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Health & Wellness

Comfortably Numb: How Psychiatry Is Medicating a Nation

By Onnesha Roychoudhuri, AlterNet. Posted April 17, 2008.


Author Charles Barber discusses Americans' unrealistic notions about happiness. We've medicalized a lot of life issues that aren't mental illnesses.
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While we've now become accustomed to the barrage of prescription drug commercials on prime-time TV, it's jarring to learn that this advertising is legal only in the United States and New Zealand. The pharmaceutical industry doesn't just target Americans directly, but also spends roughly $25,000 per physician per year. With the aid of information from data mining companies, a pharmaceutical representative knows exactly how many prescriptions for what medication a doctor has written, allowing the industry to individually target them.

How Americans came to this fraught relationship with the pharmaceutical industry and its drugs -- particularly antidepressants -- is the subject of Charles Barber's new book, Comfortably Numb. A veteran of mental health programs in homeless shelters and a lecturer in psychiatry at the Yale University School of Medicine, Barber trains his eye to the confluence of science and culture that have led to the widespread prescribing of medications once reserved for the most serious cases.

While the field of neuroscience continues to churn out new data about the way our brains work, Barber is quick to remind us how much more is yet to be understood. Barber recently spoke with AlterNet about how less sexy treatments like social interventions and therapies can be just as effective in changing the brain.

Onnesha Roychoudhuri: What led you to write the book?

Charles Barber: When I started in the mental health field in the late '80s there wasn't really a name for what I did. If I talked to professional, educated people, they didn't understand psychiatric diagnoses or medications. Then, 10 years later, people were very up on diagnoses, they were sympathetic to what I was doing, and there was now a name for the field: mental health. Many of them were taking the same medications that my clients were. There was a series of events over the late '80s and early '90s that set all that up. The main thing being Prozac and its cousins Paxil and Zoloft, which became totally mainstream; the TV advertising of drugs in the mid-'90s, well-known figures going public with their clinical depression, and a lot of subsequent pop culture stuff: The Sopranos and A Beautiful Mind, for example. All of this brought psychiatry, particularly medications, into the fore.

OR: Can you talk about your involvement in the mental health field and what it has enabled you to observe?

CB: I fell into the field for a lot of different reasons. I worked in psychiatric homeless shelter programs for about 10 years in New York -- Bellevue being the most well-known. So I was working with the really seriously mentally ill, many of whom had been in and out of prisons and state psychiatric facilities and homeless shelters. What I found was that psychiatry, at least for certain diagnoses, has confused the really serious forms of the illness with the far lesser forms. The best example is depression. Many of the folks that I worked with suffered from severe depression. I make the distinction in the book between big "D" depression and small "d" depression. In its severe forms, it's an absolutely brutal, horrific and malevolent illness where people are at dire risk of hurting themselves.

It's jarring to go to a cocktail party and hear people talking about being bummed out or hear that they're going through a divorce, and their family doctor put them on an antidepressant. There has been a confusion and conflation of this diagnosis that confuses serious disorders with far lesser conditions or, in many cases, life problems. We've medicalized a lot of life issues that are not mental illnesses.

OR: Just to be clear, this book is not about medication as a "bad" thing.

CB: Absolutely not. I think I make clear in the book that for serious disorders, I've seen the medications work really, really well. However, there are often side effects that the field has overlooked and is becoming more aware of these days. And these medications still don't work a good percentage of the time for people with serious disorders. My critique is that the further you get away from serious or moderate disorders, where you're treating nondisorders or marginal disorders with medication, the risk/reward calculus of the medications becomes more iffy -- particularly antidepressants.

When the SSRI (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor) antidepressants like Prozac and Zoloft and Paxil first came out, they were considered pretty much side-effect-free, largely because the previous generation of antidepressants had a lot of side effects. But in the past few years, people have become more aware that they have more side effects. These effects are seen most when people are getting on and off the drugs.

OR: You write that, in 2002, more than 11 percent of American women and five percent of American men were taking antidepressants. I was struck by the high percentages, but also the fact that more than 1 in 10 women are on these medications.


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See more stories tagged with: drugs, antidepressants, pyschiatry, pharmas

Onnesha Roychoudhuri is a San Francisco-based writer and editor. She has written for AlterNet, the American Prospect, Salon, Mother Jones, Truthdig, In These Times, Huffington Post, and Women's eNews.

