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Don’t swallow everything you’re told as the truth

May 22, 2019 By Deborah Schwartzkopff

Deborah Schwartzkopff

This is my last blog before turning ECTJustice.com over to the DK law group. It is a bittersweet moment for both myself and my web manager, Ron. ECTJustice.com has been a thrilling, heartbreaking, and joyous experience in which much has been learned. Much passion has gone into this. Thank you to those who supported me on this incredible journey.

My goal in psychiatric activism was to bring lawsuits around some aspect involving electroshock. The DK Law Group has just announced that it is joining forces with Baum Hedlund Aristei and Goldman, P.C. and other attorneys to prosecute on behalf of ECT victims nationwide. With our goal achieved, I can now happily investigate other interests outside of this area of activism.

In reflection, I realized I had one final warning to issue. The issue of turning over your power, and who you are, to an abusive person, whether it be a mate, or a professional treating you.

Are the “experts” always right?

I look back to my abusive marriage that fed me to psychiatry through gaslighting, minimizing, and other covert narcissistic maneuvers well hidden, in my marriage for almost 33 years. Coming from an extremely traumatic background, I became fodder for both my relationship in marriage and later psychiatry. I do not say this from the standpoint of a victim, but from one for whom this system is primed. In abusive relationships it is not uncommon for the woman to be identified having a mental health disorder, and is therefore identified as the “problem” in the relationship. We need more therapists trained in CPTSD and covert abuse.

Many of us want to be seen and heard. We want validation. We will agree to diagnosis and treatments for this. We will surrender our personhood it seems, to fit into a box that has an answer, whether medication, ECT, or therapy. I agreed to what they said of me. It seemed like the answer to all my difficulties.  Assigned an erroneous label, my responsibilities to myself seemed to evaporate.

I swallowed the pills and accepted the diagnosis, because all the experts had to be right. It was easier than admitting my life was messed up from beginning to present, and I had to take action to correct it. One wants the relationship so much for many reasons, that I found myself living up to the diagnosis, and trying to be “a good patient.” It is all so very dangerous and insidious one does not recognize in the moment. It nearly cost me my life.

It is a very rude awakening years later to realize what had all transpired. The lack of accountability by repeated providers around my care to include one psychiatric medical malpractice suit settled. The very next psychiatrist required reporting to the medical board for unethical conduct. The lack of accountability of a spouse who stood by and did little as I could have literally died daily. Before being plied by drugs and ECT, the lack of personal accountability to try and escape this system.

We turn our power, and opinions of who we are, over to people who have their very own issues, I believe often projected onto vulnerable patients. People go into this field often because they fight their own demons. We take the psychiatric labels they slap on us as gospel, and now we belong in some box, to be “treated.” We want to belong, and now we can join the groups that connect us, sadly through these labels rather than our personal defining strengths. I know I often went to a therapy session out of pure loneliness. The DSM should have loneliness at the head of their index.

Labeling

I acknowledge extreme states and suffering of many forms.  I know support groups are important in healing and have utilized them. But people should not be labeled for life.  A psychiatric label is based on someone’s opinion, on a given day, with given circumstances, and that can vary doctor to doctor. This will follow and impact you in all facets of your life.  It will become your “defining moment.” Don’t let it be that.

Drugs

In my opinion, psychoactive drugs should only be used after all other alternatives have been tried.  Due to their potential for serious side effects, drugs should only be used short term, in low doses, and only with the patient’s fully informed consent.  Patients deserve to know truth of drug side effects that may very well contribute to the worsening of their symptoms.

In addition to coming from a highly abusive background, I was put on SSRI drugs (for “depression” vs. CPTSD secondary to abuse).  That led not once, but twice to violent outcomes. Instead of the drug being removed to see if my condition improved or resolved, I was given many more drugs, labels, and eventually ECT. These drugs I feel are contributing to mass shootings in addition to increases in other forms of violence such as suicide.  The FDA requires a black box warning on SSRI packaging of the potential for increased suicidality.

