aviant wrote:Meepy, noninvasive methods for gaining some control over brain are not something new. After all schizoid patients were treated with electric shocks and unless I'm mistaken it is still used on some occasions.
You might have
heard me cringe when I read that.
Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT), formerly known as Electroshock Therapy, has a long and somewhat sordid history in psychiatric treatment. It is noninvasive in that no instrument penetrates the body, but there are support groups for people who identify themselves as victims of ECT who would argue the point. (I'm an advocate for psychiatry, not against. In any case, Googling "ECT" and "victim" will turn up relevant pages along with some pages written by very literate, intelligent, paranoid people.)
There was a time when ECT was used so routinely that patients on state hospital grounds would line up for their turn on the "black box." Like the frontal lobotomy, it was useful when there was nothing else available, and, being a useful tool in an otherwise nearly empty toolbox, it was probably used far more often than necessary.
It is still indicated in cases of either severe depression or severe mania which are intractable to medication (and, thus, potentially life-threatening and certainly life-altering). The problem is finding clinicians who are willing to perform the procedure. It drips with stigma, even though, in these limited instances, it's the best we have to offer.
I'm not keen to have strong magnetic fields shootin' through my brain, either. I keep thinking "leukemia... leukemia... leukemia..." the whole time I'm looking at the equipment.
-- Blink