Author Topic: Parents Defend School’s Use of Shock Therapy  (Read 2993 times)

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Offline Anonymous

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Parents Defend School’s Use of Shock Therapy
« Reply #15 on: December 30, 2007, 08:29:14 AM »
ABC published an article and the comments are checked by many higher ups in MA. Read the article and comment.
Here's the link:
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Story?id=4022502&page=1
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Offline Ursus

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Parents Defend School's Use of Shock Therapy
« Reply #16 on: December 30, 2007, 06:21:28 PM »
Quote from: ""Guest""
ABC published an article and the comments are checked by many higher ups in MA. Read the article and comment.
Here's the link:
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Story?id=4022502&page=1
Link expanded out for posterity's sake...

Apparently there was yet a third individual also subjected to the skin shock treatments, an adult, not mentioned in the previous articles.

They say there are "no long term negative effects," but just the anticipation of the shock-sure-to-come due to "bad behavior" is something JRC does not seem to acknowledge exists. PAVLOV'S DOGS MIGHT DISAGREE. And putting in a more secure phone system will not even begin to address that issue.

I'm glad that voices in academia like Dr. Barry Pizant are finally being quoted by the media.

See also this thread:  'The Effects of Anticipated Shocks on Thinking and Behavior'
http://wwf.fornits.com/viewtopic.php?t=22955

========================================

abc NEWS
Electric Shocks Can Continue at Mass. School After Hoax
A Prank Caller Duped School Officials Into Shocking Students as Many as 77 Times


A teacher and a student interact at the Judge Rotenberg Educational Center in Canton, Mass. The center had admitted to mistakenly administering electric shock treatment to at least two students after a prank caller allegedly under the guise of a school faculty member ordered them to do so. Rotenberg is the only school in the U.S. that uses electric shock therapy for to treat special needs kids.
(Steven Senne/AP Photo)


By EMILY FRIEDMAN
Dec. 24, 2007


A special education school where two emotionally disturbed students were wrongly given dozens of shocks after a prank call, will be allowed to use electric shock treatments on students for another year, the Associated Press reports.

But the state's Office of Health and Human Services said the Judge Rotenberg Educational Center must prove it uses shock treatments only for the most dangerous and self-destructive behaviors, and also show that the treatments reduce those behaviors, according to the AP.

On Aug. 26, someone posing as a supervisor called in shock treatments on two students, aged 16 and 19. The teens were awakened in the middle of the night and given the shock treatments.

Seven school officials at the special-needs school were fired after the incident which occured last August.

"This [incident] happened, we reported it and we've taken steps necessary so that this doesn't happen again," said Ernest Corrigan, spokesman for the Judge Rotenberg Educational Center, where the shock therapy was mistakenly administered. "This was not a normal day at Judge Rotenberg."

A prankster, believed to be a former student of the Canton, Mass., school, reportedly posed as a member of the administration and phoned in instructions for shock therapy, according to a report by the Department of Early Education and Care, the organization that licenses the residential program at the school and is conducting the investigation.

Unaware that the phone call was a prank, school officials reportedly woke the two students up and delivered 77 shocks to one student and 29 to another -- informing both that it was punishment for misbehavior earlier in the day.

Both victims were seen by medical professionals after the incident and later cleared, according to the school. Only one of the students has remained at the insitution since. The names of the victims have not been released.

"I think it's fair to say that [giving someone] 77 shocks is unusual," said Corrigan. "It is excessive to what is normal protocol. Giving 22 shocks is also excessive."

A third person was also reportedly shocked, according to Nancy Alterio, the executive director of Massachusetts's Disabled Persons Protection Committee, who said her agency's 24-hour abuse hot line was tipped off to the incident at Rotenberg.

"The allegations that were phoned in said that somebody had called into [the school] and instructed the staff to provide the aversive therapy [or shock therapy] to three separate individuals," said Alterio, who added that her organization is looking into the third, adult victim.

Rotenberg is a school for severely disabled or deeply disturbed children who would otherwise be overlooked by society, according to a statement released by the school. Shock therapy is only used "after obtaining prior parental, medical, psychiatric, human rights, peer review and individual approval from a Massachusetts Probate Court," according to the school's Web site.

