Popular on EntSun
- LEDI Announces 2025 International Life Changers Awards Gala - 335
- International Gaming Platform Launch and Plans to Acquire Racing Women LTD. for AI Powered Sports, Entertainment and Gaming Leader: SEGG Media: $SEGG - 302
- Legendary Blues Artist Stevie Hawkins Releases Re-imagined Rendition of Leon Russell's Classic, "A Song For You" - 298
- FDA Approval of Suitability Petition on Preservative-Free Ketamine Drug Supports $40 Analyst Target; $3 Billion Suicidal Depression Market: $NRXP - 295
- Michelle Danner's 'The Call of Nishi' to screen at Catalina Film Festival - 281
- A New Era for Fans: Phinge Will End High Ticket Fees, Bots, Counterfeiting & Scalping With Netverse App-less Platform & Verified AI: Rewarding Fans - 279
- Who Will Win the 2025 Video Game of the Year? Bookmakers Review Shares Latest Odds - 274
- William J. McRea Releases New Worship Album Love Poured Out - 267
- Cervey, LLC and PharmaCentra, LLC Announce Strategic Partnership to Expand Pharmacy Technology Support Across Specialty Pharmacy and PBM Services - 264
- M Models and Talent Signs Acclaimed Pakistani Actor Imran Ashraf - 264
Similar on EntSun
- Golden Paper Introduces TAD Hand Towel Technology, Ushering in a New Era of Premium Tissue Quality
- OfficeSpaces.co Expands Its AI-Powered Website Builder Across North America
- New Article by Roy J. Meidinger – Examines Hidden Hidden Healthcare Kickbacks
- Koplon Dentistry Elevates Implant Expertise with Advanced CE Course
- NOYA Launches Premium, Design-Forward Training Gear That Belongs at the Center of Your Space
- KeysCaribbean Offers 20 Percent Off Seven-Night Stays For Private Home Collection Properties
- Matthew Cossolotto, Author of The Joy of Public Speaking, Appears on "Get Authentic with Marques Ogden" and "Achieving Success with Olivia Atkin"
- CCHR Exposes Conflicted Psychiatrists Behind Teen Antidepressant Surge
- Wohler announces release of additional Balance Control output tracking for its eSeries in-rack monitor range
- Tami Goveia Enters FabOver40, Inspiring Hollywood Legacy for Breast Cancer Cause
CCHR Exposes Two-Thirds of Electroshock Therapy Victims Are Women
EntSun News/11025619
Group says actress Whoopi Goldberg recently revealed her mother was given electroshock resulting in the memory loss of her children, highlighting that women have been and continue to be over-targeted for ECT.
LOS ANGELES - EntSun -- The Citizens Commission on Human Rights, an international mental health industry watchdog, is raising awareness during Mental Health Month on a concerning revelation: nearly two-thirds of those subjected to electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) are women—a practice deemed tantamount to assault and torture when administered against one's will. Jan Eastgate, President of CCHR International, whose own harrowing experience with electroshock therapy in the 1970s, stemmed from an undiagnosed thyroid that manifested in "depression" that she never experienced. This ignited her lifelong crusade for patient rights. Since joining CCHR in 1977, Eastgate has been a tireless voice, traversing the globe to call for the banning of ECT.
Eastgate said the recent revelation by The View co-host and Oscar-winning actress, Whoopi Goldberg, that her mother, Emma Harris, was kept for two years in a psychiatric hospital and was electroshocked, is a tragic reminder that women have been a target for brain-damaging electroshock for decades. Goldberg told People that ECT wiped out her mother's memory to the extent that she didn't remember her own children.[1] Decades later, her mother told her, "Yeah, I had no idea who you were. I just knew I never wanted to go back to that hospital."
In her 46 years of exposing ECT, Eastgate said she has found a common adverse effect was women undergoing the treatment forgetting their children's births due to the long-term memory loss ECT causes. Eastgate tells her story in a compelling CCHR documentary, Therapy of Torture: The Truth About Electroshock, talking about her not initially recognizing her own mother while recovering from ECT.
Dianna Loper-Posthauer, who was interviewed for the documentary, tells of her experience which she described as "raping my soul." "I didn't have anything except what you call the baby blues. My hormones were completely messed up after having a child…. And the next thing I know, they have me in a hospital. And they shocked me." She couldn't remember her son or her marriage. "You just got shocked, whether you wanted to be shocked or not. They just have to keep hitting your head with that hammer. They gave me 28 shock treatments. They took my soul, my mind, my intellect, my emotions…."
