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The experience of living after ECT: a qualitative meta-synthesis

Karen Wells, Nicola Hancock, Anne Honey

2020Journal of Mental Health26 citationsDOI

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is a controversial treatment. Research has predominantly focused on clinician assessment of short-term efficacy and, occasionally, on participant experiences of the treatment itself. While service user accounts of the long-term impacts of ECT are reported, they are dispersed throughout the literature and typically tangential to studie's main foci. AIM: The aim of this study was to synthesise service-user accounts, within peer-reviewed literature, of long-term impacts of ECT in their daily lives. METHODS: A qualitative meta-synthesis was conducted. A systematic literature search identified qualitative articles meeting the inclusion criteria. Results sections of eligible papers were analysed thematically. RESULTS: From 16 eligible papers, the review identified 11 long-term impacts, four social influences and five strategies that people employed to navigate these long-term impacts. CONCLUSION: Limited research has examined long-term experiences of ECT from service-user perspectives. These lived experience perspectives are required to facilitate peer-to-peer learning and assist future service delivery to align with needs of people living with long-term ECT impacts.

Topics & Concepts

Qualitative researchPsychologyElectroconvulsive therapyInclusion (mineral)Peer reviewService delivery frameworkService (business)Term (time)Grey literatureSystematic reviewLived experiencePsychotherapistPsychiatryMedicineMedical educationMEDLINESocial psychologySociologyPolitical scienceSocial scienceCognitionEconomyEconomicsPhysicsLawQuantum mechanicsElectroconvulsive Therapy StudiesBipolar Disorder and TreatmentTreatment of Major Depression
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