WOW. Sorry, I am coming very late to this thread, but, having gone through ECT myself, having it pulled me out of my deepest darkest nonfuncional self... I have never been that deep since then.
It also seems to me that memory loss people are describing is not generally THAT disorganized. I have minor memory issues, but those are all things from the past. I forgot things like authors names, years of birth and death and the titles of all their books.
Hmm. English literature vs deep non-functional depression. I made that choice and I am glad that I did. I don't know if I would still be here anymore. I've stated on this site, in the past, that I was close to 100% non-functional. I would sit on the sofa all day and sleep on the sofa all night and eat when food was given me, and sometimes shower when I was pushed to... and driven to doctors and medications and in and out of mental hospitals. This captures it:
I mean "last resort" in that someone has tried ALL other options....they've run the proverbial gamut on supplements, they've tried alternative therapies that aren't in the mainstream, and so on.... once someone has really tried everything, then it may be time to consider risking brain damage.
Agree.
If you cannot make things shift with medication and you are non-functional, meaning you cannot communicate, you are either frozen or in constant fear - your mind is trapping you, basically - then yes, it's the best we have.
Agree
now the doctors put the patient under anesthesia when given the shock treatment.
True.
there are plenty of doctors looking into safe and effective ways to work with brain stimulation, and there has been real progress in that area.
Yes and there are people looking to make ECT, a type of brain stimulation, safe and effective, and you're correct, there has been real progress. Anesthesia. Yes there are potential problems with that, but honestly you're only in that state for like 5 minutes, and there are other reasons that it is less likely to harm than if you are undergoing surgery.
I found a research program that accommodated me. If anyone wants more details, I am happy to provide them, just send me a PM. Briefly, my experience was with unilateral as opposed to bilateral (wires hooked up to, oh, I don't remember! ;) let's say the left side, instead of both). which lowers risk of memory loss. They also do a mini-mini-mini current. Not only are you under anesthesia, the shock can be so mild that your body does not even shake during the procedure - which is what would happen during a "regular", uncontrolled seizure.
that the medical community has (I think) stopped working on the problems of ECT. In other words, no-one is really focusing on getting it to be less problematic.
Not true. Many of the doctors looking into safe and effective ways, that you mention above, take the science from previously incapacitating treatments. There are many modifications and I was well-informed of risks and benefits and possible outcomes. I was down too deep. I was becoming suicidal and checking myself into hospitals for my own safety - two or three times a year.
Since the ECT, I have had not needed to be inpatient. I cannot tell you how grateful I am for that, how much ECT has pulled me up from the dregs of life, and enhanced my ability to cope, along side other treatments. It IS a treatment of last resort. But it is certainly not barbaric, either.