Electroshock

Electroshock is brain damaging, and should never be used. Psychiatrists often justify electroshock by saying the patient is “treatment resistant.”  By shifting blame from the ineffective treatment (drugs that didn’t work) to the patient, they justify using a brain damaging procedure that many say does irreparable harm.  The much more likely truth is that before the shock, and before the drugs, the physician failed to search for and treat an underlying and undetected medical cause of the distress.  Or the physician simply failed to ask about possible physical or emotional abuse in the patient’s life, and help the patient deal with the actual source of the problem.

Disempowerment & Guilt

My abusive childhood and marriage made me compliant, in yet another abusive and dehumanizing system. It allowed me to swallow the truths of people who referenced a book verses referencing my personhood and my capabilities. They wanted to dis-empower me into being a “good and compliant patient”, by being patronizing and condescending towards me.  They tried to enforce compliance by using guilt and the love I had for my children. They set themselves above me, behind glass, so they could smugly label me.  They call themselves “healers” so they are able to sleep with themselves at night.

I know people suffer, because I too have suffered. I know many states labeling us as “ill” are often gifts to be managed and utilized. I believe there are those who do not want us to access what are, in many instances, Spiritual insights coming to fruition. Drugs and shock prevent us from being able to access these areas needed in our evolution.

In Reflection

NAMI is in the schools now.  It is principally funded and controlled by pharmaceutical companies.  It should be viewed for what it is, a marketing tool of Big Pharma.  Its purpose in the schools is to get our children on these highly addictive and dangerous drugs. Our children need to be taught boundaries and self-partnering skills. Skills such as meditation/yoga, conflict resolution and open dialogue. Focusing attention on wellness and creating community will lessen the need for mental health interventions such as labeling and drugging. Children will have positive attention toward healing and utilizing their struggles to benefit their growth and the growth of others.

A broken system

This system of accepting psychiatric labels, drugs, and shock, in order to be seen and heard in our suffering must change. The current system of us and them only separates.  The hierarchy will need to fall to establish the systems meant to evolve. I no longer accept the current system.

I look back at what I agreed to, what I tolerated, and I am angry at myself. To be seen and heard, I felt I had to live up to the diagnosis.  This is a sad revelation to me, knowing what I robbed my children of, and the harm I inflicted on them. In my immaturity, I did not recognize it.  I say all this, because I hope a parent may see themselves in my experience, and spare their children and themselves.

Rise up

Nothing is without purpose I have learned. We are all in this together, so please rise up.

Thank you and goodbye.

Filed Under: Articles

Failure to speak out against ECT

May 17, 2019 By Deborah Schwartzkopff

 

Deborah Schwartzkopff ECTJustice.com
Deborah Schwartzkopff

If damages around electroshock/ECT are so bad, why are more victims not speaking out?

Despite the stigma of having a mental health diagnosis, there are many reasons for this.  While I cannot speak for all my peers, I have had enough conversations to speak for quite a few.

All have traumatic brain injuries to one degree or another which involves apathy, and neuro/cognitive damages.  And in many instances there is a failure to even recognize damages secondary to the TBI outcome of anosognisia.

Anosognosia is a deficit of self-awareness, a condition in which a person with a disability seems unaware of its existence. Anosognosia results from physiological damage to brain structures,  and is thus a neurological disorder. This distinguishes the condition from denial, which is a psychological defense mechanism.

They have received little recognition and validation from providers, family and friends (who have been told their symptoms are psychiatric in nature). They have been actually blamed to a degree in outcomes “of not trying hard enough.” They come from a stigmatized background of psychiatric labeling, and are up against the societal structure of the most powerful. They have been gas lighted and minimized by those that should care the most.  When they ask for help it is often not provided. Many simply give up.  Suicide is not uncommon.

With post electrical injury there are outcomes of anxiety, depression, and PTSD.  It is difficult to risk speaking out. This greatly frustrates many because they so want to tell their truth and have it heard.

They are in jobs or in school, and their public revelations may make them fearful to come forward as this could impact their standings or how people may view them. Some may feel it is okay to have a mental health diagnosis.  But many may not want it known that “it got bad enough to require ECT.”

People have said they are so isolated in these outcomes that they cannot even share with family and friends the true devastation this has created. Often, family members encouraged ECT after speaking with the treating providers.  The victim may not want them to feel guilt for damages done, so they stay quiet. These are the concerns of many of my peers, their hearts!

