When discovered the Mormon church stopped all conversion practices at BYU and refereed its homosexual students and other gay church members to Evergreen International located in Salt Lake City, Utah, whose stated mission was to assist “people who want to diminish same-sex attractions and overcome homosexual behavior” and the horror stories persisted of abuse and torture.Īlthough it functioned independently of any church, Evergreen was religiously based on the teachings of the LDS Church. Others were given chemical compounds, which were administered through an IV and caused subjects to vomit when they were stimulated.
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Shocks, given in three 10-second intervals, were then administered in conjunction with certain images. The 1976 study at Brigham Young, “ Effect of Visual Stimuli in Electric Aversion Therapy,” was written by Max Ford McBride, then a graduate student in the psychology department.Ī mercury-filled tube was placed around the base of the penis to measure the level of stimulation he experienced when viewing nude images of men and women. BYU students were told that they’d either have to go through the “aversion therapy” or leave BYU. Teen boys as young as 15 were sent there by their bishops. Gay men were referred there by bishops, stake presidents and, for BYU students, the standards committee. Īlthough “therapy” was required for homosexual students, Dye promised Bergera that “no student working through Standards will ever undergo aversion therapy” He lied.
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Gary Bergera interviewed Gerald Dye, chair of the University Standards office, in February 1978, and Dye reported what the “set process” was for “homosexual students referred to Standards” for counseling: However, most of the therapies were not stopped (including electric shock, vomiting aversion, and the use of pornographic materials). Within a year, the review board had assembled a list of eight therapies being used at BYU which “could conflict” with church teachings. In 1975, the Brigham Young University Psychology Department administrators organized a Board of Review for Psychotherapeutic Techniques to recommend “policies governing the use of sensitive treatment techniques” on campus.