More on EntSun News
In the UK, Dr. John Read, a professor at the University of East London, obtained statistics through a Freedom of Information request that found 67% of patients who received ECT in 2019 were female. He further established that 36% underwent ECT without consent, which the United Nations defines as torture.[2]
Dr. Read adds that ECT has "no place" in evidence-based medicine due to the risks of brain damage.[3]
"Generally, when we talk about ECT, the public assumes it is banned," said Dr. Jessica Taylor, a psychologist and author. "In my view, there is never a good reason to give an animal or human electric shocks to the brain. In another circumstance, it is fatal – you're not meant to get electrocuted."[4]
The Ontario Institute for Studies in Education in Canada published a paper on ECT also saying that it is overwhelmingly given to women, resulting in extensive cognitive and physical impairment. It "functions and is experienced as a form of assault and social control, not unlike wife battery," the paper stated. "Although the medicalization camouflages the assault, overwhelmingly electroshock constitutes an assault on women's memory, brains [and] integral being."[5]
In 2017, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) passed a resolution that vehemently opposed ECT, stating its administration "constitutes 'torture' without consent" and supported a ban on the use of ECT in the treatment of children and young adults.[6] Reverend Fred Shaw, who instigated the resolution, is the president of the Inglewood-South Bay branch of the NAACP and co-founder of CCHR's Task Force Against Racism and Modern-Day Eugenics, is an outspoken critic of any ECT usage, especially on those who are pregnant, stating: "When a woman is pregnant she shouldn't drink coffee; she's not supposed to smoke. There's a whole list of things that are bad for the baby when it's in the prenatal stage. However, pregnant women are getting electroshock, causing miscarriages."
The Task Force has documented a history of psychiatric abuse of African Americans and women. For example, in 1946, U.S. psychiatrist Walter Freeman performed his first ice pick lobotomy on a 29-year-old housewife from Washington DC. Like ECT, it is estimated that more than two-thirds of lobotomies were performed on women.[7] Freeman believed that African American psychiatric patients, especially women, were among the best candidates for lobotomy because of what he called "the greater family solidarity manifested by these people" who could care for them post-operation. At the West Virginia state hospital, Freeman operated on many African American patients in 1952 and was happy when he returned "a week or so after operating upon 20 very dangerous Negroes and found 15 of them sitting under the trees with only one guard in sight," he wrote.[8]
More on EntSun News
Throughout the 20th century, nearly 70,0000 people (overwhelmingly working-class women of color) were sterilized as part of eugenics, developed by psychologists, in over 30 states. Black women, Latina women, and Native American women were specifically targeted.[9] While having surgery to remove a tumor, Civil Rights activist Fannie Lou Hamer was given a hysterectomy in 1961 without her knowledge or consent as a part of the state of Mississippi's plan to reduce the number of poor blacks in the state.[10]
Eastgate said it should be seriously questioned why so many women are targeted for psychiatric treatment that has the potential to permanently damage them, and a ban is urgently needed on such practices.
About CCHR: CCHR was founded in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and the late Dr. Thomas Szasz, Professor of Psychiatry, State University of New York Upstate Medical University. It has helped achieve over 190 laws that protect patients from abuse, including a ban on ECT usage in minors in some states.
Sources:
[1] people.com/whoopi-goldberg-reveals-her-mom-had-electroshock-therapy-exclusive-8642200
[2] uk.news.yahoo.com/style/thousands-women-uk-being-given-133000788.html
[3] truthaboutect.org/new-research-supports-electroshock-causes-brain-damage-ban-re-urged/ citing: www.bbc.com/news/uk-52900074; connect.springerpub.com/content/sgrehpp/21/2/64
[4] uk.news.yahoo.com/style/thousands-women-uk-being-given-133000788.html
[5] truthaboutect.org/electroshock-the-redefinition-of-assault-and-battery/ citing: pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16567337/
[6] naacp.org/resources/protecting-individuals-electroshock-treatment
[7] www.dazeddigital.com/beauty/article/60782/1/why-are-we-so-obsessed-lobotomies-rise-ironic-nihilistic-feminism
[8] www.wondersandmarvels.com/2016/12/race-gender-selection-patients-lobotomy.html
[9] bpr.studentorg.berkeley.edu/2020/11/04/americas-forgotten-history-of-forced-sterilization/
[10] info.umkc.edu/womenc/2018/03/06/fannie-lou-hamer-civil-rights-activist/
Eastgate said the recent revelation by The View co-host and Oscar-winning actress, Whoopi Goldberg, that her mother, Emma Harris, was kept for two years in a psychiatric hospital and was electroshocked, is a tragic reminder that women have been a target for brain-damaging electroshock for decades. Goldberg told People that ECT wiped out her mother's memory to the extent that she didn't remember her own children.[1] Decades later, her mother told her, "Yeah, I had no idea who you were. I just knew I never wanted to go back to that hospital."
