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Antidepressants Work No Better Than a Placebo

Matthew Whalley writes "Researchers got hold of published and unpublished data from drug companies regarding the effectiveness of the most common antidepressant drugs. Previously, when meta-analyses have been conducted on only the published data, the drugs were shown to have a clinically significant effect. However, when the unpublished data is taken into account the difference between the effects of drug and placebo becomes clinically meaningless — just a 1 or 2 point difference on a 30-point depression rating scale — except for the most severely depressed patients. Doctors do not recommend that patients come off antidepressant drugs without support, but this study is likely to lead to a rethink regarding how the drugs are licensed and prescribed."

99 of 674 comments (clear)

  1. This just in! by n3tcat · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Thinking that you're going to not be depressed anymore makes you less depressed!

    1. Re:This just in! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Spoken by someone who's obviously never suffered from depression.

    2. Re:This just in! by DuncanE · · Score: 5, Insightful

      As its been widely noted this study does not take into consideration as a variable those patients that talked about their depression with a psych or councilor and those that didn't.

      Anti-dep medication allows you to handle your current situation enough so that you can go and talk to someone about your wider issues.

      Its a band aid. The real fix is to find the thing making you depressed and fix that. And you need to talk to someone for that.

    3. Re:This just in! by dbjh · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I happen to be close to someone with a serious depression. But I don't understand your last statement. In what way is depression *not* all in your head? I know how self-destructive a depressed person can be. I also know they drain energy from the people around them. That they can feel physical pain and get into panics. However, I don't see how that's not all something happening in the head of the depressed person.

    4. Re:This just in! by dosius · · Score: 3, Informative

      And it depends on WHY you're depressed.

      If you're depressed because of a neurological glitch - yeah, meds might help. But if like me you're depressed because of environmental issues (cabin fever compounded by social phobias) - they might just not work at all - Prozac didn't do shit for me, didn't even cause a reaction when I OD'd on it.

      -uso.

      --
      What you hear in the ear, preach from the rooftop Matthew 10.27b
    5. Re:This just in! by Aladrin · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I have to agree. My sister and mother are both are anti-depression meds... And I used to feel I was depressed, but wouldn't do anything about it.

      I no longer feel depressed and I know why: I have hobbies now.

      My mother and sister don't have hobbies at all... They just sit around and play games or watch tv... They have nothing to look forward to each day, or even each week.

      Me, I can't -wait- to get home and mess with one or more of my hobbies at any given time... I've got so many that it's actually a burden at times to decide what I want to mess with... And I want to add more.

      It really was the difference between wondering what life's about and loving my life.

      I'm not a doctor, and this isn't the solution for everyone... But I'd bet a -lot- of people would be better off if they had things to look forward to, instead of living life minute-by-minute and never looking forward. Having friends is not 'having a life'. Having a future is, and that -should- include friends to do those things with.

      --
      "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
    6. Re:This just in! by qbzzt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      He meant "in your head" as an idiom for "illusionary". Depression is not illusionary, it's a real disease.

      --
      -- Support a free market in the field of government
    7. Re:This just in! by Brian+Gordon · · Score: 4, Funny

      What? It's a placebo? AAH DON'T TELL ME!

      *plugs fingers in ears*
      la la la la la

    8. Re:This just in! by justthinkit · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I strongly agree about hobbies. In addition, I think there is a benefit to limiting contact with the news. As Steve Chandler said, "It's not the news, it's the bad news". This is of course related to having a hobby. If you disappear into the basement for 4 hours, you probably didn't fire up CNN every 10 minutes during that time.

      Another thought, perhaps controversial, is that women seem inclined to worry more than guys. I try to minimize potential worry-items -- opening up bills just before I plan to actually pay them, for example. My wife will open a bill the minute she sees it, even if we are just off for a walk with the dogs. Then while we are walking the dogs in the fresh air, she has to be thinking about that ridiculous Comcast bill.

      Finally I would add that carrying too much stuff around in our head does us no favors. No one in our family has a cell phone, nor do we wish we did. That way when I'm driving from A to B, I am not so rudely interrupted that I almost drive off the road. Instead I can enjoy the beautiful bumper-to-bumper traffic in peace. But seriously, if I am fuming in traffic I would just as soon not share my headspace with someone else at that exact moment. I have also used a reminder program for eight or nine years now, and currently have 225 reminders in it. When my wife hits me with an event -- take the dog to the vet on Wed -- I create a reminder and then forget about it until the reminder goes off. I miss fewer events and carry a dozen times less event-related detail in my mind -- has to be a good thing.

      --
      I come here for the love
    9. Re:This just in! by BobPaul · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No, seriously, he's right. It's not so simply like you can just say, "I'm not going to be depressed" but just being depressed is itself a real downer than sucks you in deeper. Antidepressants, even if they only work through placebo affect, provide a patient with hope, which could help the roller coaster move gradually upward.

      The best days are usually the days you've made a plan of action and convinced yourself it will change everything and you'll be better--you're thinking positively and not fixated on your depression. The worst days are when you realize you plan of action didn't do shit and everything still the same.

    10. Re:This just in! by popmaker · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I actually think this is a wonderful advice. Doing these things makes you forget how shitty your life is and when you actually get at them, your life isn't shitty anymore. The worst thing to do is to just lie around and sulk. You become focused on your own depression and that just makes it spiral out of control. Well, sometimes that actually IS the only thing I want to do when feeling down - and in that way it is maybe not so hard to understand how depression happens to people.

      Sometimes just cleaning my room, or doing the laundry helps me get up again. And having a fairly regular life, eating good food, and getting outside, if not only to walk around a bit. Heck, even writing comments on slashdots can help.

      The basic tenet of this philosophy is to "keep yourself busy". Don't ever just sit down and let the feelings overwhelm you. By and by, they diminish and life won't suck anymore. I know this isn't enough for many people and I suspect a lot of "you have no idea what _I_ have been through". But I think people should TRY. We are often too quick to judge something as clinical depression and sometimes forget that depression is also a normal state of things that CAN be overcome by effort. Even when it gets so bad that you don't leave your bed for a week - it CAN be normal - or at least inside some manageable neighboorhood of normal.

      As for the last thing: Stop feeling sorry for yourselves! This might sound harsh, but feeling sorry for yourself is the worst thing you can do to yourself.

    11. Re:This just in! by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Depression is not illusionary, it's a real disease.

      Depression is certainly not illusionary, and is certainly a real problem.

      Whether it is helpful to call depression, and other "problems in living" that are not directly diagnosed as neurological lesions or malfunctions, "diseases" or "illnesses", is questionable. I suggest reading Thomas Szasz's The Myth of Mental Illness (available also in an expanded book form, but the original paper gives the gist of it):

      ...In actual contemporary social usage, the finding of a mental illness is made by establishing a deviance in behavior from certain psychosocial, ethical, or legal norms. The judgment may be made, as in medicine, by the patient, the physician (psychiatrist), or others. Remedial action, finally, tends to be sought in a therapeutic -- or covertly medical -- framework, thus creating a situation in which psychosocial, ethical, and/or legal deviations are claimed to be correctible by (so-called) medical action. Since medical action is designed to correct only medical deviations, it seems logically absurd to expect that it will help solve problems whose very existence had been defined and established on nonmedical grounds. I think that these considerations may be fruitfully applied to the present use of tranquilizers and, more generally, to what might be expected of drugs of whatever type in regard to the amelioration or solution of problems in human living.

      I'm not sure whether I agree with him entirely or not. I do think that "mental illness" is at least in part a social construct - but the same is true of a lot of physical illness.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    12. Re:This just in! by kalirion · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Just like you can decide not to feel pain when someone hits you, right? I mean all the beating did was send a bunch of electrical signals into your brain. Pain itself is all in your head.