Many come from trauma backgrounds where there was repeated gas lighting and minimizing of their distress.  It may just seem safer to not address and risk hostile responses on social media.

Many are still in relationship with providers that either performed the procedure or recommended the procedure. This is a double bind for the patient to know that this trusted provider was fully aware of the damages anticipated and did nothing to protect and warn. This greatly impacts their ability to trust anyone moving forward. Some of these providers are prescribing addictive drugs that another provider may not fill.  Victims will not risk exposing them for this reason.

Many cannot come to terms, and do not even want to acknowledge to themselves, what has happened.  It is just easier to not address. They give up hope.

If you have had ECT and can find it in yourself to comment or speak out when you see posts about electroshock it would help so much. Make use of your suffering and give it purpose in speaking out. In these times of biological psychiatry, you may find your family members and friends are at risk unless you speak out.

Your physician inflicted or recommended a procedure with known harmful outcomes. He or she took it upon themselves to use a device and perform a procedure that has had no FDA testing for safety or effectiveness. They did not bother to even let you know the device and procedure were classified as experimental.

They, in negligence of their lack of duty to warn, protect, and not cause harm, have impacted the rest of your life in outcomes you struggle with daily. Do not keep their secrets. You have a great deal to share to protect others. Please speak out. Lawyers can fight for justice for ECT victims.  Legislators can act to protect others from becoming future victims.  But, unless you speak out, how will they know?  How can they act?

Filed Under: Articles

Family Secrets

May 14, 2019 By Deborah Schwartzkopff

Some time back I took a trip…

Deborah Schwartzkopff ECTJustice.com
Deborah Schwartzkopff

Who ever I come into contact with, for even a brief period of time, I cannot help but share my experience with electroshock. It unsettles many.  The common response is, “are they still doing that”?  Another response I find frequently is that they share their family secrets of a loved one having had this “done to them.” I find that interesting phrasing and poignant. I assure them this is happening now at leading medical institutions, including Kaiser Permanente, and it is happening a lot.

During one particular trip, in 36 hours I met two people whose mothers had had electroshock. I was very happy to cross paths with a director/producer from L.A, and his wife. Learning of his occupation and possible ties to media, I slipped him my card and asked if he would help? It was a brief interaction.

The next morning I joined him and his wife for breakfast. He stated he had not yet had a chance to look at ectjustice.com. He seemed very sad in that moment, and reflective. He shared that his mother had had electroshock, and shared her outcomes. Learning what had actually happened to his mother at the hands of psychiatrists brought needed support.  He stated he would take this back to L.A., and try to assist with this.

A short time later, my path crossed with a woman in conversation. She is a healer. After quite some time she shared her experience as a teenager with her mother having electroshock. She stated that she and her mother had many fights because her mother would say she did not remember her being her daughter. She did not remember her daughter’s life.

Psychiatrists blamed the mother’s mental illness for her disorganization, confusion, agitation, etc. verses acknowledging the actual brain injury. This woman related how out of hurt and frustration she said and did things. I shared that her mother was telling her the truth about her compromised condition and the true outcomes of electroshock. I asked if her mother was still alive in hopes of reconciliation, but she has since passed away. I felt very sad for the two of them.

Family members please research “low voltage electrical trauma” and “traumatic brain injuries”. Review, and please acknowledge and validate, your loved ones experience. Please get them appropriate testing and rehab. If they have 6 months before time frames expire in your state for medical malpractice, contact law firms for representation around damages. Most law firms specializing in brain injury have been prepped with the needed information (brain injury firms). When you see posts on social media please speak out about this to put an end to this battery of patients, please.

Many psychiatrists offer “maintenance” electroshock when patients begin to complain of worsening symptoms. I feel it is to create apathy in the patient so they cannot pursue suit. In addition to traumatic brain injury outcomes, your loved one may have had many medication changes made, and multi-system bodily signs and symptoms impacted by electrical trauma. They need medical intervention to address these outcomes. A baseline needs to be established so one can figure out what is causing what.

Electrical trauma also does induce PTSD, anxiety, and depression.  This will have to be carefully navigated so no further harm is incurred. Please have your loved one fill out the survey on ectjustice.com. Please speak out about this and comment when you see posts so that this practice will be stopped and those responsible held accountable. Thank you.

