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Quality of life and ECT

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

L. Andre*
Affiliation:
PO Box 1214, New York, NY 10003, USA. E-mail: ctip@erols.com
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Abstract

Type
Columns
Copyright
Copyright © 2005 The Royal College of Psychiatrists 

The first author of this study (Reference McCall, Dunn and RosenquistMcCall et al, 2004) has an apparent career, if not financial, conflict of interest in the treatment being reviewed. He is the President of the Association for Convulsive Therapy, the industry trade organisation, as well as the editor of its journal which he calls ‘the voice of ECT’ (Reference McCallMcCall, 2004). This ought to have been revealed to readers directly; as it is, it reveals itself in the many flaws of research design which bias the study towards minimising the risks of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT).

The study included those who had had ECT as recently as 4 months previously, thus building into the research design the assumption that the adverse effects of ECT resolve within that time period; but there is evidence that this is not so. If it is not, then the study is simply comparing those who are still suffering the after-effects of ECT with those suffering more severe after-effects, a comparison which tells us nothing about the effects of ECT per se. The fact that those at baseline averaged a score of only 18 on the Mini-Mental State Examination suggests some type of cognitive dysfunction, perhaps due to ECT, even at that point.

The measures chosen by McCall et al in all areas – cognition, amnesia and, most importantly, what he calls quality of life and functioning – are the grossest possible, and cannot register the deficits known to be associated with ECT because they are simply not designed to do so. The authors must be aware of the work of the Service User Research Enterprise (SURE) group (Reference Rose, Fleischmann and WykesRose et al, 2003) in which patients describe a highly specific pattern of permanent memory and cognitive deficits post ECT. This was a rigorous systematic review of the literature on ECT's effects, and encompasses what most people would call quality of life and functioning. It revealed that for at least one-third of individuals ECT had deleterious, often devastating, effects on these areas which lasted more than 6 months and appeared to be permanent.

Individuals lost the ability to perform their jobs. They lost memory of up to 20 years of their lives. They were unable to handle schoolwork because of impaired memory function and concentration. They did not recognise persons previously well known to them. They waited anxiously for the promised ‘return of memory’ which never came. None of this is consistent with improvement in quality of life.

Why then are McCall et al's results so seemingly contradictory? Because he did not ask about these things. Instead, participants were asked, quite literally, whether they could wipe their own backsides. If they were simply able to get out of bed, feed and dress themselves, and use a bus or a telephone they were graded as functioning at the highest possible level. No one has ever reported that ECT affected their ability to use a toilet.

Finally, 4 weeks after ECT is too soon for individuals, who are unlikely to have tried to go back to work or school yet, to be able reliably to assess their altered memories and abilities.

References

McCall, W. V. (2004) Past, present and future of the Journal of ECT (and related treatments). Journal of ECT, 20, 12.Google Scholar
McCall, W. V., Dunn, A. & Rosenquist, P. B. (2004) Quality of life and function after electroconvulsive therapy. British Journal of Psychiatry, 185, 405409.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rose, D., Fleischmann, P., Wykes, T., et al (2003) Patients' perspectives on electroconvulsive therapy: systematic review. BMJ, 326, 1363.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
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