    13. Re:This just in! by KevinKnSC · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In the first page of this story I've already seen three of your posts claiming that depression is self-inflicted by focusing on the problem. I was just wondering if you could tell us where you went to medical school, or what medical or psychological studies you've conducted. There are constructive, non-medicinal, ways to deal with depression such as cognitive behavior therapy, but it's incredibly disingenuous to suggest that depression is self-inflicted by people who would just rather be sad.

    14. Re:This just in! by Rosy+At+Random · · Score: 2, Funny

      I no longer consider suicide as an option, but whether this marks an improved state of mind or simply reflects my belief in quantum immortality, I can't say!

      --
      Would you like a slice of toast?
    15. Re:This just in! by Jonny_eh · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The placebo effect, while often startlingly effective, is only temporary, it always wears off. This is why people need regular treatments at chiropractors and acupuncturists.

      If someone has real severe clinical depression, drugs are the only scientifically proven way to get back to leading a normal life.

    16. Re:This just in! by dbjh · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, seriously, he's right. No, he's not. I didn't reply to the first post in the thread ("Thinking that you're going to not be depressed anymore makes you less depressed!"), because that seems to work for depressed people. The post I was replying to used the word "sincerely" and I object to that. It has nothing to do with sincerely trying or not. A depressed person on a bad day can feel so bad that they can hardly move. Using words like "sincerely" suggests (to me) that those people are faking or doing something similar. It shows an absolute lack of empathy or ignorance.
    17. Re:This just in! by NickFortune · · Score: 4, Informative

      If someone has real severe clinical depression, drugs are the only scientifically proven way to get back to leading a normal life.

      Yes, this is not under dispute

      The research does in fact say that for the most serious cases of clinical depression, the drugs do have a benefit. They don't work any better in such cases you understand; it's just that the placebo effect drops away sharply at the extreme end of the severity curve, so that drugs become more effective by comparison.

      The point here is that for the vast majority of cases where the four anti-depressants in question are usually prescribed, they have roughly the same effect as a couple of grams of chalk wrapped up in a sugar coating. Which rather brings into question their value in all but the most extreme cases.

      [ Info based on an interview on Radio 4's Today Program, this morning. They had an interview with one of the researchers, and another with a rep from the drugs industry. ]

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    18. Re:This just in! by jesuscyborg · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Telling someone who is suffering from mental illness that the pain they feel is not their fault, but a disease which can be cured, can oftentimes be comforting. Such treatment externalizes the source of the patient's problems and motivates them to fight against the "disease" instead of blaming him/herself. Think about it, if you had severe depression and each day was a struggle to do the most basic of things, would you rather have a doctor say, "oh, wow, I guess you're pretty messed up. take these pills and it might make you more like a normal person" or "what's happening isn't your fault, it's a disease that can be treated and possibly cured"

    19. Re:This just in! by GungaDan · · Score: 3, Insightful

      not "the only." ECT has been shown to work wonders in severe depression, drug free.

      --
      Eloi are stupid, throw morlocks at them!
    20. Re:This just in! by TheLostSamurai · · Score: 5, Interesting

      It's funny, I used to be among the camp of people that would say "just make yourself be happy". For me it was really that simple. Anytime I was in a bad mood I could just will myself out of it and simply could not understand other people that couldn't.

      That was of course until I started taking steroids, no not the shoot 'em in your ass and get big kind, the prescription kind. Now a normal dose for this drug is 5-10mg usually given for skin problems and sometimes for asthma. The bottle specifically states that you should not suddenly stop taking this medication and there needs to be a weening period to help you get off of this drug. The dose I was given was 120mg that I was instructed to start on the first day of the month, take for 5 days and then stop altogether. The goal was to try to make my immune system recover from months of intensive chemotherapy. After the second day of taking this medication, my mood could only be described as extremely optimistic about everything and a view that I was, for the most part, wholly invincible. This feeling lasted until the sixth day at which point I had stopped taking the drug and started to feel like the world was literally crumbling around me. I would see a commercial on TV and start to cry when I realized that I do sometimes get that 'Not so fresh feeling'. It was ridiculous. At one point I got into an argument with an old friend who did not know what I had been going through, and for a moment considered jumping 3 stories to my death so she could see how much she hurt me.

      It was at that moment that I realized what true depression was. I looked back on the moment a week later after the side effects had dithered and thought about how irrational those thoughts were. At the time when I was having them however, they seemed a perfectly logical solution. Now I realize this is an extreme case brought on by side effects of a powerful drug, but it does represent to me how an unbalancing of chemicals in the brain can greatly affect a persons mood and I will never again jump to the conclusion that a persons depression is not affected by a real problem with their physiology.

      With regards to the placebo effects of anti-depressant drugs, I will say that at one point I was prescribed Lexipro by my doctor for what at the time was really situational depression. This drug was certainly no placebo. While it did not make me happier, it had the affect of making me extremely anxious and angry. I developed very violent tendencies over the 2 weeks I was on it. This drug was obviously mis-prescribed by a bad doctor, but it most certainly altered my brain chemistry. My cousin, who is more similar to me that our parents are to each other (sisters), was prescribed the same drug with very similar effects. So there may be some drugs out there prescribed for depression that don't work for a lot of people, and others that have unintended effects, but this may be due more to doctors not understanding the illness of their patients and not understanding the drugs intended uses.

      --
      I am Jack's complete lack of surprise.
    21. Re:This just in! by truthsearch · · Score: 5, Insightful

      He said "real severe clinical depression". That's the 1/3 you're talking about where the drugs work. Many people are diagnosed with depression based on just the most general definition (feeling "down" for longer than 2 weeks). And most people should only be treated with therapy. Today the drugs are handed out like candy. If they were only handed to the people that genuinely need them you'd find anti-depressants work quite well, which seems to be what TFA is saying.

    22. Re:This just in! by hedwards · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If someone has real severe clinical depression, drugs are the only scientifically proven way to get back to leading a normal life. I think you mis-phrased that. Medications can be useful in getting somebody out of the mire enough to start utilizing approaches like Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and taking better care of themselves.

      It bothered me when I first read the BBC article on this, that people were being prescribed antidepressants for mild depression. There isn't generally any reason why a mild case should be worth the side effects, expense and possible suicide risk of prescribing the pills. I've been a fervent believer for quite a while that unless a person is suicidal or debilitated to the point where they aren't functioning, that they should really think about whether the pills are the right solution or not.

      The most effective treatments always include both pills and therapy in the beginning, and usually over time become just therapy as a patient improves. I wouldn't personally be surprised that the placebo effect factors into this somewhere, outlook on medication has been known for a long time to be an influencer of efficacy. And even in cases where a person knows that a treatment or method is bunk, but chooses to delude themselves anyways, there's a bump in efficacy.

      Medications should be in wane in terms of development at this point, it's pretty well established that exercise, light box therapies, certain fatty acids, CBT and things of that nature make a much larger impact than was believed in the past. Not to mention the fact that much of what gets diagnosed as depression is more accurately describes as insomnia.

      Unfortunately, this isn't a one size fits all solution to things, people will frequently need combinations of the above, with possible other treatments as well. The big problem with medication is that it was never proven that the pills addressed the cause of the problem in the first place. Because of that, there was always the risk that the pills were kind of like treating drowsiness with meth, it appears to work in the short term, but doesn't actually address the underlying problem.
    23. Re:This just in! by hesiod · · Score: 3, Informative

      > Stop feeling sorry for yourselves!

      There are some who don't necessarily feel sorry for themselves, but instead are mad at themselves for not being able to overcome their depression. The same psychology still comes into play, but it's not like all depressed people sit around thinking "I'm so sad and everyone should pity me."

    24. Re:This just in! by big_paul76 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Suggesting that depression is self-inflicted by people who would just rather be sad is on par with suggesting that a rape victim was asking for it. Anybody who's ever seen anyone suffering from genuine depression (as opposed to feeling down after you lost your job or something) knows that nobody would wish that on themselves any more than they'd wish cancer on themselves.

