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Wednesday, December 22, 1999
SOLDIER SUES OVER MEDICAL TREATMENT: TOO MANY DRUGS, ELECTRIC SHOCK THERAPY
HURT HIS CAREER
By RACHEL BOOMER -- The Daily News
A Dartmouth soldier says he was wrongly prescribed electroshock treatments
for anxiety and given "a vast amount" of drugs by two military doctors.
James Thurrott is suing the federal attorney general and the two doctors,
saying he may lose his job because of the treatment.
"Two years of sitting home like a zombie, being overdrugged ... (I felt)
pretty crappy," Thurrott, 37, said in an interview from his Dartmouth home
yesterday. "They had me as depressed, I suppose. Being drugged that much, I
didn't know that much different."
In 1996, the army ventilation technician said he was feeling stressed,
anxious and confused. While Thurrott was under the care of Dr. Garth Watt
from 1996 to '98, his lawsuit claims, Watt prescribed inapproprate drugs
and electroconvulsive therapy.
In electroconvulsive therapy, a treatment for depression and other
psychiatric disorders, a psychiatrist gives a patient electric shocks to
the brain, usually under general anaesthetic.
Lawyer David Bright writes in the statement of claim: "No proper assessment
was made by Dr. Watt of the plaintiff's condition and no proper records
were kept."
Thurrott's suit names a second doctor, Dr. Serdar Dursun, who reviewed
Thurrott's case in January 1998, and recommended changing Thurrott's
medication. The suit claims Dursun isn't a qualified psychiatrist. "Watt
and Dursun misdiagnosed (Thurrott's) condition and prescribed medication
which was not appropriate ... and further gave dosages of certain
medication far in excess of their recommended daily amount," the documents
say.
The suit claims an unspecified amount of damages for pain and suffering,
loss of enjoyment of life, future lost income and future care. Bright
writes Thurrott's two years of "improper and inadequate diagnosis and
treatment" may even cost him his job in the army's regular force. Thurrott
said yesterday the army has questioned whether he's medically able to be
deployed on UN missions away from home.
In November 1998, Thurrott said, he went to the Nova Scotia Hospital, where
staff there took him off all medication except for a thyroid medication.
Symptoms of a hyperactive thyroid, as listed in a medical dictionary,
include nervousness, heart palpitations, restlessness and insomnia.
Thurrott, a father of three, says he's feeling better now, but is worried
about his job. No defence has been filed.
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