Legislative Battles,
Debates, New Laws On ECT
United Kingdom
A response to the UK Mental Health Bill from
someone who prefers to remain anonymous
New York State
On May 18, 2001, Assemblyman Marty Luster held public hearings on the issue of
ECT.
Testimony:
Leonard Roy Frank
Linda Andre
Anne Krauss
John Friedberg, MD
John Breeding, PhD
Anna Szyszko, sister of Adam
Materials in the Luster Press Packet (Press
conference held June 11, 2001)
*Press statement from Anna Szyszko
(brother is *Adam)
*Press release from Assemblyman
Luster
*Summary of the APA findings
*ECT practices in the community
*Summary from Mental Hygiene Legal
Services
*Letter from Assemblyman Luster to Chairman Gary O'Brien of the NYS Commission
on Quality of Care for the Mentally Disabled, expressing concerns over the
treatment of Paul Henri Thomas and others, and asking questions of the
chairman: Page 1 Page
2 Page 3
New bills have been
introduced into the New York Assembly:
Analysis of
the bills
Assemblyman Luster has introduced:
9081: Requires every facility which administers electroconvulsive
therapy to provide full disclosure of the benefits and side effects of such
therapy, gain the written consent of the patient to such therapy, include a
copy of such disclosure and consent in the patient`s records, and establish a
protocol for determining patients' capacity.
Summary |
Bill
Text
9082: Establishes the temporary advisory
council on electroconvulsive therapy practices to make recommendations to the
commissioner of mental health on rules and regulations to be adopted relating
to such practices.
Summary |
Bill
Text
9083:Requires facilities which
administer electroconvulsive therapy to report to the office of mental health
on a quarterly basis and the use of such therapy; requires such office to
annually report, on or before October 1, to the governor, temporary president
of the senate and speaker of the assembly on the information received from such
facilities.
Summary |
Bill
Text
9084: Requires every facility
administering electroconvulsive therapy to be readily accessible to resources
needed for emergency treatment while maintaining proximity to inpatient
psychiatric units.
Summary |
Bill
Text
Assemblyman Ortiz has introduced:
8960: Enacts provisions relating to the use of electroconvulsive
therapy; bans the use of such therapy on persons less than 16 years of age and
restricts the use of such therapy on persons 65 years of age or older.
Summary |
Bill
Text
More public hearings will be held July 18, 2001
in Albany to further investigate ECT, and, in particular, the issues of
informed consent and procedural safeguards that may be necessary when
involuntary, court ordered ECT is being considered.
News coverage:
New York Daily News:
Shock Method Eyed
New York Post: Callous shock docs zap holes in
people's lives
Angry Pol Would Rein in Zap-Hapy State Shock
Docs
Dad's Rights Zapped by the Shock Docs
Electroshock turns Hillside to Hellside
Newsday: Shocking Treatment - Electroconvulsive
therapy's return stirs debate on use
Missouri HB134
This bill would require quarterly ECT reporting in
Missouri. It passed the House, but was defeated in the state Senate. Sen. Betty
Sims opposed the bill, saying it was too "controversial."
Channel 11 carried a brief
report on the bill as it headed to committee.
New Hampshire
This bill is gaining support from nearly everyone but
those who stand to profit. HB406 will prohibit ECT on children under the age of
16. New Hampshire organizers are urging those who have had ECT to tell their
stories to concerned parties, particularly the legislators who sponsored the
bill.
Activity in Texas
The state of Texas is a hotbed of ECT activity. It is one of the few states in
the nation that keeps any kind of records on ECT treatments, and legislators
there have introduced a number of bills trying to regulate ECT. And, because of
the recordkeeping that does not exist in most states, regulatory agencies are
able to keep track of violations.
Vermont House passes shock bill
Morgan Brown reports on a controversial shock bill
passed in January 2000 by the Vermont House of Representatives.
The Journal of the Vermont House of Representatives
The bill as introduced
The bill as passed by the House.
Banned in Italy
Northern Italy bans shock on children, pregnant women
and the elderly!
More on the
Italy news, from the British medical journal Lancet.
Protesters call for ban in Alaska
"In the U.S., a psychiatrist who uses ECT makes
about twice as much as one who won't use it."
ECT shocks to the health system
Patients and researchers voice their concerns about ECT,
Parliamentary Leader agrees to meet and discuss.
Therapy return to Niagara sparks
debate
St. Catharines General Hospital has agreed to be the regional provider of shock
therapy, sparking raging debate among mental health
professionals over whether the technique helps or harms.
Personal accounts of survivors.
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