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View:
TV on the web.
Posted by: Lagstorm on Apr 17, 2008 12:18 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just torrent your favorite shows and then there's no commercials! I haven't had a symptom in about 4 years.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» Huh? Posted by: fluffmuffinmom
» Try reading the article Posted by: war_on_tara
Terrorist
Posted by: HeKnew on Apr 17, 2008 12:38 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Be efficient...be happy...

THX1138

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EXTERNAL vs INTERNAL INFLUENCES
Posted by: skizum on Apr 17, 2008 4:27 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Perhaps there are some imbalances that require medication but we simply don't know enough about the basics of human behavior to make informed decisions about medication yet.

One day I asked myself the question, “Wouldn’t it be nice if there were some sort of ‘one stop shopping’ guidelines or handbook that I could reference to reflect on and use affect my level of happiness? I’m not talking about a resource like religion, the girl scouts, or any other organization built around externally and subjectively generated criteria, that I may or may not feel good about fulfilling. I want something that is based primarily on my internally and objectively generated needs relative to the modalities through which I perceive my world namely; psychological, physical, emotional, intellectual and spiritual. Criteria that I feel 100% good in fulfilling.” I kept thinking, there’s got to be some free resource out there like this.

I spent quite a bit of time researching and gathering my thoughts but I did not find exactly what I was seeking. I did find that there are a myriad of resources scattered across psychology*, psychiatry*, anthropology*, medicine*, religion*, ethics*, government* and many other institutions of history, wisdom and knowledge. However, the vast majority of these resources are present themselves out of context to one another. Whereas, in my real life, everything is constantly juxtaposed against everything else to create the conditions which determine my state of mind and thus influence my human behavior.

As a scientist and artist, this led me to wonder if there is any basic ‘alphabet’ or ‘periodic table’ or ‘basic set of variables’ that can be used to describe the basic elements that inspire human behavior; surely an achievable endeavor. If this resource existed, all these theories could be contextualized using a common set of variables and better understood in relative terms.

Doesn't it make sense that each of us should have a clear idea of what balance of needs* we must fulfill in our lives to be happy. Wouldn’t it be great if we knew what do to bring ourselves back into balance, and it was free? If more of us, including the most aggressive ones, were in balance with ourselves, could we solve so many of our world’s problems based on models that create imbalance?

The problem is that, as individuals, cultures and societies, we spend so much of our time focusing on influences external to ourselves that we create solutions to solve external problems when it is the internal ones that need solving. Every one of us should start learning to understand what are basic psychological(+)* needs ARE and how we can, as individuals and societies, fulfill them in a humanely balanced way.

In the face of all the bad trends that are happening, the good news is that this process can begin now, you can consider, reflect, write, think and communicate right in your own living room. You can still contribute and act on your findings in your daily life, for now.

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I don't take pills when I have a headache. Try meditation for 5 minutes.
Posted by: maxpayne on Apr 17, 2008 6:02 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And that's just an example. Seriously though, Big Pharma has been NUMBING America for decades ever since outlawing truly harmless but helpful plants. When ever some dumb motherfucker tries to say "pot smoker", I shoot back and ask them how they enjoy their petrochemically manufactured poison pills they keep gulping down from Big Pharma. And to be honest, if the Left really cared about being happy, they'd be fighting the Big Pharma tooth and nail by working towards overturning the ban on Cannabis in the first place.

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» Or just drink a glass of water Posted by: fanny666
You have to be Sedated to live in this Corpirate Hell Hole!
Posted by: williameon on Apr 17, 2008 6:20 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Treat the symptoms instead of curing the disease!
Placebo America.
Another TRILLION (a million millions)
Flushed down the
Toilet.
Eat Adulterated Food, drink polluted Water and live in a poisonous Environment
And
What do you get?
Sicker and
Deeper in Debt!
Oh, Thank you so much!
Mr. Corpirate God (CEO).
Trouble is?
Half of the people are so brainwashed and numb that:
They know or care little about it.
Slaves working three jobs, with no: security, no health insurance, no education and a
As the Shrub Said:
Uniquely American!
Corpirates Gone Wild!
When the Sh-t Hits The FAN?
Who do you think is going to save you?

He will be flying high above it in a Private Jet
or
Floating around
In a
Ark Sized Yacht.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

sslyon
Posted by: sslyon on Apr 17, 2008 6:20 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's gratifying to see important facets of this topic explored in depth at last. One of the first and most astute explorations of overmedication with anti-depressants of our population was L. Marinoff, PH.D in his 1999 work, "Plato Not Prozac". He treats his readers to revealing perspectives on the genesis of splits between philosophy, psychiatry and psychology and a stunning revealation of how the DSM has grown from 1952 with 152 listed disorders to 1994 listing 374, including such beauties as "Lottery Stress Disorder". Books of these kinds provide a tardy but essential start to a national self-evaluation into a mental health system in real -and hugely expensive, distress.

