Texas ECT debate simmers as
national controversy flares.
Mental Health Weekly, 05-22-1995
Just after mental health leaders in the state of Texas appeared
to fight off a move to ban electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) there,
federal mental health officials unwittingly found themselves in
their own ECT imbroglio.
Angry advocates for the mentally ill have fired off letters to
ConFess and the Center for Mental Health Services (CMHS) in response
to an April CMHS memo that expressed the agency's interest in
furthering discussion of "electroconvulsive therapy,
involuntary treatment and related issues." Advocates say any
attempt to couple ECT and involuntary treatment is misguided and
plays into the hands of what they consider to be extremist groups,
such as those that this year tried unsuccessfully to persuade Texas
legislators to ban ECT outright.
"Of all the things that are at a crisis point in a rapidly
changing health care environment, CMHS does this?", Laurie
Flynn, executive director of the National Alliance for the Mentally
Ill, told MHW. "When are they going to spend time on (issues
such as) patients' access to clozapine?"
Responding to concerns from groups such as the National Alliance
for the Mentally Ill, the American Psychiatric Association and the
National Depressive and Manic-Depressive Association, CMHS director
Bernard S. Arons, M.D., told MHW that the federal agency never
intended to give ammunition to those who consider ECT an outright
dangerous practice. Scientific evidence confirms the efficacy of the
treatment, which is used most often in cases of severe affective
disorders such as major depression, Arons said.
As for CMHS's intent in issuing the April memo, which Arons
explained was to encourage a larger discussion of finding preventive
ways to reduce the need for involuntary mental health treatment,
Arons said, "We may not have been as clear as possible."
CMHS mentioned ECT in its memo, Arons said, because it recently
has received many letters about the appropriateness of ECT from both
sides of the fence.
But advocates fear that ECT opponents, included those affiliated
with the Church of Scientology, will use the invitation to discuss
"ECT and involuntary treatment" to storm Capitol Hill with
proposals for a national ban.
In Texas, a move to ban the practice statewide appears to have
fizzled for 1995. After an April 18 hearing in which 60 members of
the public addressed a House of Representatives committee on a
proposed ban (see MHW, April 17), the committee returned the ECT
bill to the subcommittee level, essentially killing its chances for
this year.
William H. Reid, M.D., medical director of the Texas Department
of Mental Health and Mental Retardation, told MHW that he believes
the bill would have failed had it come to a final vote.
Some Texas patients who say ECT harmed them argued for the ban,
saying there is no accountability on the use of the practice among
mental health professionals. Opponents of a ban say the
anti-psychiatry Citizens Commission on Human Rights, founded in 1969
by the Church of Scientology, is fueling the debate in Texas and
nationally.
John Bush, executive director of the Texas Society of Psychiatric
Physicians, told MHW that ban supporters eventually will be back
before state legislators. "This group has vowed to ban ECT
either in future legislative sessions or in the courts," he
said.
As for the recent national flare-up, advocates have asked
Congress to request that CMHS scrap any plans to include ECT, which
is usually administered on a voluntary basis, in any review of
involuntary treatment issues. The CMHS memo mentions plans to
conduct "further analyses of the 1985 (National Institute of
Mental Health) Consensus Development Conference on ECT which
indicated the efficacy of ECT for some patients. "
Flynn remarked, "This is taking the issue of involuntary
treatment, which is highly controversial, and entangling it with
ECT, which shouldn't be."
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