Future Human

The Unlikely Revival of Electrocution Therapy

For patients like me, an unexpected way to help treatment-resistant conditions

Siddhi Camila Lama
OneZero
Published in
7 min readJul 2, 2018

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Illustration: Sam Taylor

WWhen I first told my friends I was going home for a few months to get electrocuted, they thought I was insane. I think some of them wondered if I was literally insane, given that electrocution-related therapies are often associated with psychiatric institutions. These days when I see my friends, they often eye me sideways. Is Siddhi mad? Is the electrocution helping? What’s wrong with her, anyway? But given that for me, the treatment was a last-ditch effort at treating an incurable condition, I wasn’t bothered by how extreme it seemed to some people.

Since I was a teenager, I’ve struggled with chronic pain — the result of repeated shoulder dislocations from my earlier years in gymnastics. I was also a double bassist, and though my injuries had never been particularly debilitating, they left me with a tremor in my right hand that made a career path in music untenable. By the time I was in college, five years later, I had fibromyalgia — debilitating fatigue, widespread pain, and an inability to regulate body temperature. The onset was sudden — I was halfway through my undergraduate degree when I woke up one day and couldn’t move the right half of my body. My mobility…

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OneZero
OneZero

Published in OneZero

OneZero is a former publication from Medium about the impact of technology on people and the future. Currently inactive and not taking submissions.

Siddhi Camila Lama
Siddhi Camila Lama

Written by Siddhi Camila Lama

Bioengineer working on human-machine interface systems by day; scientific writer and translator by night.