Electroshock Therapy 2, ECT Psychiatric Survivor Recovers After Leaving Psychiatry
psychiatric treatment
Electroshock Therapy 2, ECT Psychiatric Survivor Recovers After Leaving Psychiatry Dr. John Breeding, Ph.D. Psychologists talk with psychiatric survivor Evelyn Scogin. She was placed on a number of psychiatric drugs and given several rounds electroshock therapy or ECT. This made her unable to work and forced her on to disability. Only now that she has removed herself from psychiatric treatment, gotten off the medication and refused further electroshock is she recovering and moving forward back into the work force. Visit Dr. Breeding’s Website at www.endofshock.com http This video was produced by Psychetruth www.youtube.com www.myspace.com Copyright © Target Public Media LLC 2010. All Rights Reserved. This video may be displayed in public, copied and redistributed for any strictly non-commercial use in its entire unedited form. Alteration or commercial use is strictly prohibited.
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#3 written by barkulator 1 year ago
Bravo.
Doctors are authorities and chose their work so that they can give orders rather than take orders. They get their “knowledge” from universities whose courses toe the party line filtered down from the Pentagon (we all ultimately work for the royalty you know). None of these people are interested in living in peace. If you want peace, you won’t get it from psychiatry.
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#12 written by ratiocinativeness 1 year ago
the only treatments someone should get for psychological problems is the right psychotherapy and real medical treatment if need be for physical problems that effect emotions like blood sugar problems, cardio problems, glandular problems, etc. AND often, people have nutritional deficiencies (vitamin D, B, magnesium, etc) that contribute to a large part of their emotinal issues and would be VERY easy to treat– and most doctors don’t test for those. The treatment is too “cost effective”.
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#13 written by ratiocinativeness 1 year ago
the only treatments someone should get for psychological problems is the right psychotherapy and real medical treatment if need be for physical problems that effect emotions like blood sugar problems, cardio problems, glandular problems, etc. AND often, people have nutritional deficiencies (vitamin D, B, magnesium, etc) that contribute to a large part of their emotinal issues and would be VERY easy to treat– and most doctors don’t test for those. The treatment is too “cost effective”.
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#15 written by maciexp 1 year ago
imagine that right now, iam feeling a bit like Alice. Tumbling down the rabbit hole .
i mean i feel like i lost completely control on my life i just take pills go to shop to some doctor for new pills i cant even tell precisly what i like and what i dont like
this is some nightmare i feel like i am sleeping my life through i want to wake up but i cant i dont understand this
i am a bit stupid , i have memory problems , huge concentration problems and so …. :/
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#16 written by StarWomb 1 year ago
That was a great letter and i hope he has enough cents to actually read it. You are a survivor of ill medical treatment. what ever happened to the hippocratic oath.
“I will remember that there is art to medicine as well as science, and that warmth, sympathy, and understanding may outweigh the surgeon’s knife or the chemist’s drug.”
once again many blessings and healing energy your way.
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#17 written by AlterEgoTrip 1 year ago
@Gedankenverbrecher84
But evidence and testimony from a number
of sources proves that the drugs are not “safe”
and when it comes down to it, America has
a unique place in allowing for things that
would not otherwise be allowed, to get a
free pass, as it were, especially when the
drugs will still be prescribed, even off label
and yet never see an FDA test until AFTER
its been sold and used by 5 million people.
If that isn’t fishy, I don’t know what is. -
#18 written by bingramtube 1 year ago
Ever try to help somebody who is nutz ? Trying to help the insane will drive some folks to more and more EXTREME measures. Read up on Pre-frontal lobotomy’s and you will know the legal limit doctors have gone to in order to ‘help’. the patient to at least be quiet. I am sure most of the doctors started off truely wanting to help but its a job with a very very low success rate and its a job I certainly wouldn’t want to do.
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#19 written by Gedankenverbrecher84 1 year ago
@DawidWarsaw
Yes, I like this letter too.
But don’t expect that this “doctor” will
ever feel sorry about what he has done to
her.Most psychiatrists would fit into the
pattern what they call
“antisocial personality disorder”.
One of the symtoms of this disorder
is the lack of feeling sorry about
when hurting someone. -
#21 written by Gedankenverbrecher84 1 year ago
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#24 written by hypnofan35 1 year ago
It is hard to take notice of briliant people unless they are being spiked to a post. If your environment or circumstances lack in mercy, whatever else is done is going to be pretty stupid with severe hierarchal imbalances due to local covetousness. Don’t feel bad; in the first grade i remember being force to sit in fear until i pissed my pants one day, and then severely derided for the episode. I say overdose on cannabis and try to avoid authority at all times.
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I am more scared by the crap Dr. Breeding spews than undergoing ECT.