      --
      The plural form of "anecdote" is "anecdotes", not "evidence".
    25. Re:This just in! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      As a martial arts expert I can say that no amount of training will ever allow you to ignore pain. Anyone who says otherwise is a liar.

    26. Re:This just in! by plague3106 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Suggesting that depression is self-inflicted by people who would just rather be sad is on par with suggesting that a rape victim was asking for it.

      Stop with strawmen already. They are nothing alike; one scenario you have control over, the other someone else is controlling you. How dare you equate the violence of rape with depression; you trivialize those that have been raped.

      Anybody who's ever seen anyone suffering from genuine depression (as opposed to feeling down after you lost your job or something) knows that nobody would wish that on themselves any more than they'd wish cancer on themselves.

      Speaking as someone that WAS, I agree, but that doesn't mean its not any less in your mind (and actually under your control). The fact that these pills DO NOTHING seem to re-enforce my point, wouldn't you think?

    27. Re:This just in! by steelfood · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You are absolutely correct. Conditioning in martial arts does this over a long period of time. It doesn't kill the nerve endings, but it does make the brain "used to" the signals.

      On another level, there are meditations that will allow the brain to ignore "pain" signals. The most well-known of these meditation methods is the high level chi gung that top falun gung members practice, but it actually comes from a much older Chen Buddhist tradition.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    28. Re:This just in! by big_paul76 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      The reason I bring up the 'blame the victim' rape example is that they're both part of the same psychological phenomena, the 'Fair World Bias'.

      Most people aren't comfortable with the idea that bad things happen to people through no fault of their own. If bad things can happen to you through no fault of your own, then I have to consider that terrible things might happen to me!

      It's like people believing in a meritocracy. People who believe they owe all their success and material wealth to their own strength of character and nothing else, as if, had they been switched at birth and raised in the 3rd world or an inner-city slum, instead of a middle-class family in an industrialized country, that they'd still be programmers or stockbrokers or something.

      The fact that these pills DO NOTHING seem to re-enforce my point, wouldn't you think?


      Are you suggesting that the fact that SSRIs do nothing supports the assertion that people can just 'think themselves out of depression'? 'Cause I don't think you can draw that conclusion at all. The only conclusion I think you can draw from the fact that SSRIs are no better than placebo is that we don't understand the brain nearly as well as we thought.
      --
      The plural form of "anecdote" is "anecdotes", not "evidence".
    29. Re:This just in! by TheLostSamurai · · Score: 2, Interesting

      One week of a drug induced depression is not clinical chronic depression. This would be like saying, I spent one week living on bread and water, and I now totally understand what its like to be living in a 3rd world country and starving every day. It was not my intention to imply that I knew what it was like to live with chronic depression, and as such I may have mis-spoke. I was simply trying to convey my realization that clinical depression is not merely something you can will away, as I had previously thought to be the case.

      And not that it has much relevance to your comment, but I did this every month for 14 months, not just one week.

      --
      I am Jack's complete lack of surprise.
    30. Re:This just in! by plague3106 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Are you suggesting that the fact that SSRIs do nothing supports the assertion that people can just 'think themselves out of depression'?

      Read the study again; its not that the pills did nothing, its that the placebo had the same effect as the pills. So yes, certainly seems to suggest you can "think yourself out of it." But remember, some people don't want to.

    31. Re:This just in! by plague3106 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The chemical reactions in the brain thagt cause depression are pretty well known. It's chemical issue.

      No, sorry. Read the study. We don't know what causes depression. Hell, even the TV commercials for anti-depressents tell you that. The chemical imbalance theory is just that. Its just as likely that the chemical imbalance is a symptom, not the cause. We don't know.

      Just because it's in your brain, doesn't mean it's really in your control.

      To some extent that's true, to a large extent not. Certainly our mood is under our control. Some have been known to control their heartbeat.

      You would be suprised at the number of things people do everyday and never know it.

      I did say part of it was subconcience; the trick it to make yourself aware of it.

      People EAT without knowing it. Snack really. All kinds of things that take a consious outside effort to change.

      Nonsense. You know how I know its BS? Because they know RIGHT AWAY when they are out of snack. They choose to pretend they aren't eating as much. There's a reason why writing down what you eat works when you're trying to lose weight... it makes it so you can't lie to yourself, but there's certainly no external force in that... you need to CHOOSE to lose weight, and write down your diet.

    32. Re:This just in! by Tyger · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's not that people don't want to, it's that when their brain chemistry is screwed up, they don't think they can. It's like you don't feel like you are in control of your own moods. So along comes the placebo effect. If you believe the pill can help your depression, you're not having to believe that you can do anything, just that the pill can.

    33. Re:This just in! by SETIGuy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Thinking that you're going to not be depressed anymore makes you less depressed!

      The truth is more like "Becoming less depressed makes you think that something you thought made you less depressed."

      I can't tell you how many people I've known who have suffered from clinical depression have come to the conclusion (after the fact) that they willed themselves out of it.

      Until they suffer their next bout and can't repeat the trick of "snapping out of it" without assistance.

    34. Re:This just in! by CaptJay · · Score: 2, Insightful

      (posting cancels a moderation, but I'd rather contribute).

      Consider not having the energy to get back up from your microwaved macaroni when you realize you forgot to take a fork, and just leaving it there uneaten because it's too hot to eat with your fingers, and just "not worth it", after all. Then try to imagine how someone in that state can draw the strength to "start focusing on what needs to be done".

      It's an incredibly nasty circle to get drawn in, and not as simple as just changing a mindset.

      I don't think there's a simple way to generally describe depression, as it is a consequence of so many different causes. Mine was because of work burn out.

      For me, sadness and depression are two completely different feelings. Sadness is an easy feeling to describe : losing something dear, an opportunity, someone, or just generally being disappointed with life. It can go far, and can lead to depression, but it's "just" a feeling. I was sad I let down my team mates, for instance, but that wasn't the issue.

      Depression is being so overwhelmed by a situation that feelings are a constant jumble. Sadness, hopelessness, rage, apathy, frustration, but mostly a serious lack of energy and motivation to do *anything*. Getting up in the morning takes you 15 minutes of anxious anticipation, as if all of the day's weight was concentrated in that silly little step off the bed. You sit somewhere, getting up to DO something takes forever, and the longer it takes, the more you hate yourself for being so lazy for not doing anything.

      --
      "I remember Y1K, every abacus had to get another bead"
  2. Prozac changed my life by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I don't care if it is a placebo - and I doubt it is - but I'm glad I finally went on Prozac.I'm a much more functional human being than I was five years ago before I started.

    1. Re:Prozac changed my life by JustOK · · Score: 2, Funny

      no, you're not.

      --
      rewriting history since 2109
    2. Re:Prozac changed my life by BeanThere · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This summary doesn't mention it, but I saw another summary of this recently, and as I recall Prozac was not one of the drugs covered under this study (assuming it's the same one I read about).

      While the results are interesting and worth keeping an eye on as a basis for further research, we should retain heavy skepticism here. It would be absurd and incredibly stupid to draw major conclusions already from this one small study (like the slashdot headline does). In ANY given field you'll find studies that disagree with most other studies. And for all we know this study could've been funded by a company whose main competition is anti-depressants, for example (e.g. many of the quack "cures") or some other group that ideologically disagrees with anti-depressants, and/or there could've been problems with the methodology --- I mean, we may know the drug companies have a financial reason to be biased, but that doesn't mean no drugs have value and doesn't mean that nobody other than drug companies have reasons to be biased.

    3. Re:Prozac changed my life by Muad'Dave · · Score: 4, Informative

      Prozac == fluoxetine, which is mentioned in the article.

