FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Therapy or Torture? The Truth About Electroshock Airs on World Mental Health Day

Therapy or Torture: The Truth About Electroshock is an exposé of the brutal psychiatric practice of electroshock treatment. Administered to patients under the guise of curing mental health ailments, its victims and their families give harrowing accounts of living in its aftermath in this searing documentary.

It hits the head with the force of a 40-pound cinder block dropped seven and a half feet. It’s been described by patients as a grenade going off in your body. It’s called electroconvulsive therapy. And the truth of this violent practice is revealed in the original documentary Therapy or Torture: The Truth About Electroshock, featured on World Mental Health Day,  October 10, at 8 p.m. ET/PT on the Scientology Network. 

Learn the truth about ECT on Therapy or Torture: The Truth About ECT on the Scientology Network on World Mental Health Day
Learn the truth about ECT on Therapy or Torture: The Truth About ECT on the Scientology Network on World Mental Health Day
 

Man-on-the-street interviews show most people have no idea this barbaric practice is still in use. Yet electroshock or ECT (the initials stand for electroconvulsive therapy) is not an antiquated medical practice of some bygone era. The stark truth is that ECT is inflicted on a million people worldwide. Every year.

Side effects of ECT include amnesia (substantial and permanent memory loss), confusion, disorientation, apathy, disinterest, headaches, nausea, slowed reaction time, lowered intellectual function, and death.

In a single shock treatment, the psychiatrist sends up to 460 volts through the brain of the patient. Putting this into perspective, the human brain operates on 0.2 volts—eight times less than the 1.5 volts of a watch battery—so ECT inflicts the patient with 2,300 times the electricity the brain uses to function.

Therapy or Torture: The Truth About Electroshock is a gripping exposé of the $5.4 billion ECT business, its history, practitioners and devastating results, revealed in graphic detail.

The film is a Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR) documentary, part of an ongoing investigative series to educate the public on abuses of psychiatry. Other CCHR documentaries expose the truth about the marketing of psychotropic prescriptions, the dangers of those drugs and the psychiatric industry’s terrifying history.

Citizens Commission on Human Rights was cofounded in 1969 by professor of psychiatry Dr. Thomas Szasz and the Church of Scientology. With headquarters in Los Angeles, California, CCHR International guides a global human rights advocacy network of some 180 chapters across more than 30 nations. CCHR Commissioners include physicians, psychiatrists, psychologists, lawyers, legislators, government officials, educators and civil rights representatives.

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The Scientology religion was founded by author and philosopher L. Ron Hubbard. The first Church of Scientology was formed in Los Angeles in 1954 and the religion has expanded to more than 11,000 Churches, Missions and affiliated groups, with millions of members in 167 countries.

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