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» we are destroying ourselves Posted by: toddcory
» we are destroying ourselves Posted by: toddcory
I am angered by the message in this article!
Posted by: Nightstallion on Apr 17, 2008 6:36 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Human beings are already shirking their duty to themselves and their progeny. Since the author of this book won’t say it to AlterNet, I’ll say it.

All medications are Band-Aids! We do not treat or heal illness we “Masque” it. All so-called Antidepressant medications are legal thievery performed by a callous, invasive, and evasive American Medical Association. Said latter body is hell bent on getting away with money laundering and using male bovine excrement to haze J.Q.P. (John Q. Public) into purchasing chemical lobotomy to treat an already terminal condition called life!

As for brain chemical imbalance, that is pure unadulterated hogwash! Folks, this is a chicken and egg conundrum here. Yes, we have emotional imbalance, yes, we have paranoia, but also, and yes we do not have any such thing as a non-causal situation here.
Your brain chemistry is going to be haywire if you have been traumatized emotionally or physically. This is a fact not a conjecture! Besides, if you are paranoid it is because press, politicians, banking analysts, and most especially doctors who WILL use your ignorance of Greek & Latin to tell you that you have an illness that is NOT an illness are lying you to. For instance: Doctor to patient: “You are suffering from polymyalgia (Poly Gr. Meaning many /Myos Gr. Meaning muscle groups/ algia Gr. From Algol meaning Pain). Wonderful you have a condition that may be any of over a hundred different injuries, diseases, or disintegrations.

Cow dung people and pain medications are ALL addictive. You would be better off going to a naturopath or some other “Faith” healer or Witchdoctor. All psycho active drugs are addictive or they have contraindications that scare the urine out of me when I read them. Put a doctor on a lie detector if you don’t believe me. DO NOT believe these physicians of today! Every single one of them is a snake oil salesman on one level or another.

Thanks for reading,

Nightstallion

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» RE:small print..xxx prama porn Posted by: wittler youth
» Right on, Nightstallion! Posted by: HoboHomo
Great article!
Posted by: Gravitas on Apr 17, 2008 6:51 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If only Americans could turn off Dancing With the Stars long enough to read it! Then I wouldn't have to worry about all their eliminated drugs showing up in my drinking water.

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» RE: My mother watches,I don't. Posted by: nightgaunt
» RE: My mother watches,I don't. Posted by: HoboHomo
leftbank
Posted by: markw4786 on Apr 17, 2008 6:59 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Every high school and college massacre had one common denominator...legal prescribed psychotropic drugs. The mothers who drown their children in bathtubs...Prozac and its mind altering cousins.
There is a substance that people have been using for thousands of years for anxiety and depression with no murder or massacre association...pot!
All kidding aside, the mental health protocols, like medical care is nothing but the indiscriminate distribution of dangerous drugs, poorly tested, with side effects too often worse than the disorder or disease being treated. PATIENT, HEAL THYSELF.

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» RE: leftbank Posted by: HoboHomo
Drugs keep the sheep in the pen. . .
Posted by: redceres on Apr 17, 2008 7:23 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and also from struggling so much against the knife.

Keep in mind that our government, by and large, allows the drug industry to regulate itself "voluntarily," and that drugs are approved only after a process during which the company pays the government to "test" them.

Keep in mind the way that these industries already come between your doctor and his/her Hippocratic oath--when's the last time, migraine sufferers, that you went to the emergency room and were offered a shot of cheap, effective morphine instead of a noticeably less effective and exponentially more expensive "designer" migraine drug? The rest of you, how frequently have you gone to the doctor with something that turns out to be just a general complaint, such as allergies, digestive, or sinus issues, and been offered a daily drug to "prevent" some discomfort, instead of suggested lifestyle changes and an over-the-counter remedy just to relieve the symptoms?

Yes, some people need medical help--but how often do you NEED to take something like Flomax? Was it healthier to drug yourself through a divorce? Is it worth risking cancer to avoid some arthritis pain, as one current tv ad suggests? Maybe some people would still say yes--but how conscienable is it for our trusted institutions to pretend that over-medication should be the norm, and then to reap profits both in terms of drug sales and check-ups as well as in further health problems resulting from the drugs?

