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School shocks students with disabilities. The FDA is moving to ban the practice.

Posted on January 23, 2019

Originally published January 23, 2019 by Delaware Public Media
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Angela Disisto, right, of Medford, Mass. with her autistic brother Luigi at the Rotenberg Educational Center in Canton, Massachusetts
Angela Disisto, right, of Medford, Mass. with her autistic brother Luigi at the Rotenberg Educational Center in Canton, Mass. Angela says Luigi has benefited from the shock treatments and overall structure at the school. The backpack Luigi is wearing carries equipment that would give him a two-second electric skin shock if staff deem his behavior dangerous.(Meredith Nierman/WGBH News)

In the face of sustained advocacy from disability rights groups, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration says it plans to ban a shock device that the Massachusetts Judge Rotenberg Education Center uses to influence the behavior of children and adults with disabilities. Rotenberg administrators and some students’ family members contend the device, a backpack carrying batteries wired to students’ skin that administer a shock when triggered, is the only way to control aggressive or self-injurious behavior.

Read the full story from Delaware Public Media here.

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This entry was posted in News, Outside CDS and tagged electric shock therapy, Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

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