Filed Under: Articles

Stop Shocking and Torturing Women – Mad in America

May 13, 2019 By Deborah Schwartzkopff

By Don Weitz

Edited excerpts from a speech delivered at the “Stop Shocking Our Mothers and Grandmothers” protest, Toronto, May 11, 2019

This year, more than 10,000 women will be electroshocked in Canada, at least half of whom will be in their 60s and older. As professor, antipsychiatry activist and feminist Bonnie Burstow has frequently pointed out, two to three times more women than men are shocked in Canada, as well as in the United States and elsewhere. This is a violent assault on women, triggered by misogyny, ageism and psychiatric lies, with the complicity of the Canadian and American Psychiatric Associations, the transnational drug companies (Big Pharma), and provincial and state governments. Yes, there is collusion between government, psychiatry, government, and the corporate media. A national and international crime and shame.

As an insulin shock survivor, antipsychiatrist and social justice activist, I am speaking out and protesting today to demand that psychiatrists stop electroshocking my sisters, including vulnerable elderly and disabled women. For more than 75 years — since the 1940s — Canadian and American shock doctors have targeted and permanently harmed hundreds of thousands of people, young and old. Predominantly male psychiatrists have fraudulently diagnosed as “mentally ill” (“bipolar,” “borderline personality” “schizophrenic,” etc.) women whom they have then forcibly shocked, traumatized and lied to. With their shock machines, psychiatrists have destroyed countless women’s memories, creativity, skills, careers and lives.

And then, these shock doctors and their fascist organizations unethically minimize or flatly deny all criticism of the permanent memory loss, brain damage, and trauma caused by their “safe and effective” shock machines…

Read full article in MadinAmerica ->

Don Weitz

Don Weitz is an antipsychiatry and social justice activist and insulin shock survivor who has been arrested while participating in nonviolent civil disobedience. He is co-founder of the Coalition Against Psychiatric Assault, co-editor (with Bonnie Burstow) of Shrink Resistant: The Struggle Against Psychiatry in Canada, and author of the e-book Speaking Out Against Psychiatry: Notes Toward Abolition.

Filed Under: Articles

Lou Reed: That Which Does Not Kill Us Can Radicalize Us – Mad in America

May 6, 2019 By Deborah Schwartzkopff

By Bruce Levine, PhD

While not as well-known as “Walk on the Wild Side” and “Perfect Day,” and not one of the classics he wrote for the Velvet Underground (such as “Heroin” and “I’ll Be Your Mirror”), Lou Reed’s “Kill Your Sons,” about his electroconvulsive “therapy” (ECT) as a 17-year-old, gives voice to an event that majorly radicalized him to distrust authorities. That is the conclusion of Aidan Levy in Dirty Blvd.: The Life and Music of Lou Reed, one of several recent biographies about Lou Reed (1942-2013).

“All your two-bit psychiatrists are giving you electroshock,” is how Reed begins “Kill Your Sons,” and though in Lou’s case, ECT trauma would fuel his art, such trauma often only destroys; as the ECT that Ernest Hemingway and William Styron received late in their lives only served to hasten their end. And even in Reed’s case, his ECT fueled not just his art but his rage, which sometimes hurt people who cared about him.

As a teenager living in suburban Freeport, Long Island, Lou felt alienated. He became increasingly anxious and “resistant to most socializing, unless it was on his terms,” according to his sister Merrill Reed Weiner, whose parents were overwhelmed by her brother’s behaviors and by his disregard of them, and so they sought treatment for Lou. They would comply with a psychiatrist’s recommendation.

Read full article in Mad in America ->

Dr Bruce Levine
Bruce Levine, PhD

Bruce E. Levine, a practicing clinical psychologist, writes and speaks about how society, culture, politics and psychology intersect. His latest book is Resisting Illegitimate Authority: A Thinking Person’s Guide to Being an Anti-Authoritarian―Strategies, Tools, and Models. His website is www.brucelevine.net

Filed Under: Articles

An open letter to medical professionals

April 24, 2019 By Deborah Schwartzkopff

 

Deborah Schwartzkopff ECTJustice.com

When I went into nursing it was with the intention of working in the psychiatric field. It’s ironic now, given what later transpired. I also had a passion for emergency trauma nursing, and thought since they get a high population of mental health patients as well, it was the best of both worlds. I worked level one trauma mostly at facilities such as Denver General, St. Anthony’s in Denver, OHSU, Kaiser Permanente in Denver and others. I give this to you as I know I have nursing peers I worked with that are still around, and may help take issue with electroshock.