Keep in mind also the administration's desire to protect the telecom giants from prosecution because of their illegal acts of complicity in violating the Constitutional rights of citizens (it only seems random for a second if you think about it).

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Oh so true...
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Apr 17, 2008 7:48 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Quote: "Barber trains his eye to the confluence of science and culture that have led to the widespread prescribing of medications once reserved for the most serious cases."

I would say that it is a confluence of media, financial and pharmaceutical interests that is responsible for the situation. For example, here's a theme that you never hear in the corporate press:

"We should go back to a legal ban on advertising any prescription drug"

Why not? Yes, it's because of horizontal monopolistic integration at the shareholder level between media, finance and pharmaceuticals:

Pfizer

Merck

Genentech

BristolMyersSquibb

TimeWarner (CNN)

NewsCorp (FOX)

General Electric (NBC)

Disney (ABC)

New York Times Co

Bank of America

Goldman Sachs

JP Morgan Chase

You get the same names, over and over, as the leading shareholders:

VANGUARD
Capital Research Global Investors
FIDELITY
DODGE & COX
Barclays Global Investors UK
STATE STREET CORPORATION
AXA
FRANKLIN
Bank of New York Mellon Corporation
Capital World Investors
etc.

So, the corporate press is a) earning a lot of money off selling ad space to pharmaceutical corporations, and b) is owned by the very same individuals and institutions that own the drug corporations. It's like a corporate system founded on cocaine & heroin sales - of course they want you to keep taking your medications! They'll even get laws passed that say you have to take your medications. . . for your own good.

That's why articles like this are relegated to the Internet, and why you should never believe what the corporate press has to say about your health.

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» RE: Oh so true... Posted by: tornadorider2002
» RE: Oh so true... Posted by: bikerdude
Pill - I don't blame people for taking them.
Posted by: keyinside on Apr 17, 2008 7:54 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In this era of corrupt, war-mongering, asleep at the wheel politicians, corporate greed, global warming, and a population that refuses to stand up for their own self interest against their oppressors, pills dont' seem like such a bad idea.

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Antidepressants and antipsychotics ARE good for some people
Posted by: olderworker on Apr 17, 2008 8:01 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is way too much fear-mongering in this article and in the comments.

I am a psychotherapist (not a physician) and I do refer some clients to psychiatrists for psychoactive medication. Whether you Alternet readers want to admit it or not, there are some people whose mental faculties are not the best. I have clients who, without medication, are paranoid and self-destructive. With medication, they are calm and get along well in the world.

I admit that the pharmaceutical companies would probably like for everyone to be on these substances, and I agree, they're NOT for everyone. These medications are not for people with mild depression, but for more seriously disturbed individuals.

Thanks for letting me have my say.

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» mild depression isn't necessarily mild Posted by: inverse_agonist
» cannabis Posted by: meetmeineleusis
"We have not lost faith, but we have transferred it...
Posted by: war_on_tara on Apr 17, 2008 8:14 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...from God to the medical profession." - George Bernard Shaw

I especially liked the part where in Japan, depression isn't considered a big deal. "The soul catching cold" is a nice image.

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SEIU advertising on alternet is just as bad as those med ads
Posted by: logansafi on Apr 17, 2008 8:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As an RN, I am getting a little bit sick of seeing those SEIU advertisements on alternet. SEIU is a union that has a tradition of scabbing on other unions, including the California Nurses Association. What is their advertising doing here at alternet? I think it is a lot like pharmaceutical companies advertising to doctors, don't you think?

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» Bull. Post a reference. Posted by: thoughtcriminal
It's been quite a while since Freud
Posted by: willymack on Apr 17, 2008 9:07 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Did the initial work leading to the field of psychology. Ziggy baby has been largely discredited in recent years, both by mavericks and at contentious symposiums (DSMs). Keep in mind, Freud was a pioneer in a brand new field, and he was going in a direction not attempted before. He wouldn't have claimed to be the end all in his field, and neither should anyone else; the field is still relatively new, and psychology is not yet a mature science. Using chemical agents to affect behavioral changes in people is a crap shoot at best, and often dangerous or even life-threatening when misused. The fact about drug companies is that in their quest for enormous profits, they've created a phantasy world wherein a chemical cure for just about anything from hurt feelings to fatigue brought on by not enough sleep is readily available at your corner drugstore; That'll be $29.95, please. Still groggy from the sleep aid you took last night? Not to worry; we have a pick-me-up that'll take care of that. Fourty three dollars, please. Insatiable greed is what drives Big Pharma, nowadays. Freud must be spinning in his grave.

