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Psychiatric Bulletin (1999) 23: 597-601. doi: 10.1192/pb.23.10.597
© 1999 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
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Electroconvulsive therapy in Wales

Richard Duffett, Clinical Research Fellow, *

The Royal College of Psychiatrists Research Unit and London and Specialist Registrar Trainee, Tower Hamlets Healthcare NHS Trust, St Clement's Hospital, 2A Bow Road, London E3 4LL;

Drew Ridley Siegert, Consultant Old Age Psychiatrist

Whitchurch Hospital, Cardiff;

Paul Lelliott, Director

The Royal College of Psychiatrists Research Unit, London

* Correspondence

Aims and method The use of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) was surveyed over the first six months of 1996 in Wales. Data on the indications for ECT and clinical outcome were collected in the first three months.

Results The computed annual rate was 22 patients treated with ECT per 100 000 population. Women constituted 71% of those receiving ECT (236/321). Eighty-three per cent had an affective disorder, and 80% had failed to respond to previous treatments. Only 33% of patients had been prescribed more than one class of antidepressant, and only 25% had received augmentation with lithium or an alternative drug before being given ECT.

Clinical implications ECT is mostly used after a failure of patients to respond adequately to a course of antidepressants.




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Copyright © 1999 The Royal College of Psychiatrists.