I remember some of being a nurse, when I was on the professional side of things.  And, I remember being a patient, impaired by toxic levels of psychiatric drugs and electroshock. On the professional side, around psychiatric patients were the “slurs” and innuendos when a mark was made on the triage board signifying a psychiatric client, and “who would take them?” It was interesting to me, because I knew many of my nursing peers (including myself) had experienced similar issues in one fashion or another.

Are we somehow different from the patient in room “A” whose circumstances have warranted a need for public help? I do not think people understand that based on a current crisis or short-term problem one can end up with a lifetime diagnosis, associated with drugs and possibly ECT. Doctors, nurses, psychologists, social workers, etc., you may hold a degree and carry a title, but you are still human, and are not immune to these life circumstances.

This brings me to what I wanted to talk about, and that is the rise in suicide among physicians. The rate is now 28 to 40 per 100,000, double that of the general population.1 That translates to one per day.  It is the highest suicide rate of any profession.

As a professional, to be given a psychiatric label, psychiatric drugs, or even ECT will impact your personal and professional career (if people find out). People say they are open and understand mental illness. But, once you have received a psychiatric diagnosis, people by nature, will treat and see you differently in some way. It may not necessarily be negative, but you as a person shift in others eyes.

Our current system has the mentality of “us and them”, verses a level playing field of ”we.” We are all in this together to varying degrees and life circumstances. You just haven’t been identified with some label that matches up with a drug in a clinical trial perhaps?  With a constantly growing list of diagnoses in the DSM, and a drug matched to each diagnosis, soon there will be something for everyone. We take on this new label as gospel. But it is based on reactions to circumstances that can vary day to day. And the diagnosis is based on a given doctor’s perception, that often varies doctor to doctor.

One recent study found 75% of med students and residents were on SSRIs or other antidepressants.2 Doctors could be having a rise in suicide if they are adversely responding to antidepressants which are known to increase or cause suicidal/homicidal ideation.3 They could also fear seeking assistance, because in receiving a diagnosis, they know full well it will impact their career, and how others perceive them. So, alone in their suffering they choose suicide.

Do you see the system you are actually encasing yourselves in now with your own peers? The line is a thin one.  One steps over, and though you carry a title and degree, you are still human and subject to human emotions and experiences. We may not yet fully understand and actually value nor utilize these states that I believe hold great potential and value.

I miss being a nurse. But I cannot understand how the healers I have admired and worked with can remain so silent and complicit around this, knowing full well of mechanism of injury outcomes. I recall once watching from the background, as a trauma was being worked.  I was moved to tears at the beauty of this dance taking place in an effort to save a patient. I was honored to be a part of their team.

I do not feel honored to have been part of it now, with denial of damages and the lack of response and assistance that all other traumatic brain injury survivors have at their disposal. My peers are committing suicide as a direct result not only of TBI outcomes, but because physicians write complaints off as psychiatric in order to protect a very faulty system. After such abuse at the hands of trusted providers, where does one turn for help?

Because everyone is afraid of lawsuits now, the patient suffers and symptoms are minimized or totally ignored. ECT survivors need extensive rehabilitation, but who will write the order listing the reason? Who is not afraid to take a stand as a physician with intent to warn, protect, and not cause harm? We are sorely in need of many now.

You all know full well these outcomes. But because we have a psychiatric history perhaps you feel you can minimize and look the other way? I don’t know. I know as a healer one should do their best to intervene where there is known harm. Your very own peers in medicine are at risk, and it seems many are choosing suicide as the current system keeps one bathed in shame and secrecy.