Many of the school's approximately 250 students are low-functioning autistic children who have been unsuccessful or expelled from other schools due to bad behavior, according to Rotenberg.

It is the only school in the United States that utilizes electric shock therapy, which is administered through a device called a graduated electronic decelerator, or a GED.

"The skin shock that we're talking about is two seconds and people who have experienced it say it feels like a bee sting," said Rotenberg's Corrigan.

A statement on the school's Web site adds that, "skin-shock has no significant negative side effects."

In addition to electric shock therapy, students participate in reward-based learning, which allows students who behave well to earn points that can be exchanged for video games, jewelry and other toys.

Rotenberg Dispels Controversy, Again

While the school upholds that the shock therapy is harmless — and even has parents to vouch for the success of their children's treatment — Rotenberg has seen its fair share of controversy.

The state of Massachusetts has tried and failed to close the institution twice before because of its use of the electric shock treatment, according to The Associated Press, and in 2006 New York's Board of Regents said that it would not permit students from its state to receive shock therapy after 2009, except in very rare cases.

Parents of children with special needs are upset over the incident at Rotenberg, but many of them told ABC News that they had heard negative things about the school.

"I think it's barbaric and there are really no words," said Rita Shreffler, executive director of the National Autism Association, who has two special-needs children. "It's inexplicable. There's no reason to [shock] another human being."

Shreffler advised parents to "do their homework" about their children's caretakers.

"Be very watchful," said Shreffler, who added that her children have never been treated at Rotenberg." Special-needs kids a lot of times can't speak for themselves to tell the story."

"There is outrage that this type of treatment continues to exist and is so easily misused," said Richard Robison, executive director of the Federation for Children with Special Needs and father of two young adults with special needs. "I think we know enough now about autism that there other options [for treatment]."

Autism experts also argue against the school's claim that this type of treatment has no negative effect on the children it is used on, and say while no physical harm may result, psychological effects are almost certain.

"In terms of the stress that it creates for the individuals with autism there is simply no way there can't be some very negative long-term side effects," said Barry Pizant, who is an adjunct professor at Brown University's Center for the Study of Human Development. "It interferes with their ability [to] trust people who are with them and these are people who already have trouble understanding people."

Parents who send their children to Rotenberg may not be aware of other treatment options, said Pizant.

"In no way are we saying these are bad parents, but they've probably not received good programming for their kids in the past," Pizant told ABC News. "You can understand why they'd want to do anything for their kids."

"I see [shock therapy] as the last vestige of [an] old practice that was proven ineffective and we should have stopped doing it all together 20 or 30 years ago," said Pizant. "If you look in the mainstream of people working with kids with disabilities these aversives are totally out of the mainstream."

But when ABC News' "Primetime" went inside Rotenberg in February, the team met several families who were pleased with the treatment.

Linda Doherty's autistic son, Marc, is a student at Rotenberg and was being treated with shock therapy for his aggressive behavior.

"My son is not attacking people, so people can work with him without fear of being physically harmed," said Doherty. "He's able to go on field trips and go out into the community. I think that is a success."

School Reacts, Changes Policies After Incident

Since the incident at Rotenberg was reported more than three months ago, representatives from both the school and the Department of Early Education and Care told ABC News that the center has undergone several changes.

"[Rotenberg] implemented certain measures and protocols for the safety of their children as part of their short-term response," said Early Education and Care spokeswoman Cindy Campbell. "They structured their monitoring department to include additional supervision for those working directly with the student and instituted a new [and more secure] telephone system."

Electric shock therapy is still being administered by the school, but it was temporarily suspended from being used in the residential areas, according to Campbell.

The Associated Press contributed to this story.
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Offline Anonymous

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Parents Defend School’s Use of Shock Therapy
« Reply #17 on: December 30, 2007, 09:57:59 PM »
elsewhere on the Net, some ex-employees/ex-students of Rothenberg have referred obliquely to a special torture procedure called "probing": no details have surfaced, but apparently Dr. Israel does this "probing" thing alone with the student in his office (when he thinks the student has done something extra-specially bad). If anyone has contacts with a former employee, it seems worth asking about this.
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Offline Anonymous

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Parents Defend School’s Use of Shock Therapy
« Reply #18 on: December 31, 2007, 06:57:27 AM »
JRC proponents (including Matty boy himself) have made repeated references to a "student" who died shortly after having been pulled from the program.