      --
      Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
    4. Re:Prozac changed my life by BeanThere · · Score: 2, Insightful

      My main concern, which you've not addressed

      What? Nonsense, I stated clearly that I believe drug companies have motive to be biased (OBVIOUSLY they do). I don't doubt for a minute that they would do exactly as you state. But that doesn't mean every study is tainted or that the drugs have no effect; just because drug companies might be "evil" doesn't mean everything that casts them in poor light is automatically to be taken as gospel, we keep the same scientific mindset regardless. The depression quackery business is HUGE, I wouldn't be surprised if it's measured in the billions, from depression "herbs" to homeotherapy to stones to every other bit of nonsense you can think of - every one of these snake oils salesmen are salivating right now ready to jump on this study as "proof" that you should buy their products rather. Then there are also many churches who don't believe in depression as an illness to be cured with pills (it's a "spiritual problem", you see), plus all those who simply believe that there is no such thing as an illness of the mind (it's all pyschological, you see), or even the common view that people are just feeling sorry for themselves. Depression must be one of the most contested diseases in existence.

    5. Re:Prozac changed my life by Miang · · Score: 3, Informative

      In ANY given field you'll find studies that disagree with most other studies. Of course. The solution to those is meta-analysis (using statistical techniques to combine results from many disparate studies), which...is exactly what these authors did. It's not "one small study."

      And for all we know this study could've been funded by a company whose main competition is anti-depressants Oh come on. It says right there in the paper, "Funding: The authors received no specific funding for this study." I don't know about the fifth author, but everyone else on the paper is university-affiliated -- probably just your typical professors and grad students out to up their publication count, preferably with a nice sexy (controversial) paper that will get cited a lot.

      Look, I'm troubled by these results too -- people very, very important to me have benefited greatly, I dare say in life-saving ways, from antidepressants, and having seen some of the very physical side effects I'm disinclined to think it's something as simple as a placebo effect. If you're going to go after something, consider that the study authors didn't do moderator analyses to test whether results differed for men and women, or based on the mean age of the samples, or (as one poster noted above) whether talk therapies were administered in addition to drugs. But the methodology in this study is sound, and impugning the authors for imagined conflicts of interest is just cheap.
  3. Sooo... by TubeSteak · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I guess Tom Cruise was right?

    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
    1. Re:Sooo... by Thyamine · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think Mr. Cruise was ranting about post partum depression specifically. As I understand it, he actually had some details right (no one is certain why mothers get it), but you can't go busting on a new mom on national TV and come out as anything but an ass. And really, he was one.

      --
      I will shred my adversaries. Pull their eyes out just enough to turn them towards their mewing, mutilated faces. Illyria
  4. Well that's depressing.... by Frostclaw · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm not really surprised that the drugs are overperscribed. However, I do find that the subject heading is misleading.

  5. Depression not natural? by Merritt.kr · · Score: 2, Insightful

    People seem to miss something that seems very obvious to me... They think "Oh! You're depressed.. there's something wrong with you, maybe these drugs can help it" ... but depression is a _natural_ state in most living beings. Just look at dogs, they can get severely depressed, just like their owners. Sometimes, yes, a chemical imbalance is to blame and drugs can help. But more often than not a human being is depressed for a reason... bad relationship, money problems, reading about too much pain in the world from the newspaper. You name it, there are plenty of very valid reason all around us to get depressed. Our society has changed very quicktly in the past few centuries, and the past few decades, and it seems that this new way of living does not agree with a lot of people. Rush, do this, do that, look like this, behave like this, own this, spend your money more, more, etc, etc. This is all extremely stressful, and none of it to the betterment of ourselves as people. "Okay, so, I bought myself a fancy new $600 sofa. It's pretty and soft and my guests will be impressed...... Hmmm.... So, where's my scotch?"

    --
    It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society. - Krishnamurti
    1. Re:Depression not natural? by adpe · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think you're confusing depression as in "Man, I'm pissed off today" and depression as in the medical condition. "Real" depression is a horrible thing and needs treatment. It's as if you're saying cancer neends no treatment, since the cells grow very naturally.

    2. Re:Depression not natural? by Merritt.kr · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I agree with you, clinical depression is a very serious thing. I should know, I've been diagnosed as bipolar, manic-depressive, and, I quote "SEVERELY clinically depressed". To the point where I don't mention feelings to my doctors, cause they start asking me about razor blades and the like. I've tried the drugs -- believe me, I know what I'm talking about. I'm not talking about "Man, this is a crappy day" I'm talking about a never-ending, life long dysphoria with LIFE. You get occasional pick-me-ups in the form of the people you life, a funny cartoon, etc... but in general, life seems to kind of... suck. And even when those thoughts AREN'T going through your head (or mine), you still feel bogged down just by how you have to live in this society.

      --
      It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society. - Krishnamurti
    3. Re:Depression not natural? by erase · · Score: 2, Insightful

      just because something is natural doesn't make it inherently desirable or even tolerable - there are plenty of natural diseases you would certainly choose to seek unnatural medical treatment for and there are plenty of natural things that will kill you outright (poisonous mushrooms, bears). you probably wrote this post on an unnatural computer in your unnatural living or working space, bathed in unnatural light from an artificial source, while wearing unnatural clothing and using the wholly unnatural slashdot. clearly some selective unnatural things are quite acceptable and desirable.

    4. Re:Depression not natural? by ChrisMaple · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Regardless of whether there is an external cause of depression, drugs can sometimes make a depressed person feel less depressed. This is true even of a weak herb like St. John's Wort. If someone feels too depressed to get out of bed, an antidepressant can give him the mental boost to get up and solve his problems.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    5. Re:Depression not natural? by WilyCoder · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If doctors only prescribed antidepressant drugs to those afflicted with "real" depression you might have a point.

  6. Further evidence... by inviolet · · Score: 5, Interesting

    A while ago somebody noticed that anti-depressant drugs don't work at all unless they have some side-effects. The side-effects remind the user that he or she is taking a wow-must-be-powerful drug, which increases its placebo effect. The upshot is that it is completely counterproductive to search for an anti-depressant drug that has no side-effects. In fact, the more side-effects the better.

    I don't remember more details than this, though.

    In any case, it reminds me of a similar effect in microeconomics, in which consumers would tend to evaluate a widget more favorably if they had paid more money for it.

    --
    FATMOUSE + YOU = FATMOUSE
    1. Re:Further evidence... by The+Grassy+Knoll · · Score: 4, Funny

      >consumers would tend to evaluate a widget more favorably if they had paid more money for it.

      Pah. Does every Slashdot comment need an Apple angle?

      .

      --
      They will never know the simple pleasure of a monkey knife fight
    2. Re:Further evidence... by shark+swooner · · Score: 2, Informative

      Tricyclic anti-depressants, a previous generation of medication before SSRIs, were largely abandoned because they had more side effects and were considered less effective. Sort of throws water on that theory.

  7. Depression is not all serotonin by zombie_striptease · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I was on Zoloft for a couple of years way back when I was a teenager. It did fuckall to help my depression, I still hated life and still contemplated suicide, but I noticed something funny after I stopped taking it (due to severe gastrointestinal side effects). A few days after I'd quit the pills cold turkey, I was thinking of something I was stressed about, and along with the common wave of emotional despair, felt a physical sinking in my chest that I realized I hadn't felt for... about two years. I laughed when I realized that that was probably the chemical reaction that the SSRI had been halting, and laughed harder the longer I contemplated what a drop in the bucket it was in the scope of the depression I was struggling with. It made me understand the extent to which the Zoloft was just targeting a symptom of a larger problem, like any number of other medications do. There may be some people whose depression truly does stem from such a one-note imbalance, and I truly hope that the medication can help them, but it doesn't surprise me that antidepressants could be so insignificant to so many others.

    1. Re:Depression is not all serotonin by andphi · · Score: 2, Interesting

      > I was on Zoloft for a couple of years way back when I was a teenager.

      I think you identified part of the problem right there. Zoloft and adolescents are a volatile combination. IANAPsychiatrist, but I would guess that anyone under the age of about 22 who takes Zoloft has an even chance of thinking about suicide just as often when their moods are elevated as when they were severely depressed and the drug was first administered.

