In reply to this from Paul Brandon on ECT
>And then there's the hypothesis that people change the way that
>they talk about themselves in order to avoid going through t again.

I responded briefly:
>Only someone who has no conception of the indescribable
>nightmare of living through prolonged clinical depression
>could believe something like that.

To which Paul replied:
>Allen – the severity of a problem is not proof of the
>effectiveness of a given treatment

That is a non sequitur. I said nothing about the effectiveness of ECT. 
The point I was making was that whatever the (understandable) fears 
about undergoing ECT, and the immediate reaction, it would not compare 
with the minute-by-minute pain of severe clinical depression. William 
Styron, for instance, described his experience as "suffering beyond 
expression".

Of course patients' experiences of ECT vary widely, but how would, 
e.g., Dick Cavett's report of his ECT treatment – "My wife was dubious, 
but when she came into my room afterward, I sat up and said, 'Look 
who's back among the living'," -- fit with the "they only say it to 
avoid more treatment" notion.
http://bipolar.about.com/cs/celebs/a/dickcavett.htm

Or consider this balanced comment in a letter to the Irish Times in 
2010 on a subject not always treated in a nuanced way:

"I do have great sympathy with anyone who has been adversely affected 
by ECT. In my case, it lifted me out of the depths of suicidal despair 
twice, and enabled me to resume a normal and fulfilling life again."
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/letters/2010/0112/1224262121159.html

Allen Esterson
Former lecturer, Science Department
Southwark College, London
allenester...@compuserve.com
http://www.esterson.org

---------------------------------------------------
From:   Paul Brandon <pkbra...@hickorytech.net>
Subject:        Re: How ECT Works?
Date:   Tue, 20 Mar 2012 09:26:12 -0500
Allen--
The severity of a problem is not proof of the effectiveness of a given
treatment.
The question here is what the most parsimonious explanation is of why 
people
report that ECT is effective.
We must at least consider alternative explanations before 
systematically
eliminating them (see Mike Williams' post).

On Mar 20, 2012, at 3:10 AM, Allen Esterson wrote:

> Paul Brandon wrote on ECT:
>> And then there's the hypothesis that people change the way that
>> they talk about themselves in order to avoid going through it again.
>
> Paul: Only someone who has no conception of the indescribable 
nightmare
> of living through prolonged clinical depression could believe 
something
> like that.
>
> Allen Esterson
> Former lecturer, Science Department
> Southwark College, London
> allenester...@compuserve.com
> http://www.esterson.org
>
> -------------------------------------------------------------
> From:         Paul Brandon <pkbra...@hickorytech.net>
> Subject:      Re: How ECT Works?
> Date:         Mon, 19 Mar 2012 19:34:59 -0500
>
> And then there's the hypothesis that people change the way that they
> talk about themselves in order to avoid going through it again.
>
> On Mar 19, 2012, at 6:19 PM, Michael Palij wrote:
>
>> A new research study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
>> Sciences (PNAS) claims that electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) reduces
> the
>> "crosstalk" among three neural networks in the brain, bringing their
>> level back to that of nondepressed "normal" people.   One population
>> media is available here:

Paul Brandon
Emeritus Professor of Psychology
Minnesota State University, Mankato
pkbra...@hickorytech.net





From:   Paul Brandon <pkbra...@hickorytech.net>
Subject:        Re: How ECT Works?
Date:   Tue, 20 Mar 2012 09:27:36 -0500
Again possible, but needs to be -systematically- demonstrated, not just
anecdotally.

On Mar 20, 2012, at 5:47 AM, Lilienfeld, Scott O wrote:

> It also does not square with the findings of several studies 
indicating that
many or most patients who have undergone ECT describe the treatment as 
less
disturbing or frightening than a trip to the dentist:
>
> See e.g., http://bjp.rcpsych.org/content/137/1/8
>
> ....Scott
>
> Scott O. Lilienfeld, Ph.D.
> Department of Psychology, Room 473
> Emory University
> Atlanta, Georgia 30322
>


From:   Paul Brandon <pkbra...@hickorytech.net>
Subject:        Re: How ECT Works?
Date:   Tue, 20 Mar 2012 09:32:17 -0500
Ed--

These observations are consistent with your point, but do not prove it.
I'd still like to see something more rigorous.
I'm not denying that ECT -may- work, but given the fact that it's a bit 
of a blunt instrument with serious potential side effects, I'd like to 
see stronger support.