In her 46 years of exposing ECT, Eastgate said she has found a common adverse effect was women undergoing the treatment forgetting their children's births due to the long-term memory loss ECT causes. Eastgate tells her story in a compelling CCHR documentary, Therapy of Torture: The Truth About Electroshock, talking about her not initially recognizing her own mother while recovering from ECT.
Dianna Loper-Posthauer, who was interviewed for the documentary, tells of her experience which she described as "raping my soul." "I didn't have anything except what you call the baby blues. My hormones were completely messed up after having a child…. And the next thing I know, they have me in a hospital. And they shocked me." She couldn't remember her son or her marriage. "You just got shocked, whether you wanted to be shocked or not. They just have to keep hitting your head with that hammer. They gave me 28 shock treatments. They took my soul, my mind, my intellect, my emotions…."
More on EntSun News
- OfficeSpaces.co Expands Its AI-Powered Website Builder Across North America
- Tobu Railway Group Will Host the Fourth Annual "Take-Akari" Bamboo Lantern Festival in East Tokyo, November 7, 2025 – January 31, 2026
- New Article by Roy J. Meidinger – Examines Hidden Hidden Healthcare Kickbacks
- Why Generic Platforms Fail in Emerging Markets: Bettorify Exposes the Gap Between Promise and Reality
- Blogging Pioneer Sherry Bennett Celebrates 29 Years Online - Sharing the Secrets Behind Her 7-Figure Blog Empire
In the UK, Dr. John Read, a professor at the University of East London, obtained statistics through a Freedom of Information request that found 67% of patients who received ECT in 2019 were female. He further established that 36% underwent ECT without consent, which the United Nations defines as torture.[2]
Dr. Read adds that ECT has "no place" in evidence-based medicine due to the risks of brain damage.[3]
"Generally, when we talk about ECT, the public assumes it is banned," said Dr. Jessica Taylor, a psychologist and author. "In my view, there is never a good reason to give an animal or human electric shocks to the brain. In another circumstance, it is fatal – you're not meant to get electrocuted."[4]
The Ontario Institute for Studies in Education in Canada published a paper on ECT also saying that it is overwhelmingly given to women, resulting in extensive cognitive and physical impairment. It "functions and is experienced as a form of assault and social control, not unlike wife battery," the paper stated. "Although the medicalization camouflages the assault, overwhelmingly electroshock constitutes an assault on women's memory, brains [and] integral being."[5]
In 2017, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) passed a resolution that vehemently opposed ECT, stating its administration "constitutes 'torture' without consent" and supported a ban on the use of ECT in the treatment of children and young adults.[6] Reverend Fred Shaw, who instigated the resolution, is the president of the Inglewood-South Bay branch of the NAACP and co-founder of CCHR's Task Force Against Racism and Modern-Day Eugenics, is an outspoken critic of any ECT usage, especially on those who are pregnant, stating: "When a woman is pregnant she shouldn't drink coffee; she's not supposed to smoke. There's a whole list of things that are bad for the baby when it's in the prenatal stage. However, pregnant women are getting electroshock, causing miscarriages."
The Task Force has documented a history of psychiatric abuse of African Americans and women. For example, in 1946, U.S. psychiatrist Walter Freeman performed his first ice pick lobotomy on a 29-year-old housewife from Washington DC. Like ECT, it is estimated that more than two-thirds of lobotomies were performed on women.[7] Freeman believed that African American psychiatric patients, especially women, were among the best candidates for lobotomy because of what he called "the greater family solidarity manifested by these people" who could care for them post-operation. At the West Virginia state hospital, Freeman operated on many African American patients in 1952 and was happy when he returned "a week or so after operating upon 20 very dangerous Negroes and found 15 of them sitting under the trees with only one guard in sight," he wrote.[8]
More on EntSun News
- Koplon Dentistry Elevates Implant Expertise with Advanced CE Course
- i2 Group Acquisitions and Investments in Innovations Deliver 40% Increase in Year-on-Year Bookings
- Breaking the Silence: Would A Man Rather Become A Hero Or Die Forgotten?