      The rest of the problem is as you noted: people often try to treat symptoms rather than illnesses. Sometimes the meds do the trick. Sometimes they're just the first step. I'm glad you survived.

  8. Eli Lilly CEO by ruinevil · · Score: 5, Informative

    I just listened to the CEO of Eli Lilly speak for an hour last night, and he said most prescription drugs work at best in 80% of patients who are diagnosed with the disease it's supposed to treat. Their least effective drugs only treat 20% of patients. Until effective genomics, proteinomics, and metabonomics testing systems come out, which will show exactly how people react differently to drugs, they have to train doctors in choosing criteria where the drug will work, and ensure that they don't prescibe drugs that don't work in that circumstance. Selling drugs that don't work is an unsustainable business policy.

    He talked about Strattera, a nonstimulant ADHD drug, that works works best in people with ADHD combined with clinical anxiety. Otherwise, the patient should be prescribed a stimulant based ADHD drug, which works more often in other cases.

    Anyways, a lot of drug trial data is needed to find the population where the drug works. In a lot of cases the drug might not work at all. Prescribing methicillin against methicillin-resistant Staphtacaccous aureus will probably an efficacy similar to placebo.

    1. Re:Eli Lilly CEO by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Selling drugs that don't work is an unsustainable business policy.

      Ha! Watch more late-night TV, see more ads for penis pills, and reconsider that.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    2. Re:Eli Lilly CEO by martin-boundary · · Score: 2, Funny

      I just listened to the CEO of Eli Lilly speak for an hour last night,
      My condolences. Here's a translation for you.

      and he said most prescription drugs work at best in 80% of patients who are diagnosed with the disease it's supposed to treat.
      "Don't blame us if it doesn't work as advertised"

      Selling drugs that don't work is an unsustainable business policy.
      "Trust us, what we give you really works as advertised, honest"

      He talked about Strattera, [...]
      "Look, shiny thing"

      Anyways, a lot of drug trial data is needed to find the population where the drug works.
      "We work really hard, no expense is spared"

      In a lot of cases the drug might not work at all.
      "Don't blame us if it doesn't work as advertised"
  9. (SIGH) that figures by 192939495969798999 · · Score: 4, Funny

    (SIGH) nothing ever works, its hopeless!

    --
    stuff |
  10. I have friends on anti-depressants by QuantumG · · Score: 3, Informative

    When they're on them they are normal and healthy. They feel so normal and healthy that they often decide they don't need them anymore - so they go off them. Then they are not normal and healthy.. they are depressed. After one too many 2am phone calls one of their friends will recommend that they go back on the anti-depressants. Soon after they will be normal and healthy again.. until the cycle repeats itself.

    Must all be the placebo effect though.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
    1. Re:I have friends on anti-depressants by Henry+V+.009 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, it's unlikely to be the placebo effect. It's more likely to be something called 'withdrawal.' Try the same thing with alcohol, caffeine, or tobacco. You won't be any happier because you've started taking it, but your friends will notice one hell of a decline once you stop.

  11. Anafranil by SharpFang · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I don't know about deep depression, but with rather mild depression I took a 25mg pill of Anafranil and had some 2 days of pretty much silly euphoric high.

    The effect wasn't mild or insignificant or anything you could consider effects of placebo. I was feeling like in very good mood, work that felt like dread before, could be finished at my standard efficiency and the effects were NOT negligible.

    Of course there -were- side effects and they were quite strong (feeling of heat, including sweating and problems with sleep, lower max physical strength, getting physically tired faster, problems with urination), but first they felt like a total non-issue due to the great mood I was in, and second, the lower efficiency of my body at physical work was ballanced by increased enthusiasm and will to work more and mental efficiency was not affected (not just in subjective opinion) and no other factors of perception than general very good mood were affected (although feeling far too warm to fall asleep resulted in natural effects of insomnia).

    No idea what drugs they talk about but Anafranil is THE shit :)

    --
    45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2
    1. Re:Anafranil by Dr_Barnowl · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The pharmacological effects of clomipramine and MDMA are similar ; both of them futz with your serotonin metabolism, although clomipramine also futzes with noradrenaline.

      The major difference is that while clomipramine just inhibits the re-uptake of these neurotransmitters in the synapse, MDMA also induces heavy release of serotonin, enough that your serotonin reserves are rapidly emptied on a "normal" dose.

      I wouldn't touch MDMA with a mile long barge pole ; serotonin is the "happy" hormone, taking a drug that empties out your supply seems like a recipe for a suicidal Sunday morning, not to mention the long-term effects (like your brain getting so used to the high serotonin levels that it needs the drug just to be mildly cheerful).

    2. Re:Anafranil by ricosalomar · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Placebo effect can't be identified by results that are

      ...mild or insignificant or anything...

      By definition, placebo effect is indistinguishable from a drug's chemical reaction.

      I'm not saying whether your result was placebo or not; just that you couldn't tell the difference.

  12. The wrong med from the wrong dr. by ubrgeek · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sorry, I have a considerable amount of experience with family members who went the counseling route for years without seeing improvements. After finally deciding to try anti-depressants, anti-anxiety, etc., the problems they had most of their lives went away or were reduced to levels that made it easier for them to have a better life. The biggest problem I've seen is not whether they work or not, it's that GPs are the ones issuing the Rx. GPs are just that - GENERAL practitioners. The good ones admit that their knowledge of the nuances involved with the "low-level" chemical behavior of the brain is limited. A psychiatrist, someone with a medical understanding of the topic (not knocking psychologists, but their understanding is in a different area: the non-biochemical causes of issues) should be the person making the determination of just what a person should be on. They're aware of more of the potential "cocktails" of drugs (one particular drug is not enough) - both in terms of what works and what needs an additional medication to target secondary causes/effects of depression....

    --
    Bark less. Wag more.
    1. Re:The wrong med from the wrong dr. by xanthines-R-yummy · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Mod this guy up! By FAR, the majority of psychiatric drugs are prescribed by GP's and NOT psychiatrists!

      This isn't the best reference but it's the best I could come up with in a few seconds:

      http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/406083

  13. Missing the point by Hebbinator · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The point is not that antidepressants don't work - the point is that diagnosis criteria for depression has been to lax for too long. "Everybody gets depressed, not everyone needs antidepressants" It makes sense that the only people who respond to antidepressants designed to fix chemical imbalance are the ones with severe depression.... who are likely to have a real chemical imbalance. These are not "happy pills" they are formulated to fix an insufficiency. Normal, mild depression from events (death, divorce, etc) has always been treated best by cognitive behavioral therapy (aka psych visits), unless you just want to zonk someone out. But, in our society, if you have a problem you get a pill. No one wants to hear "go talk to someone and get over it," so doctors write the scripts and the generally malcontent get them filled.

  14. Don't forget by Per+Wigren · · Score: 3, Informative

    At least in Sweden, if you've had a deep depression and are on the way to getting good, they will stop helping you and force you to go back to work 100% immediately. If you've ever had a (real) depression you know that that is not an option. You need to start slowly before you can get up to speed or you will be back to where you started (when you got depressed/burned out). So what to do? You lie to the doctors for a while and pretend that it's still as bad as it used to be so you get a chance to recover. The doctors would understand and agree with you but they aren't allowed to sick-list you if you aren't so down that you rather starve than go outside to buy some food. So, I think this survey isn't telling the whole truth.

    --
    My other account has a 3-digit UID.
    1. Re:Don't forget by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Interesting side-effect of nationalized health-care.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    2. Re:Don't forget by Jizzbug · · Score: 3, Informative

      In America, people don't have the benefit of living is a socialist/communist monarchy. Unless you're committed to a mental institution or you're on welfare/medicare, good luck getting time off from work for your "depression". You can't pay for drugs if ya don't work.

      --

      -=/\- Jizzbug -/\=-
  15. Depression is Cyclical by Eli_Courtwright · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This fits with what some other studies have shown in the past... in the short run. Depression is often cyclical; people get more or less depressed over time and will often be fine for long periods of time. So simply by taking nothing and waiting, they'll often start to feel better soon. This is why taking anti-depression meds is almost indistinguishable from a placebo in the short run, except in the most severe cases.