On Mar 20, 2012, at 7:09 AM, Pollak, Edward (Retired) wrote:


  Paul Brandon  wrote, "And then there's the hypothesis that people 
change the way that they talk about themselves in order to avoid going 
through it again."
That bit of nonsense has been around for many years despite extensive 
evidence against it and virtually no supporting evidence. I wish that 
instructors would stop promoting this absurd hypothesis. I've been 
listening to this humanistic clap trap for 40 years and it really needs 
to end.
The most obvious disconfirming observations include a) ECT is equally 
effective whether the treatment is given "eyes open" or under general 
anesthesia.  If the "avoidance hypothesis" is correct, one would 
predict that ECT given "eyes open" would be far superior to ECT given 
under general anesthesia. b) The fact that ECT is decidedly ineffective 
in most other disorders. If depressives change there behavior to avoid 
"going through it again" then why wouldn't that be true of patients 
with schizophrenia, mania, OCD, etc., etc.?
Ed

Paul Brandon
Emeritus Professor of Psychology
Minnesota State University, Mankato
pkbra...@hickorytech.net

-----------------------------------

From:   Lilienfeld, Scott O <slil...@emory.edu>
Subject:        RE: How ECT Works?
Date:   Tue, 20 Mar 2012 16:31:29 +0000
Paul - To believe that patients' self-reported improvement following 
ECT stems
 from a desire to avoid the treatment, one would also need to believe 
that:

(1) Even though most patients describe the procedure as no more 
threatening than
a trip to the dentist, their report is not especially plausible or at 
least not
plausible enough to be taken on its own merits (see Paul's message 
below);
(2) Even though scores of published studies on ECT assure patients' 
that their
self-report reports of depression are confidential, they somehow don't 
believe
this assurance of confidentiality, and instead think believe the 
treatment team
will gain access to this information and use it to decide on the course 
of
future treatment;
(3) Even though most (today, probably all) patients in published 
controlled
outcome studies of ECT give full informed consent regarding to whether 
to
receive the treatment (and therefore the treatment is voluntary), they 
somehow
don't believe that their participation is voluntary and instead believe 
that the
treatment will be forced upon them against their will.
(4) Even though patients in contemporary controlled studies of ECT are 
told they
will be randomly assigned to either a treatment arm or an alternative 
treatment
arm, they don't actually believe that the assignment is random, and 
instead
believe that the investigative team can decide at will whether to alter 
the
treatment plan on the basis of their self-reports.


Paul, I don't find this hypothesis for the effects of ECT on 
self-reported
depression in published studies at all plausible.  This isn't to say 
that lots
of reasonable questions can't be raised concerning the reported 
efficacy of ECT
(e.g., integrity of the blinding in sham ECT studies), only that I 
don't think
that this hypothesis holds water.

....Scott


Scott O. Lilienfeld, Ph.D.
Professor
Department of Psychology, Room 473
Emory University
36 Eagle Row
Atlanta, Georgia 30322
sli...@emory.edu; 404-727-1125

-----------------------------------------------

From:   Joan Warmbold <jwarm...@oakton.edu>
Subject:        Re: How ECT Works?
Date:   Tue, 20 Mar 2012 15:02:08 -0500 (CDT)
Since I don't think any one else has mentioned this, I would recommend
reading Carrie Fisher's book, Wishful Drinking, as she talks about her
experiences with ECT.  She admits to it causing memory loss but believes
these ongoing treatments are the only reason she is alive today.  This
woman is so open and frank about her life it's quite amazing--and she is
funny.

Joan
jwarm...@oakton.edu





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