Controversial Therapy Offers โคLifeline for Severe Depression, But Carries Risk of Memoryโ Loss
London – A decades-old treatment, โelectroconvulsive therapy (ECT), โcontinues to be a โvital option for individuals โฃbattling severe depression andโ bipolar disorder, even as โpatients grapple with potential memory โคdisruption. Recent stories highlight the stark realities of the therapy: for some, like Tania, it’s been a life-saver “on multiple โคoccasions,” while forโ others, like Sue, โฃthe effects โขhave โฃbeen โฃprofoundly altering, leaving her feeling as though her brain functions โlike aโ “drained mobile phone battery.”
ECT, frequently enough depicted inโข popular culture with stigma,โ involves a brief electrical stimulation โof the brain while the patient is under anesthesia. It’s typicallyโฃ reserved for cases where other โtreatments – antidepressants, โคtalking therapies – have failed, or when a rapid response is critical, โsuch as in cases of severe suicidality.
Tania,who experienced debilitating depression in her twenties thatโฃ forced her to leave โuniversity,credits ECT with aโค remarkable โฃturnaround after over a year of unsuccessful hospital treatments. “I โwent from being suicidal โคand psychotic to going home and finishing my degree,” she stated. She received ECT again in her thirties followingโค complications from miscarriages โฃand pregnancyโ hormones,later giving birth to a healthy nine-year-old daughter,attributing both to the therapy’s success. “I thinkโ I owe ECT everything,really. My career, my life, my childโฆ everything.”
The treatment isn’t without its drawbacks. Sue, an ECT patient, has spent two decades relearning basic skills likeโ reading and writing. “It’s like having an oldโ mobile phone batteryโ inโ my head,” she explained. โฃ”You charge it โคup, it takes a long time, and it drains very quicklyโฆ It means โคmy โขhopes, my desires, everything I had โคplanned for my โlife has gone.”
Despite the risks,โข experts emphasize the importance โof ECT as a choice for those who need โit. Simonโค Kitchen,โ CEO of bipolar UK, welcomes โthe therapy, stating, “I have personally metโ many people with bipolar who’ve told me they wouldn’t still be here if it wasn’t for ECT.” โคHe โstresses that “it is essential – a matter of life and death even – that everyone with bipolar should have the โchoice.”
Prov Kirov, a clinician who has โtreated approximately 400 patients with ECT, reports only one complaint in his experience. “I’m not in the business of โขharming people,” heโฃ said, adding โthat the โขreward โขcomes from “seeing โฃa person get well and their parent says,โฃ ‘Thank you for giving me back my daughter.'”
The โNHS offers a range of depression treatments, starting with “watchful waiting”โ and self-help for โmild cases, progressing to cognitive behavioural โtherapy (CBT) and, โฃfor more severe cases, antidepressants alongside therapy.Patients are generally โคadvised to continue treatment for at least four to โขsix months after symptom improvement to prevent relapse.