    The real test is how effective the meds are at preventing future episodes of depression, or at least limiting how bad they are. TFA doesn't go into enough detail on the length of time over which the data was collected, so I don't know what it has to say about this.

  16. This study has been published in 2002 by dandv · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I don't get this - the same news has been published by USA Today in 2002. Still, the PLoS article appears published on 2008-02-26.

    Can someone explain?

  17. Grossly misleading headline by Cultural+Sublimation · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seriously, Slashdot editors: be a bit more responsible when you are dealing with potentially serious and life-threatening medical conditions. The study did not find that "Antidepressants work no better than a placebo". What it seems to have found is that there is an indication that antidepressants do work for people who do have a serious depression, while there is little indication it works better than a placebo for lighter (possibly misdiagnosed) cases.

    Here's the thing: a clinical depression is a serious, crippling condition. Recent research has tied its physical underpinning to a slowdown in neurogenesis in certain areas of the brain. Most likely, this slowdown is caused by the bad quality of sleep caused by continuous and prolonged stress. But whatever the cause, the end result is a brain that is physically different. Yes, this is a physical condition, one whose recovery is progressive and takes a fair amount of time. And it's precisely in this condition that antidepressants have been shown to be of help. Moreover, you cannot magically cure someone with a clinical depression by having them "snap out of it". (Would you say "snap out of it" to someone with a broken leg?)

    Part of the reason why depression is so wildly misunderstood is because everyone gets the blues every now and then. That is not the same as a clinical depression. And if a misinformed doctor prescribes antidepressants to someone who just has this "pseudo-depression", then it's no surprise that antidepressants won't really make much of a difference. However, this does not invalidate that antidepressants are valuable tools in fighting real clinical depressions.

    1. Re:Grossly misleading headline by deuterium · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well put. Depression, because of it's overlap with "normal" human experience, is wildly misunderstood. Most people never experience psychotic symptoms, so they don't harp as much on the utility of antipsychotics, or, by the same token, anti-seizure meds for epileptics. They *do* feel bad from time to time, and so they feel they have depression figured out. Perhaps it's the fault of GPs who diagnose those people with depression, thus reinforcing their belief that depression is exactly what they've experienced.

      Clinical depression is a world apart from "a bad month." It can cause hallucinations, anorexia, insomnia, profound fatigue, sensory disturbances, and inability to think. It's a physical disorder, and generally the physical symptoms precede the subjective ones (sadness, apathy, suicidal ideation).

      I agree that it's normal for most people to get in a funk from time to time, but usually that's situational - your dad dies, you move somewhere new, you lose a job. I also agree that it's possible to use therapy to help instead of drugs, if your problem is due to negative/erroneous beliefs and self-narrative.

      What I don't agree with is the herd mentality to throw out antidepressants due to an erroneous conception of the disease and the proper use of medications. The first antidepressants were discovered accidentally, by doctors treating tuberculosis patients with Iproniazid. The patients' moods changed enough that it was obvious something was going on. This wasn't anticipated, and thus certainly wasn't a placebo effect.

  18. There is a reason why studies go unpublished by RingDev · · Score: 5, Informative

    Disclamer first, I work for an R&D company that develops interactive voice response systems (ie: phone surveys) that are used to apply traditional depression and mental health tests in a consistent manner. My company is in part funded by grants and projects paid for by large pharma comps. Although I personally have no contact with them.

    When pharma's want to do a study, they set up sites, each site will have one or more doctor and each doctor will have one or more patient who is participating. Quite often, these studies pay a bonus for each patient up to the quota, or the docs will want to try to help and fill their quota. When they do this, it introduces people into the programs who really should not be there. It's not that they are being purposely decietful or anything, they just aren't being as consistent and strict as they should be. I know this to be a fact, we have done numerous studies in which our system's performance is compared to real world docs across the US. And each and every time, our system would exclude over 20% of the patients that the doctors would enroll.

    Since these studies are being poluted with people who do not reach the level of condition the drug was ment to treat, the drug will be ineffective on them. You can't "undepress" people who aren't depressed to start with. So they will reduce the effective correlation of the drug. There is also another natural bias that clinicians apply that causes a deflation of scores at the end of the study due to the double blind factor being eliminated by side effects.

    In short, traditional ways of performing these studies are heavily flawed and will often result in a lower apparent effectiveness than the drug actually has.

    -Rick

    --
    "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
  19. Required supplemental reading by Phanatic1a · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Everyone needs to read the Last Psychiatrist's article on this study. He's a forensic psychiatrist, and a great blogger, and he makes some very interesting points:

    It's the exact same data they had 10 years ago, the exact same data. This isn't a discovery, this isn't Woodward and Bernstein, this is a bunch of academics who are no longer on Pharma payrolls who have now decided that they have nothing further to gain from pushing antidepressants.

    Now they can pretend to be on the side of science. We reviewed the data, and found some of it was not published.

    You knew that already. You were the ones who didn't publish it -- it's your journal. Turner worked for 3 years as an NIH reviewer. He just notices this now?

    Is no one wondering how it is that this study comes out now, when all antidepressants but two are generic?

    As suspicious of Pharma as everyone is, no one seems to see that they are no longer getting Pharma money, they are now getting government money-- NIH-- so they're going to push the government line. No one finds it at all suspicious that the two biggest NIH studies in the past two years both found the generic to be the best?

    You think that in 2000 those studies would have been published? But now-- 2007, 2008, if they'd found Cymbalta to be the best on the NIH's dime, you think that they'd get re-funded? What's the difference? Same authors, same studies, same data. All that's changed is the climate.

    People want a direct financial link to show bias, not realizing that bias is much more prevalent and more powerful elsewhere.
  20. The Black Dog by MrKaos · · Score: 5, Insightful
    A close relation in my family has suffered from depression for well over 10 years, it is a tragic malady and it has an effect on the people around him. His diagnosed conditions include Manic depression, Psychotic episodes, Paranoia and auditory hallucinations, but worst of all when you are around him you can sense the terrible sadness that afflicts him. He has regular visits to a Psychiatrist to assist him.

    Amongst the side affects of the many drugs that are prescribed, he has become overweight and now suffers from sleep apnea further complicating the depression. If anything I have learned from observation is that people suffering from depression need the support of people close to them, for the condition is like a downward spiral of physical, mental and spiritual decay. Contact, phone calls conversations, anything you can do to help unravel the root cause of the depression, like challenging the paranoid feelings all help to take power away from the disease.

    For the fist time in a long time, I think I see him finally come out of it because he is starting to excercise. I don't know if the drugs helped, perhaps leveled things out and maintained the status quo. They were probably required as on several occasions I was physically attacked by him (and he is a big guy), fortunately for me (and him) I also am a big guy and have trained physical combat for most of my life. I say that because there was a strong responsibility on my part to not hurt him any more than it was required to control and disarm him. You have to realise it's not the person attacking you, it's the disease and for this reason I think that it is also can become contagious (so to speak) who do not have this capability.

    I can't say whether the drugs are good or bad (just that there is a lot of them and he takes them e-v-e-r-y--d-a-y) but I do know the drugs have changed his brain chemistry forever, I often wonder if the person I grew up with is still in there, occasionally I see a glimpse. I have studied all I can about depression to learn everything I could to help him and I look forward to reading about other peoples experiences in this discussion. What I learned is that the medications are a commitment for all the people around to be aware that the critical time is when they are coming off the medication and they finally lose their apathy towards self harm, i.e they finally have enough energy to do it, signs that must be watched for if you want someone you care about to actually survive depression.

    I also learned that regardless of the drugs there are two core issues that every person who suffers depression will have to face;

    1) Rigorous physical excercise is that path back to mental well-being, the sooner the better and something fun and positive that helps self esteem and confidence.

