TEXAS MH COMMUNITY BLASTS BILL TO BAN
ECT
By Jeffrey Green
Mental Health Weekly, 04-17-1995
At a time in which electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is enjoying perhaps
its greatest level of acceptance ever in the mainstream mental health community,
a Texas bill that would ban the practice has outraged mental health professionals.
The Texas House of Representatives' Public Health Committee on April
18 will hold a public hearing on the bill, which if passed would make Texas
the only state to ban use of ECT in all cases. Amid an atmosphere of psychiatric-hospital
scandal two years ago, Texas lawmakers adopted a ban on ECT for patients
16 years old and younger, along with strict regulations governing the use
of the treatment for adults.
Mental health professionals both within and outside Texas are assailing
the latest proposal, saying it is being fueled by the Citizens Commission
on Human Rights, a group the Church of Scientology founded in 1969 (see
MHW, June 6, 1994).
A number of patients who say electroconvulsive therapy harmed them also
are fighting for the ban, but critics of the bill argue that those who
oppose any form of mental health treatment have taken the lead role in
the effort.
"Should this bill pass, it will hurt our patients and our ability to
provide the best care possible," William H. Reid, M.D., medical director
of the Texas Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation, told MHW.
Reid stressed that his opinion on the bill is his own and does not represent
a position of his agency, which cannot take official stands on proposed
legislation.
Reid said that with improvements in anesthesiology and more knowledge
of appropriate durations of ECT for certain patients, the procedure is
safer than ever. Professionals use ECT most often in severe cases of affective
disorders, such as the most debilitating cases of major depression.
"ECT generally is used for those people that are so sick that something
definitive must be done to keep them alive," Richard Weiner, M.D., an associate
professor of psychiatry at Duke University and chairman of the American
Psychiatric Association's task force on ECT, told MHW.
But those who argue against the practice allege that in too many cases,
people are suffering harmful effects or worse from the procedure, which
usually is administered over several sessions.
Linda Andre, director of the New York-based Committee for Truth in Psychiatry,
told MHW that ECT resulted in her losing five years' worth of memory. She
says the Texas bill is necessary because state officials are not enforcing
regulations enacted two years ago, requiring documentation of all ECT procedures
and records of any deaths associated with the practice.
"They are not reporting deaths due to ECT, and are attempting to attribute
them to other things," Andre said.
But Reid said there has been full disclosure of all statewide data on
the use of ECT in the 18-month period since the 1993 law took effect.
Of the eight Texans during that period who died within two weeks of
receiving an ECT treatment, two had cases in which the death arguably could
have been related to the anesthesia administered before treatment, Reid
said. Officials found no connection between the patient's death and ECT
in any other cases, he said.
Reid added that about 22,000 ECT treatments occurred during the 18-
month time frame, with women receiving about two-thirds of the treatments
and persons of color receiving the treatment less often than whites. Nearly
all such treatments in Texas occur in the private system, with more and
more taking place on an outpatient basis, Reid said.
Though several mental health professionals believe the Texas bill ultimately
will not pass, many worry about the kind of emotion an event such as this
week's public hearing could generate. "We're dealing with the Texas legislature,
and anything can happen in the Texas legislature, " John Bush, executive
director of the Texas Society of Psychiatric Physicians, told MHW.
A broad coalition of Texas mental health professionals and advocates,
generally representing the entire mental health community there, have joined
forces to oppose the bill, which would impose criminal penalties on practitioners
who violate a ban.
Some of the groups arguing against the legislation are the Texas Society
of Psychiatric Physicians, the Texas Medical Association, the Texas Depressive
and Manic-Depressive Association, the state Alliance for the Mentally Ill
and Texas Mental Health Consumers
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