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SHOCKED! ECT Home
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Dad's
Rights Zapped
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"I told him she can't decide, it's like talking to a child," Hernandez said. "It's OK," the doctor said. "We'll have to go to court."
Hillside spokeswoman Michelle Pinto said privacy laws prevent her from talking about a patient. She, however, points out the state Office of Mental Health has "strict guidelines" that enable hospitals to zap patients through court action.
That attitude mirrors the action of the state-run Pilgrim Psychiatric Center in Long Island, which is holding Adam Szyszko, 25, and fighting a court battle to re-zap him - despite his parents' objections.
The stench convinced two state legislators to introduce two bills last week to rein in the zap-happy doctors, establish laws to better monitor the practice and increase parents' rights.
Hernandez, who worked as a custodian at the Brooklyn Public Library for 27 years, is a simple man who's gearing for a do-or-die fight with the system. Every day he drives to the hospital on the Queens/Long Island border because he believes Dina, her illness, and the struggle to care for her, are a blessing from God.
That's why a lightning pain rips his heart
whenever he's about to leave his imprisoned daughter - she bolts to the locked
door in her second-floor ward, grabs the doorknob and says:
"Daddy, I want to go home."
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