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Doctors
of Deception
Price: $26.95
Subtitle:
What They Don't Want
You to Know about Shock Treatment
Author: Linda Andre
Subject: Health and Medicine
Cloth ISBN:
978-0-8135-4441-0
Pages:
336 pages
Publication Date:
February 2009
Praise for Doctors
of Deception
"This book is
absolutely fascinating and extraordinarily well-written. It is a major
contribution to the current literature."
—Michael Perlin, professor of law, New York Law
School
"Linda Andre’s
book is both a powerful memoir of her own experience as an ECT
“patient” and a documented account of the underbelly of the 'shock
industry.' It raises profound questions about ECT that both psychiatry
and the National Institute of Mental Health—if they want to be honest
with the American public—desperately need to address."
—Robert Whitaker, author of Mad in
America: Bad Science, Bad Medicine, and the Enduring Mistreatment of
the Mentally Ill
"For many years,
activist and writer Linda Andre has been forcefully and cogently
examining the reigning (and mostly unchallenged) professed claims and
practices of our medical establishment's wizards of shock therapy. In
this thoroughly-researched, pathbreaking, and essential book, the
author undraws the curtains that have for too long cloaked these
claims, practices, and wizards. It is a work of courage, heart, and
brains"
—Jonathan Cott, author of On the
Sea of Memory
"This book is
brilliant analysis. It is successful on many levels, including its most
important task: presenting an overview of the history, safety and
efficacy of electro-convulsive therapy. The book is also a masterpiece
of scientific writing. Through her extensive personal and professional
research, Andre explained things I had already known about ECT, but
with additional clinical facts and exceptional insight. She detailed
the people and places that have formed the basis for the historical
foundations of ECT at the same time that she described the politics and
organizations that have continued to promote ECT as a safe and
effective modality."—Stefan Kruszewski MD, International Journal of
Risk and Safety in Medicine, 2009
Description:
Mechanisms and
standards exist to safeguard the health and welfare of the patient, but
for electroconvulsive therapy (ECT)—used to treat depression and other
mental illnesses—such approval methods have failed. Prescribed to
thousands over the years, public relations as opposed to medical trials
have paved the way for this popular yet dangerous and controversial
treatment option.
Doctors of Deception is a revealing
history of ECT (or shock therapy) in the United States, told here for
the first time. Through the examination of court records, medical data,
FDA reports, industry claims, her own experience as a patient of shock
therapy, and the stories of others, Andre exposes tactics used by the
industry to promote ECT as a responsible treatment when all the
scientific evidence suggested otherwise.
As early as the 1940s, scientific literature began reporting incidences
of human and animal brain damage resulting from ECT. Despite
practitioner modifications, deleterious effects on memory and cognition
persisted. Rather than discontinue use of ECT, the $5-billion-per-year
shock industry crafted a public relations campaign to improve ECT’s
image. During the 1970s and 1980s, psychiatry’s PR efforts misled the
government, the public, and the media into believing that ECT had made
a comeback and was safe.
Andre carefully intertwines stories of ECT survivors and activists with
legal, ethical, and scientific arguments to address issues of patient
rights and psychiatric treatment. Echoing current debates about the use
of psychopharmaceutical interventions shown to have debilitating
side-effects, she candidly presents ECT as a problematic therapy
demanding greater scrutiny, tighter control, and full disclosure about
its long-term cognitive effects.
About the Author:
Linda Andre
is a writer, activist, and the director of the Committee for Truth in
Psychiatry. Since receiving ECT in the early 1980s, she has been an
advocate for the human and civil rights of psychiatrically labelled
people, particularly the right to truthful informed consent. She has
been interviewed by numerous publications and media such as 20/20,
The New York Times, and the Washington Post.
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Price: $26.95
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