community still accept and strongly advocate for ECT shock therapy," according to one Los Angeles law firm litigating on behalf of ECT survivors. "It was recently estimated that fewer than 1,000 psychiatrists practice ECT in the U.S., out of a national total of approximately 49,000 psychiatrists."[1]
CCHR recently distributed its documentary, Therapy or Torture: The Truth About Electroshock to thousands of attorneys across the country, offering facts that consumers are not told by those administering ECT.
More on TelAve News
- Trump's Executive Order Rescheduling Cannabis: Accelerating M&A in a Multibillion-Dollar Industry
- Genuine Hospitality, LLC Selected to Operate Hilton Garden Inn Birmingham SE / Liberty Park
- Documentary "Prescription for Violence: Psychiatry's Deadly Side Effects" Premieres, Exposes Link Between Psychiatric Drugs and Acts of Mass Violence
- Price Improvement on Luxurious Lāna'i Townhome with Stunning Ocean Views
- Nextvisit Co-Founder Ryan Yannelli Identifies Six Critical Factors for Behavioral Health Providers Evaluating AI Scribes in 2026
The amount of involuntary use of ECT in the U.S. is unknown, yet a July 2018 UN Human Rights Council report determined that forced ECT constitutes "torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment." The 2023 WHO and OHCHR guidance on Mental Health, Human Rights, and Legislation reiterates that ECT without consent "may constitute torture and ill-treatment."
The guidance notes: "In Slovenia and Luxembourg, ECT is not available" and there are "there have been calls for it to be banned altogether." Without this, patients must be apprised of "potential short- and long-term harmful effects, such as memory loss and brain damage."
In October 2018, a California court ruled there was sufficient evidence for a reasonable jury to find that an ECT device caused brain injury. The manufacturer settled the case and posted on its website that ECT may cause permanent brain damage.[2]
In an email produced during a deposition, a psychiatrist and CEO of an ECT device manufacturing company, revealed this was not for patient protection, but the "goals of the warning statement" were "one, to prevent lawsuits, and two, not alienate psychiatrists."[3]
On June 20, 2024, the California Supreme Court made a landmark decision that a patient could sue the manufacturer for not giving a stronger warning about risks. The company did not dispute it failed to warn doctors of the risk of brain damage and permanent memory loss.[4]
Electroshock was first discovered in 1938 by Italian psychiatrist Ugo Cerletti who used it on pigs in a Rome slaughterhouse to quell their fear of being killed. Cerletti understood the effects ECT had when he experimented on patients: "When I saw the patient's reaction I thought to myself: this ought to be abolished!" Eighty-five years later, psychiatrists were still fixated on electroshocking pigs.
In a 2023 study, researchers, including the CEO of the ECT device maker, shocked a pork shoulder in an attempt to disprove cellular brain damage.
However, Kenneth Castleman, Ph.D., a biomedical engineer who has served on advisory committees for The National Institutes of Health and NASA, explains ECT-caused cell death: "Electrical energy is converted into heat inside the brain, raising its temperature. The larger the current, the more heat is produced. If the temperature gets too high the cells will suffer temporary injury, permanent damage, or even death." Additionally, through a process called "electroporation," the production of pores by electrical means, when the voltage is high enough, the "holes produced are too many and too large, thereby overwhelming the repair mechanism. Toxic material rushes in, and the cell dies. ECT risks brain cell damage both from heating and from electroporation."
