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ECT practice in Australia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 April 2020

W. Chanpattana*
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Srinakharinwirot University, Bangkok, Thailand

Abstract

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Objective

To determine the characteristics of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) practice in Australia.

Method

From October 1, 2002 to February 29, 2004, a 29-item questionnaire was sent to 136 hospitals in Australia.

Results

113 hospitals (83%) completed the questionnaire. ECT was available in 90 hospitals. A total of 7,469 patients received 58,499 ECTs from 356 psychiatrists, which gives an average course length of 8.5 treatments. ECT utilization as assessed by the crude treated-person and crude administration rates were 37.85 persons and 296.47 administrations per 100,000 population per annum, respectively. 63.4% of patients were female. Brief-pulse devices were used in all hospitals. EEG monitoring was used routinely in 80 hospitals. Unilateral ECT was used twice as often as bilateral ECT. 82.3% of ECT treatments were given to patients with major depression, 9.6% with schizophrenia, 4.9% with mania, and 1.7% with catatonia. Patients who received ECT were in age group over 65 years (38.4%), followed by 45-64 years (28.3%), 25-44 years (26.3%), 18-24 years (6.9%), and less than 18 years (0.2%). Unmodified ECT was not used in any hospital. 1,196 patients received continuation ECT in 83 hospitals and 1,044 received maintenance ECT in 77. There was no case of ECT-related death during a survey period.

Conclusion

ECT use in Australia is high. ECT training programs for psychiatry residents were acceptable. The pattern of use is similar to that of the United States.

Type
Unassigned abstracts
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2007
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