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4 Reviews
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Not a Medical Book,
By Paige Turner "bookie3" (Kansas City) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Pushbutton Psychiatry: A History of Electroshock in America (Hardcover)
Descartes Li misses the point. This is not a medical book. This is not a self-help book. You should NOT be buying this if you are trying to evaluate the strengths or possibilities of ECT for yourself or anyone else. This is a social and historical examination of the practice. If you want to know about the social implications of ECT, or how medicine and medical "knowledge" affect our selves, our society, and our bodies, then you should read this book--because that's what it's about.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
What kind of historian doesn't fact check?,
By
This review is from: Pushbutton Psychiatry: A History of Electroshock in America (Hardcover)
In the book, the authors state as fact that ect.org, my website and organization, is run by Scientology. That is absolutely false (and libelous). In fact, my attorney sent numerous letters to the publisher and authors, which were ignored.
All it would have taken would have been one email to ASK me if I'm a Scientologist. They either were too careless or they weren't interested in changing their preconceived notions. This kind of bad research makes everything else they've written suspect. Terrible work. Would love for the authors to respond, but they're likely too busy not researching other things. A history professor and sociologist...bad work, you two. oh, p.s. I'm a Presbyterian. Maybe your next book you should say I'm jihad?
1.0 out of 5 stars
Poorly written, Poorly researched, and Poorly priced,
This review is from: Pushbutton Psychiatry: A History of Electroshock in America (Kindle Edition)
Whether or not you agree with the premises set forth in this book is beside the point. The quality of work represented here is what one would expect from a high school student the night before a term paper deadline. To the authors: please do your research.
1 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Not worth your time or money,
This review is from: Pushbutton Psychiatry: A History of Electroshock in America (Hardcover)
Is electroconvulsive therapy(ECT) effective in treating depression? According to the authors, this is not our question. However, throughout the book, the answer appears to be maybe. By not seriously reviewing this issue, the authors make a fundamental error in discussing this subject, because one of their theses is that electroshock seems poised at some midpoint in the cycle of (re)invention, dissemination, acceptance, criticism, and retrenchment that it and other treatments go thoughagain, and again, and yet againin Western medicine. At one point in history, people thought that the earth of the center of the solar system. With Galileo, we went through a cycle or two about the truth of this fact, but we (or at least most of us) now believe that the sun is the center of the solar system.
Similarly, other controversies have dogged our society such as: Is Evolution a law of nature or merely a hyothesis or theory? Do cigarettes cause lung cancer? Are we in danger of global warming? Is the earth round? By not addressing the possibility that ECT is in a similar social situation, the authors miss out on an important sociological phenomenon surrounding ECT. How do we define truth in our society? After a serious review of the literature and an evaluation of the reliability of the sources of this literature, most readers will probably understand that individuals, who are honest and reliable and knowledgeable about ECT, support the use of ECT for mood disorders, depression and bipolar disorder. With this understanding, the social aspects of ECT can be seen in a completely different light. Unfortunately the authors do not take the effort to make a decision about Does ECT work? They do not consult directly leading speakers for or against ECT, and instead rely on media sources for their information. They do not cite any scientific studies of the efficacy of ECT. Thus, they do a major disservice to the public at large by fostering the idea that there is a (scientific) controversy around ECT. Lets faceit, if ECT didnt work, it would have gone the way of blood-letting or insulin coma therapy as a medical practice. It is only 135 pages long, with 30 pages devoted to bibliography and index. So at $75, it is too expensive to simply peruse and discard. In addition, I did not find the book to be particularly well-written nor well-argued. It reads more like a undergraduate students term paper, with topic sentences frequently not supported by the following arguments. If I were a (paid) teacher grading this paper, I would give this work a C or maybe a B-. If you are a person considering ECT as a treatment for yourself or a loved one, I would recommend Max Fink's "Electroshock: Restoring the Mind." You can also obtain informational pamphlets from the American Psychiatric Association under "Public Education" or from the Madison Institute of Medicine. |
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Pushbutton Psychiatry: A History of Electroshock in America by Timothy W. Kneeland (Hardcover - March 30, 2002)
$95.00
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