More on TelAve News
- CredHub and Real Property Management Join Forces to Empower Franchise Owners with Rental Payment Credit Reporting Solutions
- Leimert Park Announces Weeklong Kwanzaa Festival & Kwanzaa Parade Celebrating Black History, Culture, and Community
- Renowned Alternative Medicine Specialist Dr. Sebi and His African Bio Mineral Balance Therapy Are the Focus of New Book
- Psychiatric Drug Damage Ignored for Decades; CCHR Demands Federal Action
- Why Millions Are Losing Sexual Sensation, And Why It's Not Age, Hormones, or Desire
A 2009 Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences study on electrical injury also notes: "Four mechanisms of cellular injury by electricity are presently known. They are the direct effects of the current, thermal burns, mechanical injury due to falls, and electroporation."[5]
Dr. Bennet Omalu, a Clinical Professor at the Department of Medical Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at the University of California, Davis, says that "The amounts of electrical energy introduced to the human brain by ECT machines can be nothing but harmful and dangerous" and can be "expected to cause cellular physiologic, biochemical, and anatomic injuries to the human brain."[6]
ECT device manufacturers have never undertaken clinical trials to determine the safety and efficacy of their machines and psychiatrists admit they don't know how ECT or "electricity" works.
Experts say electroshock is more brutal today than how it was portrayed in the Academy-Award-winning film One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest in 1975 because the voltage and amperage used is higher than in the past.
CCHR calls for all electroshock treatments to be prohibited.
If you or someone you know has been harmed or damaged by electroshock, please submit a report to CCHR here.
CCHR was established in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and professor of psychiatry, Thomas Szasz, securing hundreds of laws providing patient protections in the mental health industry, including banning deep sleep treatment involving electroshock.
[1] www.wisnerbaum.com/defective-medical-device-injuries/ect/
[2] www.madinamerica.com/2019/06/ect-litigation-patients-not-warned-brain-damage-risk/
[3] www.wisnerbaum.com/blog/2023/august/electroshock-therapy-ect-trial-jury-finds-somati/
[4] www.wisnerbaum.com/blog/2024/june/wisner-baum-prevails-in-landmark-win-for-patient/
[5] Brandon C. Bryan, et al., "Electrical Injury, Part 1: Mechanisms," Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences, Vol.1, No. 3, 1 July 2009
[6] www.wisnerbaum.com/defective-medical-device-injuries/ect/
Source: Citizens Commission on Human Rights
0 Comments
Latest on TelAve News
- TRIO Heating, Air & Plumbing Now Ranks #1 in San Jose
- Milwaukee Job Corps Center Hosts Alumni Day, Calls Alumni to Action on Open Enrollment Campaign
- Golden Paper Identifies Global Growth in Packaging Papers and Upgrades Its High-End Production Capacity
- Champagne, Caviar Bumps & Pole Performances — Welcome the New Year Early with HandPicked Social Club
- A New Soul Album: Heart Of Kwanzaa, 7-Day Celebration
- Allegiant Management Group Named 2025 Market Leader in Orlando by PropertyManagement.com
- NAFMNP Awarded USDA Cooperative Agreement to Continue MarketLink Program Under FFAB
- Costa Oil - 10 Minute Oil Change Surpasses 70 Locations with Construction of San Antonio, TX Stores — Eyes Growth Via Acquisition or Being Acquired
- LaTerra and Respark Under Contract with AIMCO to Acquire a $455M, 7-Property Chicago Multifamily Portfolio
- Record Revenue, Tax Tailwinds, and AI-Driven Scale: Why Off The Hook YS Inc. Is Emerging as a Standout in the $57 Billion U.S. Marine Market
- VSee Health (N A S D A Q: VSEE) Secures $6.0M At-Market Investment, Accelerates Expansion as Revenues Surge
- Children Rising Appoints Marshelle A. Wilburn as New Executive Director
- Fairmint CEO Joris Delanoue Elected General Director of the Canton Foundation
- Sleep Basil Mattress Co.'s Debuts New Home Page Showcasing Performance Sleep Solutions for Active Denver Lifestyles
- Bent Danholm Joins The American Dream TV as Central Florida Host
- The Nature of Miracles Celebrates 20th Anniversary Third Edition Published by DreamMakers Enterprises LLC
- Artificial Intelligence Leader Releases Children's Book on Veterans Day
- Felicia Allen Hits #1 Posthumously with "Christmas Means Worship"
- CCHR Documentary Probes Growing Evidence Linking Psychiatric Drugs to Violence
- Creative Investment Research Warns AT&T Rollback Undermines Market Integrity