Based on a given day, with circumstances which may be acute and self-limiting, you are identified with a lifelong mental health label to follow you throughout your life. This is a shame to so limit a human being. I do not think the human SPIRIT will be contained nor identified this way for long. The current medical paradigm is failing. It feels as if a shift is happening in the crisis of the fallout of justice for electroshock patients.

My hope is for an entirely new perspective, a healing perspective where altered and extreme states are valued. Where power and responsibility are returned to the sovereign individual with assistance as needed, and in cooperation.

References

1 . “When doctors struggle with suicide”, National Public Radio, July 31, 2018, https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2018/07/31/634217947/to-prevent-doctor-suicides-medical-industry-rethinks-how-doctors-work

2. Pamela Wible MD, “75% of med students are on antidepressants or stimulants (or both)”, Sep 4, 2016. https://www.idealmedicalcare.org/75-med-students-antidepressants-stimulants/

3. Peter C Gøtzsche , Professor, Nordic Cochrane Centre, “Antidepressants increase the risk of suicide, violence and homicide at all ages”, BMJ 2017;358:j3697, Sep 3, 2017. https://www.bmj.com/content/358/bmj.j3697/rr-4.

 

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: ECT SSRI suicide doctors

“Let’s not go overboard about ECT”

March 5, 2019 By Deborah Schwartzkopff

Peter Breggin, MD
Peter Breggin, MD

By Dr. Peter Breggin, MD in Mad in America

In an internet email discussion among a large group of supposedly enlightened mental health professionals, few came forward to outright condemn or ban ECT. One participant responded to my comments with, “It worries me how this debate gets so polarized. I appreciate Peter’s opposition to ECT. But that doesn’t mean ECT has not ‘helped people’ even though it might be a placebo effect.” Another declared it was “fashionable” to criticize ECT, but all treatments had their pros and cons. Most seemed to agree that “it sometimes works.”

This refusal to say or to accept something polarizing is a hallmark of most so-called reformers in the field of mental health. What about lobotomy—most of which my 1970s campaign stopped? What about insulin coma therapy? The spinning chair? What about freezing baths? What about the bleeding and purgatives? What about all the other atrocities committed by psychiatry on helpless “patients”? Should we never have simply said, “Stop!”?

Some Things Are Worth Polarizing Over

We know enough about the damage caused by ECT to conclude that it would be unethical even to experiment on people (and perhaps even on animals) in search of that person who supposedly might benefit…

Read full article here.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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Static-Electricity "and the ashes will be blown away from the tops of their heads. It is edict! It is writ!"

Welcome

Welcome to the ECT survivors website.

News & Events

  • Don’t swallow everything you’re told as the truth May 22, 2019
  • Failure to speak out against ECT May 17, 2019
  • Family Secrets May 14, 2019
  • Stop Shocking and Torturing Women – Mad in America May 13, 2019
  • Lou Reed: That Which Does Not Kill Us Can Radicalize Us – Mad in America May 6, 2019
  • An open letter to medical professionals April 24, 2019

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  • Be a Media Spokesperson for ECT Victims
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  • ECT Survivor Kenny on Life After Electroshock
  • ECT Survivor Mary Maddock’s story
  • ECT Survivor Stories
  • FDA’s 2011 Hearings on Reclassifying ECT
  • Info about ECT
  • Is Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT) Effective?
    by Philip Hickey, PhD
  • Medical Records
  • Neurologist John M. Friedberg on ECT
  • No One Should Be Given Shock Treatment
  • Peter Breggin, MD: Electroshock is Brain Trauma
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About ECT Justice

ECT Justice was created to help advocate for ECT survivors and their families and to gather and disseminate information about known risks of ECT.  If you are an ECT survivor suffering from post-ECT cognitive deficiencies, please know you are not alone.  By sharing your issues, we are able to continue our efforts toward helping ensure that appropriate warnings of the potential risk of permanent injury gets provided to anyone considering ECT. Together we can make a difference.

Recent Posts

  • Don’t swallow everything you’re told as the truth May 22, 2019
  • Failure to speak out against ECT May 17, 2019
  • Family Secrets May 14, 2019
  • Stop Shocking and Torturing Women – Mad in America May 13, 2019
  • Lou Reed: That Which Does Not Kill Us Can Radicalize Us – Mad in America May 6, 2019
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