News
Electroconvulsive therapy helps patients with their symptoms in more than 80% of cases – but its stigma means it may not be helping the people it could.
New studies of brain activity explain benefits of electroconvulsive therapy. ScienceDaily. Retrieved June 2, 2025 from www.sciencedaily.com / releases / 2023 / 11 / 231116140829.htm.
New studies of brain activity explain benefits of electroconvulsive therapy Why this controversial treatment works is a century-old mystery; scientists from UC San Diego may have solved it ...
Between 2009 and 2019, 4826 ECT sessions were recorded in SEAN. Of these, the majority (68.4%) were in women. The average age of the patients was 58.52 years, with no significant differences ...
These results contribute to the growing evidence of the benefits of ECT in young patients with severe ASD, study investigator Raul J. Poulsen, MD, Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry ...
Benefits and risks. Every treatment has risks, and ECT’s are as real as any other. In deciding whether it’s safe and effective, researchers weigh the benefits against those risks.
As a psychiatry resident, he became convinced of the benefits of ECT. But he spent years battling detractors and a misleading pop-culture depiction of the procedure.
Some patients benefit from maintenance ECT, which is usually given on a much less frequent basis, sometimes once monthly. For most patients, the benefits of ECT greatly outweigh the small risks, ...
Electroconvulsive therapy can have significant side effects and there is only limited ... Patients are being misled about the risks they are taking and the limited nature of ECT’s benefits. ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results