Experience of having ECT
In preparation for the ECT people are tested to make sure they are fit for treatment, e.g. a chest X-ray, an ECG (to trace the...
ECT can have side effects. Most people we spoke to had some side effects from the treatment. Side effects ranged from the pleasant “being woozy is actually really nice’ right through to the extremely unpleasant e.g. complete disorientation or deeply upsetting such as the loss of treasured memories. Some only lasted in the short-term, like headaches and tiredness, others were long-term e.g. memory being ‘foggy’. Memory loss is the side effect that caused the most concern to people.
Apart from the side effects of having ECT, there were also suspected side effects from having the general anaesthetic and sometimes it was difficult to tell the difference. For example Dafydd said it was hard to tell how much of his wife’s tiredness was due to the effects of the general anaesthetic and how much was due to the ECT.
However, a few of the people we interviewed experienced little if any side effects of having ECT, and some pointed out the side effects of taking medication could be worse. John Z, said that he experienced no bad effects from ECT at all, and it was like having a cataract operation.
The people we spoke to reported the following side effects immediately after the ECT treatment, which lasted only a short while (hours or sometimes a few days):
Headache and jaw ache sometimes only happened following the first ECT sessions, and people felt their bodies adjusted better to treatment as they went along. For others, this was something they always experienced after having ECT. Kathleen said the dosage of her ECT made an impact on the severity of the side effects. When she first had ECT, the headache and jaw ache was so bad she couldn’t eat, but when the dose was reduced for the following treatments, the effects were not so bad.
Some people we spoke to said looking like someone who had ‘had a stroke’ and drooling was a very upsetting side effect both for the person having the treatment and for those who saw them. Annie and Lorraine said that seeing their mother after her first treatment was scary.
People often found they were very sleepy immediately after their treatment and wanted to go to bed. Carys said that her daughter would sleep for up to twelve to fourteen hours afterwards.
Most people remembered having the treatment, sometimes in great detail and some were able to resume their normal activities immediately afterwards. But others did not remember having the treatment at all, or remember other things going on at the time of the treatment. Some were very disoriented and couldn’t find their room afterwards, or were unable to remember how they got home. Helen, who had her treatment in 1970 said she struggled to remember her own name after the treatment, her mind was ‘just black, like you’re in a different universe’.
Suzanne felt that memory loss was a price she paid for getting well again. Like others, she judged that it was worth it in the end. She also said there were other periods of her life she couldn’t remember and didn’t find this particularly unusual or upsetting.
Most of the people we spoke to did experience memory loss following ECT. This seemed to be the case whether or not the ECT had had any effect on their mental illness. Frequently, the memory loss was judged to be relatively minor, such as forgetting people’s names, or not being able to find their way back to their room, or around their local town, and forgetting their passwords and bank pin number, or how to spell. These did come back to them in time, or once they were reminded. David Z found that although his ability to recall sometimes is ‘a bit fuzzy’ he’s learnt to deal with it and if someone reminds him it comes back ‘and stays back’.
People did worry about the long-term effects of ECT on the brain, e.g. problems thinking, and said that their doctors were likely to deny that long term effects were possible.
However some people, especially those who had ECT over ten years ago, did find they had lost memories of important events such as a daughter’s dedication, a surprise birthday party, a holiday, or the birth of a child. Not being able to remember events in their lives could be frustrating and distressing. Although a few suspected they might have lost unpleasant memories ‘I want to forget’ and asked themselves if that might have been part of their recovery.
For many, the memory loss was short lived, around the time of – or before – the treatments. Tania says that although she had not suffered long term memory loss, she does have ‘gaps’ in her memory from the months when she was receiving weekly or fortnightly ECT treatments (although this didn’t happen when she had less frequent maintenance ECT). Otherwise she says ECT has not affected her ability to think and write. Like others, she was concerned her thinking would be affected, but feels ‘sharper than [she’s] ever been’. Catherine Z said she is able to think ‘just as quickly and clearly’ as before the ECT.
For others the effects have been more permanent. Sue experienced long term ‘fogginess’, which she was told would go away, but it never cleared. She still has ongoing short-term memory problems, which are getting worse, though she does wonder if this could be related to her chronic fatigue and pains. Albert had ECT in the 1960s and wasn’t aware of the side effects of memory loss until recently. He said he suffered badly with memory loss and he had difficulties using his mind and that affected his life. He thought it was ‘[him] that was the problem’ but now believes it was a side effect of the ECT and has met others who have suffered long term memory loss after having ECT. Sunil says for him memory loss is the most distressing effect of ECT. On a daily basis his wife tells him about something that has happened in the recent past which he has no memory of. His wife keeps a diary so he can look back at what has happened in the last few weeks. Dafydd’s wife watches repeats of television programmes but has no recollection of having seen them before.
As mentioned above, where the ECT had worked, some felt the memory loss was minor in relation to the benefits they got, or that the memory loss served a helpful purpose. Jane felt that although she doesn’t remember much of her own childhood or her son’s childhood, this was because her brain was used to shutting off painful memories ‘as a protective thing’ and not as a result of having the ECT. Others wondered whether the memory loss might have actually been a part of what got them better, because they had forgotten the bad things that happened to them. Helen said, ‘It’s so beautiful now because I can forget’. She has found innovative ways to get around the inconvenience of memory loss, like reading so that she remembers how to spell words or writing down the date every morning. Nevertheless, many people who experienced memory loss just found it difficult and upsetting.
While some were neutral about the ECT experience, or even found it pleasant (one man looked forward to his ECT), feelings like a lack of control or having been abused during their treatment were profoundly difficult for others. Sue, who had been sexually abused in her childhood, felt that having ECT left her traumatised, and having the anaesthetic felt like she was being held down. She said abuse by members of hospital staff, and the feelings of powerlessness she experienced had long-term consequences for her and her husband. Tracy felt ECT did nothing for her except remove her memory and she called it barbaric.
While some felt included in their loved ones treatment, as a carer, Carys struggled with her own lack of control over the ECT treatments given to her daughter, and felt side lined and unimportant. Her daughter repeatedly ran away from the hospital and was incredibly unhappy and she still struggles with the feeling that she let her daughter down.
Some people who had bipolar disorder described experiencing a ‘high’ after the ECT. John Z, who was catatonic when he had the treatment, went high and ‘off the scale’ after his ECT treatment (see for more ‘How effective did people find ECT‘). Sometimes this was short lived and left them feeling worse than before.
In preparation for the ECT people are tested to make sure they are fit for treatment, e.g. a chest X-ray, an ECG (to trace the...
There is no guarantee that ECT will work for all people or for all kinds of mental illness. The National Institute for Health and Care...