Shock therapy
scrutinized in wake of woman's death
Lawmakers want to halt unnecessary treatments
AMARILLO - The death of a chronically ill 79-year-old woman in a
mental hospital has focused new attention on the emotional debate
over electroshock therapy as a treatment for depression.
The woman, whose identity is protected by confidentiality laws,
died 24 hours after a shock treatment Dec. 30, 1995. Medical records
described her as confused and disoriented when she signed into The
Pavilion on Dec. 27.
The Pavilion is an 85-bed, private psychiatric hospital in
Amarillo, the heart of the Texas Panhandle. The woman was kept in
the hospital's locked geriatric ward.
State legislators are pointing to her death and others like it
across the state as they consider new laws to prevent hospitals and
psychiatrists from giving unnecessary shock treatments to elderly
people covered by Medicare.
"It {shock therapy} could be a moneymaker for those who use
it unscrupulously," said Sen. Jerry Patterson, R-Pasadena, who
is sponsoring legislation to put more regulations on shock therapy
for the elderly.
Pavilion administrators deny that shock therapy is a high-profit
procedure. They say medical reviews found no evidence that shock
treatment contributed to the the woman's death.
Still, critics have designated Amarillo and The Pavilion as
"the shock capital of Texas."
State records say psychiatrists gave the treatment to 201
Pavilion patients during the year ending Aug. 31, 1996 - more than
any other Texas hospital. Memorial Southwest Hospital in Houston
ranked second with 126 shock patients.
Under fire from Texas and federal regulators, the hospital
announced that it stopped providing shock therapy May 1.
"It is a corporate business decision," said Richard
Failla, The Pavilion's top administrator. "There has been a lot
of {anti-shock therapy} propaganda over the last 18 months. And
harassment of hospitals that do it."
State records kept during a three-year period ending Sept. 1,
1996, show that 17 Texas mental patients died within 14 days of
receiving a shock treatment. The records, which include the Amarillo
woman, do not allege cause-and-effect between the treatments and
death.
Mr. Patterson's bill would require two doctors to certify that
shock treatment is medically necessary for patients 65 or older. It
also requires the doctors to inform patients or their legal guardian
whether shock treatment might worsen other medical conditions.
The proposed law passed the Senate last month and was reported
out of a House committee with no amendments. It awaits consideration
by the full House. The Legislature adjourns June 2.
Patient gave consent
Texas Department of Health inspectors examined a random series of
patient records at The Pavilion in February and March. The
79-year-old woman was among them.
Inspectors said she had undergone knee replacement surgery,
suffered a post-surgical heart attack and "an exacerbation of
congestive heart failure." She also had a urinary tract
infection.
The woman was put in a nursing home. Records said her medical
problems had stabilized and that depression had become "her
major health problem."
The nursing home transferred her to The Pavilion on Dec. 27,
1995. Medical records said she was suffering from unstable blood
sugar related to diabetes, incontinence, bedsores on her buttocks
and swollen hands and feet.
"She was able to ambulate only 3-4 steps only with maximum
assistance, choking easily on food or fluid, needing total
assistance with personal care." She was also disoriented and
confused, according to inspection reports.
"This patient, although not competent to give informed
consent, was allowed to sign herself into the psychiatric unit and
to sign for {shock therapy}," inspectors wrote.
Inspectors said The Pavilion violated a 3-year-old state law by
allowing the woman and several other mentally incompetent patients
to sign themselves into the hospital and then sign papers consenting
to shock therapy.
The woman took her first shock treatment Dec. 29 - two days after
arriving at The Pavilion. Nurses found her "unresponsive"
at 7:15 a.m. the next day. She died several hours later.
The federal Health Care Financing Administration, which monitors
the Medicare program, considered the case serious enough to put the
hospital on "the short track" toward terminating Medicare
reimbursements for patient care.
Andrew R. Perez, a federal official who monitors hospital
quality, sent The Pavilion a warning letter April 11. He said the
hospital constituted "a serious and immediate jeopardy to
patient health and safety." He gave The Pavilion 10 days to
submit a corrective plan of action or face loss of its Medicare
privileges by May 8.
"The case itself is terrible, obviously," Mr. Perez
said. "It's very serious anytime we take an action like
this."
Health care experts say most hospitals depend on Medicare for 35
percent to 50 percent of annual revenue. Termination would be
devastating for a hospital, they say.
Regulators oversee 500 Texas hospitals. The Pavilion was one of
11 put on the short termination track since July, federal officials
said.
Dr. Michael Jenkins, The Pavilion's medical director, said the
hospital changed its admitting policy. Patients must now be
"factually competent" - meaning they must know the time,
place, who they are talking to and the nature of their medical
problem - before they can sign themselves into the hospital.
The new policy leaves few treatment options, Dr. Jenkins said.
"These rules tell me to send the patient back to the nursing
home," he said. "Medical literature tells me to treat the
patient. So what do I do?"
Inspectors came back to The Pavilion early in May and found
enough positive changes to take it off the termination track.
Some say therapy safe
The health care industry's formal name for shock treatment is
electro-convulsive therapy, or ECT. Psychiatrists say they prescribe
it only after psychoactive drugs fail to relieve debilitating
depression or manic depression.
To the chagrin of shock treatment opponents, nationally
recognized professional associations of psychiatrists and physicians
all recognize ECT as safe and effective.
The therapy typically comes in a series of five to 10 treatments
- a treatment every other day over a two- or three-week period.
Sometimes, doctors give a single "maintenance treatment"
on an outpatient basis.
Psychiatrists administer the procedure in a hospital's surgical
suite. After anesthesia, electrodes are attached to the unconscious
patient's head. At the other end of the wires is a briefcase-sized
machine that provides the electric pulse. The electricity is applied
for about a second, inducing a seizure that lasts 20-30 seconds.
Opponents say those seizures can result in brain damage, epilepsy
and prolonged memory loss.
ECT advocates say the electricity-induced seizure changes the
brain's chemistry for the better, eliminating suicidal tendencies
and improving the patient's life.
Last month, the Texas Senate's committee on health and human
services heard testimony on Mr. Patterson's bill requiring two
physicians to review medical records before the elderly receive ECT.
Some patients said ECT is the only thing standing between them
and suicide.
"It is better for me to have the treatments because the
other choice I have is death," Virginia West, a manic
depressive, told the committee.
Others said ECT impaired their ability to think, work or perform
routine tasks such as getting dressed.
"It has devastated my life," said Jane Betzen, a former
ECT patient. "It's inhumane. It needs to be stopped."
Numbers questioned
State regulators accused The Pavilion of giving shock treatment
to too many patients. Pavilion administrators said the number - 201
patients in the most recent 12-month reporting period - looked big
because the hospital serves a vast area of the Texas Panhandle,
western Oklahoma, southern Colorado, eastern New Mexico and the
southwest corner of Kansas.
Pavilion administrators say their company didn't even own the
hospital when the 79-year-old woman died Dec. 30, 1995.
Records show Pennsylvania-based Universal Health Services Inc.
bought the Pavilion and its parent, Northwest Texas Hospital, from
the publicly owned Amarillo Hospital District about a year ago -
some four months after the death.
The Pavilion and 45 other Texas hospitals reported giving shock
treatments to 1,781 patients from Sept. 1, 1995, to Aug. 31, 1996,
according to reports on file at Texas Department of Mental Health
and Mental Retardation.
County, state and federal tax dollars paid for a vast majority of
the treatments.
Copyright 1997, The Dallas Morning News.
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