Dasen Brajkovic - Electroconvulsive Therapy –Effects on Severe Depression
As the most common type of condition in the United States, anxiety and depressive disorders affect around 40 million adults in the United States. Dasen Brajkovic is a psychiatrist who knows the statistics well. Those suffering from anxiety disorders are up to five times more likely to seek the help of a physician and the probability is six times greater that they will be hospitalized for psychiatric conditions than those who don’t suffer from anxiety. A closely related condition, depression, often goes hand in hand with an elevated level of anxiety. In fact, nearly half of those suffering from depression suffer from anxiety as well.
Severe depression can cause a ripple effect on overall health and a person’s mental state. When left untreated, depression can spiral into the most severe form of depressive disorders, clinical depression. When a person is clinically depressed, he or she experiences a lack of interest in nearly all activities, thoughts of suicide or an attempt on his or her own life, noticeable changes in weight, and many other noticeable changes in personality.
When medications fail to alleviate these symptoms, a treatment known as electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), is highly effective in relieving symptoms in severely depressed patients. Dr. Dasen Brajkovic is trained in ECT among many other treatments and knows it is one of the fastest ways to help patients who have no responded to treatment otherwise who may be at risk of harming themselves or possibly suicidal. This form of treatment has often been misunderstood but is highly effective and safe when performed correctly by trained professionals.
Sources: http://www.webmd.com/depression/guide/electroconvulsive-therapy
http://www.adaa.org/about-adaa/press-room/facts-statistics











