Posts Tagged ‘Ireland’

Ireland: Psychiatry has “too much power” to electroshock patients against their will causing memory loss/brain damage

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

Irish Times
By Carl O’Brien
March 16, 2010

A CONSULTANT psychiatrist employed by the HSE has warned that psychiatrists have “too much power” and that rules on the use of electro-shock therapy need to be changed to protect patients.

Dr Pat Bracken, clinical director for the West Cork mental health service, was speaking at a private briefing for members of the Oireachtas on whether changes are needed to laws governing use of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). These rules state that ECT can be used where a patient is “unable or unwilling” to give consent once it has been approved by two consultant psychiatrists.

Dr Bracken said this law meant there was no legal comeback for a patient who felt they had been harmed.

“In any other branch of medicine it would be unconscionable to allow a procedure to go ahead, except in the most dire emergency, without procuring consent, if not from the patient then from a next-of-kin,” he said.

He said ECT was the “most invasive procedure” currently used by psychiatrists and that research showed that at least a third of recipients had suffered substantial memory loss after treatment.

Read entire article:  http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/health/2010/0316/1224266346885.html

« Return to news items


Share

In Ireland protests heat up over psychiatrists ability to force unwilling patients to undergo electroshock

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

Irish Times
By Carl O’Brien
February 2, 2010

A major debate is unfolding over the use of forced ECTon psychiatric patients

SHOULD A mentally ill patient in distress be forced to undergo electric shock treatment against his or her will?

It’s a question which goes to the heart of a growing debate over one of the most controversial and invasive procedures used in psychiatric care.

Rightly or wrongly, no other treatment arouses as much fear as electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). Depending on who you talk to, ECT is an effective and fast-acting treatment for severe depressive disorders, or it is a potentially dangerous procedure unsupported by research and whose side effects include long-term memory loss.

The growing recognition of patients’ human rights, as well as lobbying by organised advocacy groups, means the issue is now on the political agenda. But the debate is wider than just use of this procedure; it also touches on the key question of just how much power and responsibility should we place in the hands of consultant psychiatrists?

Read entire article:  http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/health/2010/0202/1224263563057.html

« Return to news items


Share

Irish psychiatric wards deemed “unfit for human habitation” – patients found abused, mistreated, electroshocked

Monday, December 28th, 2009

Donal Thornton
IrishCentral.com
December 28, 2009

Irish state health inspectors have warned that many of Ireland’s psychiatric wards may be closed as they are “unfit for human habitation.” Irish health inspectors have uncovered evidence of bad management and untrained medical staff administering electric shock therapy to patients in psychiatric wards around the country.

The results of the inspectors findings were revealed in a report by the Inspectorate of Mental Health Services. The Irish state caters for over 2,700 patients in its 63 psychiatric institutions.

Practically all of the bad reports were confined to Victorian era health wards that the authorities have been waiting to close for the last 20 years.

Inspectors reported seeing patients wandering “aimlessly” around St. Brendan’s psychiatric ward in Dublin and were concerned that patients were been accommodated in “unsuitable” conditions.

Read entire article: http://www.irishcentral.com/news/Irish-psychiatric-wards-unfit-for-human-habitation-80198882.html

« Return to news items


Share