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» Freud and Prozac Posted by: fanny666
SSRIs, the anti-LSD
Posted by: meetmeineleusis on Apr 17, 2008 9:22 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Back in the 60s, the peace movement had an influence that so many people have readily forgotten.

LSD was banned NOT because it causes hallucinations, but because it "inspired revolutionary and anti-government tendencies"

LSD temporarily grants you a filter to view the world through, and generally, while on it, you gain a profound understanding of who is fucking you over, how thoroughly, and how often.

The stuff makes you want to take to the streets and do something.

40 years later, and what little research we managed to glean about psychoactives during the golden age of psychedelic drugs has been twisted to give us pharmaceutical monstrosities like prozac and paxil.

These drugs fill you with false contentment, They take away your drive to raise hell, and they help you to tolerate what should be considered intolerable. SSRIs are the anti-LSD, and the powers that be know it.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» but the fact is Posted by: meetmeineleusis
» Perhaps a coincidence Posted by: meetmeineleusis
» RE: SSRIs, the anti-LSD Posted by: inverse_agonist
» DMT / Ayahuasca Posted by: meetmeineleusis
» DMT / Ayahuasca Posted by: Cathyc
» RE: SSRIs, the anti-LSD Posted by: nodozejoze
» RE: SSRIs, the anti-LSD Posted by: e rice
» RE: SSRIs, the anti-LSD Posted by: nodozejoze
» RE: SSRIs, the anti-LSD Posted by: e rice
What? No chemical imbalance in mentally-ill brains?
Posted by: HughScott on Apr 17, 2008 9:24 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The author wrote, "There is no clear chemical imbalance for any mental illness."

BULLSHIT!

I have two family members in their late 40s who are bi-polar. Despite severe mental breakdowns and serial hospitalizations as young adults, they finished college and are now productive members of society.

Their success managing manic depression over the years is due primarily to drugs taken daily that treat bipolar brains.

Don't tell me chemical imbalance isn't a factor in some mental illnesses.

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» You're right. Posted by: fanny666
SSRIs used in War Theater...
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on Apr 17, 2008 9:27 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
you heard me. selective seretonin re-uptake inhibitors.

used to keep the Troops shoot'n...

"Forced to Fight", the story of War: but SSRIs used in Iraq & Afghan War Theatre

gee, could this be why Afghans talk about how American troops are scary because they're moody & trigger-happy?

that & the **steroids** abuse... gee, that'll make ya stable...

Screaming In An Empty Room: Potent Mixture: Zoloft & A Rifle

Nazis on Steroids - That's just great

How Nazis used amphetamines / meth (Pervetin) to keep their troops 'fight'n'...

~~~
Spread Love...

BlueBerry Pick'n
can be found @
ThisCanadian com
~~~
"We, two, form a Multitude" ~ Ovid.
~~~
"Silent Freedom is Freedom Silenced"
"do no harm"

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» Ahh amphetamines Posted by: meetmeineleusis
» killing 'trigger anxiety'... Posted by: BlueBerry PickN
antidepressants aren't all bad
Posted by: allyourbasearebelongtous on Apr 17, 2008 9:28 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I too am a non-physician psychotherapist. Many of the people I see are not having enough difficulty dealing with life problems to need more than psychotherapy but others are in need of psychiatric medication either because of the nature of their mental health issues or because the level of depression or anxiety they are experiencing is too severe for them to cope with with out the temporary help of medication. Anxiety and/or depression do not always require medication but that should be determined by a mental health professional. Some disorders such as bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, to name two, do require medication because they appear to be both biological and chronic in nature -- based on what we know at this time. My comment here is not a substitute for competent face-to-face professional mental health evaluation and/or treatment and should not be in any way construed as mental health advice and/ evaluation and/or treatment.

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» RE: "Based on what we know at this time" Posted by: allyourbasearebelongtous
» RE: "Based on what we know at this time" Posted by: allyourbasearebelongtous
» RE: antidepressants aren't all bad Posted by: allyourbasearebelongtous
» RE: antidepressants aren't all bad Posted by: JackOfCircles
The real problem isn't the drugs
Posted by: ReallyBearish on Apr 17, 2008 10:22 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's that you have too many physicians treating symptoms and not causes.

I took SSRIs for mild depression (that also cured compulsive behavior and phobias), and then stopped. I know many others that have had the same experience.

I've also seen people loaded up on various drugs by doctors who did not try to deal with the underlying psychological problems.

SSRIs work (in spite of what the Scientologists think). Doctors simply need to start looking at the problems with more sophistication.

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