His name was James Velez. Information about him can be found here and here.
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Offline Anonymous

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« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Anonymous

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Parents Defend School’s Use of Shock Therapy
« Reply #20 on: December 31, 2007, 10:41:23 AM »
Even if your son scratches at himself...institutionalizing him at age 7 is shameful. Get a private nurse and some pro advice, for godsakes. A seven year old is easily controlled.

Parents just don't want to take care of their kids. You know those pictures of the "alien babies" that float around you tube? Like this?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7xW4TVRL ... re=related

These kids suffer from a serious disease. But, they can live rewarding lives. One has gone on to be competitive swimmer. It takes alot of work from the parents, though. They need to be cleaned, and swabbed, and the environment they live in needs to be super clean. If these kids can be taken care of....
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Offline Anonymous

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Parents Defend School’s Use of Shock Therapy
« Reply #21 on: January 10, 2008, 09:24:38 AM »
Quote from: "Guest"
I saw this post on another forum:

Quote
Greg Miller
Mar 6, 2007 at 12:21 am

My name is Greg Miller. I used to work at Judge Rotenberg Center and spoke against the abuses in the ABC Nightline documentary. I appreciate reading your thoughts on the documentary.

ABC Nightline did leave out many facts. For example, I told ABC in my 2+ hour interview with them about JRC tying students into restraints on a four-point board and shocking them five times consecutively (over 10 minutes, or 40 minutes, whatever is on the student’s plan) for certain behaviors. The person with the remote control in one hand that you saw on the documentary, and a timer in the other hand, would remain out of sight from the student on the board to administer the shocks. That is to create as much panic and fear in the student as possible to make the punishment far worse than the shocks itself. This was all pre-approved by parents and the judges and the laws of Massachusetts.

There are worse things I’ve seen at Judge Rotenberg Center. Imagine watching a 40+ year-old adult male, in there with suicidal tendencies from a young age, get attacked three times per week by an adult male staff with a plastic knife. The student was left in restraints all day long for this procedure so that he was unable to defend himself. Then while the student is screaming for his life, TRYING HIS BEST TO DEFEND HIMSELF WHILE TIED IN RESTRAINTS, and the staff tries to jam the knife down the student’s throat while yelling the words,â€
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Offline Anonymous

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Re: Parents Defend School’s Use of Shock Therapy
« Reply #22 on: January 15, 2008, 01:09:22 PM »
Quick link to contact Governor Patrick:

Click on the following link to send an automated message to Governor Deval Patrick:
http://capwiz.com/thearc/mail/?id=51610 ... S&state=MA

Choose "speak out regarding electric shock aversive therapy" to send a pre-composed message, or "Compose Your Own Letter" if you'd rather create a message from scratch. DO NOT select "support community investment for people with disabilities" as this is a state-specific budget message (important, but not relevant to the aversives issue).

Click on "next step" and fill in your personal information before sending your message. It is important that you fill in this information, which will appear within the body of the outgoing message, so that the Governor will see you are a real person and that the message is not spam.
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Offline Anonymous

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Re: Parents Defend School’s Use of Shock Therapy
« Reply #23 on: January 15, 2008, 01:23:40 PM »
If you have more time, here is the list of senators and state reps.  

SENATORS

thomas.mcgee@state.ma.us 617-722-1350 room 112

patricia.jehlen@state.ma.us 617-722-1578 room 513

bruce.tarr@state.ma.us 617-722-1600 room 313-A

REPS

Rep.stephenleduc@hou.state.ma.us 617-722-2230 ext 5 room 167

Rep.RobertNyman@hou.state.ma.us 617-722-2020 room 527A

Rep.MaryGrant@hou.state.ma.us 617-722-2220 r254

Rep.JohnFernandes@Hou.State.MA.US 617-722-2030 r43

Rep.JohnLepper@hou.state.ma.us 617-722-2100 r128

Rep.MaryRogeness@hou.state.ma.us 617-722-2390
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