Classics in ECT: Ambulatory ECT from 1947

"Classics in ECT" brings you this article from 1947:

Ambulatory electroconvulsive therapy.

FELDMAN F, GOMBERT E, BARRERA SE.J Nerv Ment Dis. 1947 Feb;105(2):171-90. doi: 10.1097/00005053-194702000-00007.PMID: 20284376 

The pdf is here.
And from the text:
This classic article is a description of a busy outpatient ECT practice in upstate New York in the early years after World War II. I feature it mainly as a reminder that ambulatory ECT is not new, although it almost disappeared in later decades, only to be revived starting in the 1980s.
Much of what is described in this 20-page essay rings true today, but much of it is also totally archaic, including the paternalistic, patriarchal tone, some of the diagnostic categories, and, of course, the fact that this is about unmodified ECT. The themes of the importance of family involvement and the need to have ongoing treatment to decrease relapse  still ring true.
For history buffs, a full read (~30 minutes) will be rewarding; for others, it is enough to know that this paper is on PubMed.

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