    2) The issues that triggered the depression will eventually have to be faced.

    I hope one day it will be gone, because I don't want my family member to die from it or with it. I call it the black dog because it chases and hunts you down and occasionally I sense it coming after me, but I fight it and you have to fight it. Perhaps if people who were susceptible to depression were made to excercise it would disappear, but then the drug companies wouldn't get to sell all that expensive medication and I definitely think it is a factor in the diagnosis of this modern curse. I also think that good spinal care is a factor as I also noticed an improvement in his demeanor when this was done. Additionally I think that depression is a natural consequence to some overload of emotional stress, alas IANAP, that triggers a change to the brain chemistry.

    I suspect the Metalica song Until it sleeps was written about depression as it aptly describes what is truly the modern plague of our time.

    --
    My ism, it's full of beliefs.
    1. Re:The Black Dog by big_paul76 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Did you ever see the Simpsons episode where they diagnosed Bart with ADD?

      The scene where the two doctors are advocating a medication called "focusin", that they describe as being "the best possible treatment, except for (roll of the eyes, and dismissive shrug) *snort* regular _exercise_."

      --
      The plural form of "anecdote" is "anecdotes", not "evidence".
  21. Re:Antidepressants, not antipsychotics. by Thanshin · · Score: 2, Funny

    You realize that Thorazine is an antipsychotic, not an antidepressant, right? Replaying the joke in slow motion, in case you missed the details:

    Original quote: "Antidepressants work no better than a placebo."
    Joke response: "He's delusional! Quick, give him some Thorazine! Or sugar! Whichever you can get faster."

    Thus, they'd be giving him sugar for his delusions of antidepressants being a placebo. Hilarity ensues.

  22. If you can DECIDE not to be depressed by spun · · Score: 4, Informative

    Then it isn't a chemical imbalance. There is a difference between being unhappy and being depressed. I know that many times when I am in the grips of it, I wish I could actually feel unhappy. It's more like a fog, a lead blanket, a loss of engagement with life. A positive attitude could help, but how do you do that? "Just decide to" isn't the answer. Exercising can help, lots of things can help, but how do you decide to do those things, and then actually do them? If you have an answer, I'd love to hear it.

    But I've heard people like you all my life. The "Buck up little camper," the "Just snap out of it," the "Oh stop whining," you know you aren't doing it for me. The fact that I am depressed makes you uncomfortable, maybe even challenges your ideas about the self and free will, and you just want me to shut up and go away. You don't really care if I get over it or not. At least that's what most people who talk your talk are actually like, who knows, maybe you are different. But I doubt it.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    1. Re:If you can DECIDE not to be depressed by big_paul76 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's the fair world bias.

      Many /.ers are true believers in fair world and meritocracy.

      So the idea that bad things happen to people for no reason at all, through no fault of their own, makes people who believe that they're 100% responsible for the state of their life profoundly uncomfortable. So you get this 'blame the victim' mentality.

      Comfortable, well educated, middle class white guys don't like being told that they didn't get where they are solely on their own strength of character.

      I submit that anybody who says you can 'decide' to not be depressed has absolutely no idea what they're talking about.

      --
      The plural form of "anecdote" is "anecdotes", not "evidence".
    2. Re:If you can DECIDE not to be depressed by smaddox · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The biggest things separating the people who suffer from depression from those who don't are:

      1) Healthy Diet
      2) Healthy amount of sleep
      3) Healthy amount of exercise/activity

      Depression is a chemical imbalance in the brain by definition - the chemical imbalance isn't the cause (well, not directly). Everything your brain does is a chemical reaction, so it doesn't really give you any information. Anything differing from the "norm" is a chemical imbalance.

      I've suffered from depression, but I didn't go to a doctor because I knew it would pass eventually - IF I took care of myself.

      I'm sure there are extreme cases in which a person's genetics plays a major role. Those are most likely the extreme cases in which medication really will help.

    3. Re:If you can DECIDE not to be depressed by dbcad7 · · Score: 2, Informative
      I submit that anybody who says you can 'decide' to not be depressed has absolutely no idea what they're talking about.

      As others have pointed out.. if you are talking about a chemical imbalance, then no amount of "positive thinking" is going to change that... However there are situational depressions.. ie a person who's brain chemistry is such that if the situation were different (say.. girlfriend didn't dump him) then they would not be depressed... these people can be helped by choosing their own mood.

      I lived with a manic depressive for a long time.. We both had many of the same "bad times".. no amount of positive attitude would help her. My depressions were short lived, but I still had to deal with hers which were at a higher intensity and lasted a long time. When our pet died for example.. very sad time for me.. sad time for us both,, but I got over it in a few days.. it took her months before she had a day where she didn't spend an hour crying.. and even after a year an a half there were times she would break out in tears... there is absolutely no control of emotions with the brain chemistry she had.. and she was medicated to the extreme.

      There was a time however, when I was an extremely unhappy person..(this is different from clinical depression).. and finally one day I read that happiness was a choice.. that you choose to be happy.. well it does work for me, and even when everything goes to hell, I can still be happy.. but then I don't have a chemical imbalance. When I first started living with the manic depressive, I tried like heck to help her with this attitude.. It was a waste of time.. it can't be done any more than telling a drunk to "think sober"

      BTW.. the depression bad to deal with, but mania could be even worse... but whole other ball of wax.

      --
      waiting for ad.doubleclick.net
    4. Re:If you can DECIDE not to be depressed by steelfood · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You can't decide out of the blue not to be depressed. You can recognize the depression, and actively fight to counteract it and its effects. It's not easy--nothing worthwhile ever is. But it's doable.

      What is usually most difficult and nearly impossible for some people is accepting their true mental state. Denial is the mind's worst enemy.

      Some tips:

      Have a crew. Depression can be overwhelming enough even in the company of friends, it's far worse alone.

      Have a consistent schedule with said crew. It makes the time in between worthwhile.

      Smile more. People who smile more tend to make the people around them happier. That elevates the happiness of the whole group of people.

      Think the glass is half full. Or at least recognize the idea. Being able to see the other side, or the silver lining, is a big step to getting out of the depressed mentality.

      Forgive and forget. Try not to get too hung up on anything, especially the negative things. Let go.

      At the end of the day, resignation to being unable to do something is as good as not being able to do it. Never resign, never give up, always believe it is possible. It's not just about believing though. There needs to be substance behind the belief in oneself. So where there is failure, it just means there is a lacking, and that which is merely lacking can always be remedied.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    5. Re:If you can DECIDE not to be depressed by sckeener · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm sure there are extreme cases in which a person's genetics plays a major role.

      I'm a mild case for genetics. My grandfather committed suicide, my dad & mom are in prison, and I've been on anti-depressants off/on since the I was in middle school.

      Back in middle school I couldn't sleep. I'd toss and turn and never sleep well*. They put me on antidepressants and I finally slept. (something that has not changed since even when I stopped taking them - I think it trained my brain to sleep) I went from being a B/C student to straight As. I was put into honor classes. My life turned around.

      And then I grew a bit and my brain chemistry changed and the drugs no longer worked. I dropped out of high school.

      Then as an adult the drugs had advanced and I started taking again. I've accomplished more while under drugs, but I haven't achieved the highs points as when I was off them. My creativity is constrained.

      I think about suicide often, but I dismiss it just like my dad does. We don't want to end like my grand father. It doesn't stop the feelings or desire, but dying is the last thing I want to do ;)

      I'm not sure I'd want to stop these feelings. Control them yes, but they do give me a kind of strength, a kind of understanding. I wouldn't want to lose them. I just don't want to suffer because of them.

      *side note about my dad and sleep. He only slept 4 hours. He'd work as a lawyer in the morning, build pcs in the afternoon, sleep for 4 hours, and then work on mainframes at NASA (Clear Lake, TX) through the night.