- New Book Release: The Tree That Could Not Change
- BayWa r.e. Solar Trade and WHES Announce Distribution Partnership for the European Market: Delivering Smarter Energy Storage
Throughout the 20th century, nearly 70,0000 people (overwhelmingly working-class women of color) were sterilized as part of eugenics, developed by psychologists, in over 30 states. Black women, Latina women, and Native American women were specifically targeted.[9] While having surgery to remove a tumor, Civil Rights activist Fannie Lou Hamer was given a hysterectomy in 1961 without her knowledge or consent as a part of the state of Mississippi's plan to reduce the number of poor blacks in the state.[10]
Eastgate said it should be seriously questioned why so many women are targeted for psychiatric treatment that has the potential to permanently damage them, and a ban is urgently needed on such practices.
About CCHR: CCHR was founded in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and the late Dr. Thomas Szasz, Professor of Psychiatry, State University of New York Upstate Medical University. It has helped achieve over 190 laws that protect patients from abuse, including a ban on ECT usage in minors in some states.
Sources:
[1] people.com/whoopi-goldberg-reveals-her-mom-had-electroshock-therapy-exclusive-8642200
[2] uk.news.yahoo.com/style/thousands-women-uk-being-given-133000788.html
[3] truthaboutect.org/new-research-supports-electroshock-causes-brain-damage-ban-re-urged/ citing: www.bbc.com/news/uk-52900074; connect.springerpub.com/content/sgrehpp/21/2/64
[4] uk.news.yahoo.com/style/thousands-women-uk-being-given-133000788.html
[5] truthaboutect.org/electroshock-the-redefinition-of-assault-and-battery/ citing: pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16567337/
[6] naacp.org/resources/protecting-individuals-electroshock-treatment
[7] www.dazeddigital.com/beauty/article/60782/1/why-are-we-so-obsessed-lobotomies-rise-ironic-nihilistic-feminism
[8] www.wondersandmarvels.com/2016/12/race-gender-selection-patients-lobotomy.html
[9] bpr.studentorg.berkeley.edu/2020/11/04/americas-forgotten-history-of-forced-sterilization/
[10] info.umkc.edu/womenc/2018/03/06/fannie-lou-hamer-civil-rights-activist/
Source: Citizens Commission on Human Rights
Filed Under: Health, Celebrities
0 Comments
Latest on EntSun News
- Life as a Dog: P-Wave Press Brings Readers a Heartwarming Memoir of Love, Laughter and Companionship
- NOYA Launches Premium, Design-Forward Training Gear That Belongs at the Center of Your Space
- Earbuds With Endless Listening!: Phinge Modular Stylish Earbuds with Interchangeable Battery Modules & Dual Charging Case Available Soon for Pre-Sale
- 2 Pianos 4 Hands at North Coast Repertory Theatre
- Eisenhower: This Piece of Ground at North Coast Repertory Theatre
- Research Defense Examines Violence, Illiteracy, Non-Active Fathers, and Low Self-Esteem Among Males
- Investing in Greece: Your Definitive Real-Estate FAQ Guide
- KeysCaribbean Offers 20 Percent Off Seven-Night Stays For Private Home Collection Properties
- Advancing Circular Economy in Automotive ESD Packaging
- Institute for Pet Health Sciences Names Boops Pets 2025 Product of the Year
- DJ.Community launches the global platform connecting DJs, promoters, and fans worldwide
- Matthew Cossolotto, Author of The Joy of Public Speaking, Appears on "Get Authentic with Marques Ogden" and "Achieving Success with Olivia Atkin"
- CCHR Exposes Conflicted Psychiatrists Behind Teen Antidepressant Surge
- The Harlem Globetrotters Reveal Four Style Collaborators In Advance Of Centennial Season
- WIBO Announces Fall 2025 Entrepreneurship Programs to Empower NYC Founders and Small Business Owners
- "The Stranger Between Us" Released From the Visionary Behind "The Lion King"
- Local College Student Launches "Cleopatra" App to Make Cleaning Easy for Mercer County Residents
- Wohler announces release of additional Balance Control output tracking for its eSeries in-rack monitor range
- The Best Cartier Dupe Bracelets to Buy in 2025
- A Milestone of Giving: Ten Percent Group Donates £25,000 to Cure Parkinson's