      --
      "Only one thing, is impossible for god: to find any sense in any copyright law on the planet." Mark Twain
    6. Re:If you can DECIDE not to be depressed by spun · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hey, nuance! I like nuance. You are starting to sound a little smarter to me. Certainly, many people who should "just get over it" are prescribed drugs they don't need and that won't help. But just as certainly, there are people who need some kind of kick start before they can engage their own positive coping mechanisms. And there are also people who are just going to be miserable no matter what, the poor sods.

      I don't think our society is devolving like you say. I think it is coming out of some major post traumatic stress, and there are going to be all kinds of juvenile, self involved responses to that, but that is just part of the healing process. Sometimes things appear worse before they get better. You know, you're in therapy and you have a breakthrough, and maybe your a complete mess while you work through all the shit you've been repressing, but then you feel much better and more in control? I think that's what our society is going through on a large scale.

      I mean really, do you want to go back to the days of beating kids, wives as chattel, no vote for women or blacks, almost no middle class home ownership, 12 hour, 7 day work weeks, child labor, no worker safety laws, union organizers gunned down by hired thugs, and all the other fun crap we dealt with in the last century? Because I don't.

      Sure it's fun to feel all cynical and superior and grouse about how the world is turning to crap, but where does that get you, hmmm?

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    7. Re:If you can DECIDE not to be depressed by Jizzbug · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I work with Nuance speech recognition and speech synthesis products at work, often having to design grammars to match complex inputs (like "A 1 2 3 4" versus "alpha one-thousand two-hundred and thirty-four"). Talk about nuance... Nuance can obfuscate if it is sufficiently steganographic (subtle), but the additive power of "nuance + subtlety" -- which yields results orders of magnitude stronger than either used alone -- is a great tool for social engineering.

      But I suppose you are right about evolution of our society and trauma. Evolution cannot operate without punctuated equilibrium.

      And sure, more people are literate today than 100 years ago, even if handwriting on average is much worse than before. But the civil war actually started because the North wanted to count slaves as 3/5ths of a person, while the South wanted slaves to count as 1 whole person. The constitution doesn't actually say whether a slave is a citizen or property or has the right to vote or not. The obfuscation of these facts among others only evidences the declination of our society as a whole. ... But, yeah, I was raise in Platte City, Missouri, the world headquarters of the KKK.

      But we will have World War very soon, so all this muck will be cleared up through violence and bloodshed and massive death, and we can move on to a Brave New World Order. Beware the Double-Headed Eagle of Hattusa & Lagash (and of Albania & Serbia)!!

      --

      -=/\- Jizzbug -/\=-
    8. Re:If you can DECIDE not to be depressed by PCM2 · · Score: 2, Informative

      I know that many times when I am in the grips of it, I wish I could actually feel unhappy. It's more like a fog, a lead blanket, a loss of engagement with life.

      Really true. This is something that I struggle to explain to people who have never experienced it.

      I've had episodes of pretty severe (I'm not qualified to say "clinical") depression, lasting a few months at a time. When I tell people this, they give me that "aw, that's too bad" look -- not understanding that, throughout these periods of depression, I was rarely actually "sad." People picture you moping around the house, looking through old pictures, crying at TV commercials ... for me it was nothing like this.

      The only way I can describe it is this: Picture your emotions as a sine wave. The top of the wave is "happy." The bottom of it is "unhappy." The zero line is "feeling nothing much." Throughout your life you oscillate between various points on the curve. As you slip into depression, though, your baseline drifts below the zero line, into "unhappy." It does this in such an insidious way that you don't really notice it slipping. Eventually, though, the tops of your own personal sine curves -- the points that used to reach into the "happy" zone -- stop hitting "happy." Instead, they only make it about as far as "not feeling much of anything."

      I'm a pretty logical person, most of the time. But when your brain is misbehaving on you like this, your normal logical processes start to get clouded and messed up, and this can compound the problem. Here's how it worked for me:

      Let's say you're feeling sort of down, so you want to cheer up. You go and take down your favorite book off the shelf, the one you've loved since childhood, and you start flipping through it for a little pick-me-up. But you're depressed, so you still feel ... nothing much. Not much of anything at all. So you put the book back. LOGICAL CONCLUSION? I must not really like that book after all. I guess I grew out of it.

      A few such "conclusions" and the evidence starts to mount up: All this stuff that I say I'm "about," that I've been saying I like and enjoy, is really sort of a sham. Because clearly I don't really like any of it. I don't like going to movies, I don't like music...I don't get much joy out of any of it, at all. So the fact that I own these rock band T-shirts...what a joke! I'm putting people on. I'm just making small-talk, covering up for the "fact" (again, pseudo-logical deductions taking place here) that I don't have any real interests at all.

      At my absolute lowest points, I would find myself downtown, out in front of Macy's somewhere, and I would have a "revelation": Look at all these people, all these crowds. Everyone coming and going. Everyone with their own way of looking, their own way of speaking, their own interests, their own goals and plans. Everyone, that is ... except me. Because I have no discernible hopes or joys or interests. I have no discernible personality at all.

      And I know it's pretty hard for people to believe this if you're not in the same space -- I have a hard time comprehending those feelings right now -- but when I was in the grip of it, let me assure you that I was not speaking metaphorically. I really, seriously meant that I was a non-person, some kind of entity, desperately afraid that all the people around me were going to catch on to the fact that I had been lying to them all the years that I'd known them, because all the ways that I had pretended to be a unique individual had just been an elaborate ruse to cover up my shame at being a complete and utter non-person.

      If you knew me, you'd see immediately how absurd that notion is. But that's the thing about delusions. When you're having them, there still might be a little voice in the back of your head saying, "Whoah, buddy, ease up, maybe you oughtta go lie down for a while or something" -- but it doesn't matter. You're not going to be

      --
      Breakfast served all day!
  23. Quitting "Cold Turkey" by Ieshan · · Score: 5, Informative

    "A few days after I'd quit the pills cold turkey"

    Just a note - whether or not you think your pills are helping you, don't try this. It's extremely dangerous with most medications. I'm not posting to berate the Parent, just letting others know that it's a really bad practice that can lead to serious consequences with a lot of these drugs.

  24. The cure... by Dr.+Cody · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...craniectomy!

  25. This Thread Cheerfully Bought to You by by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The Church of Scientology.

    Now, stop jumping on my couch!

    --
    "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
    Never been known to fail..."
  26. You must be fucking kidding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    I know a few depressed people and a couple bipolar people, and I also know the clinical definition of "depression", and boy, having "lots of hobbies" and doing "many different things" does not fucking compute.
    Depressed people have trouble enjoying things that they used to find enjoyable -- that includes hobby --, that's the god damned definition. They also have trouble getting things done, that's the god damned definition too.
    Ergo, if you enjoy lots of hobbies and do lots of stuff -- you're probably not depressed! Very depressed people can't get out of the bed, for fuck's sake.

  27. Some important details by Diziet · · Score: 2, Informative

    As one of the comments to TFA notes, one problem with the studies reviewed is that the trials may not have been long enough to detect differences. They were mostly 6 week trials, with a few shorter and a few longer. That may not be long enough to pick up a significant difference. The effects for some can peak between 6-8 weeks. Disclaimer: I am a psychologist.

  28. Being a diagnosed manic depressive... by nowhere.elysium · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...I can comfortably say that antidepressants aren't all that.
    This is not to say that they have no effect, though.
    The way that an antidepressant works (from the point of view of someone that isn't a chemist/biologist/pharmacist) is that it's much like a compression filter: it chops off the bottom end and the top end of emotional response. The purpose of them is not to 'make you happy' - that would cause a mass addiction problem, I reckon. They take you out of the horrific depths of depression, be it suicidal or not, and give you enough breathing space to gain some perspective.
    There are people who cannot cope without antidepressants. Most of us (depressives, that is) can survive without them, though, once we've managed to level ourselves out a bit. I personally found them to be pretty hard work: anything that messes with your brain chemistry tends to have other results, too: I became prone to very short bursts of high activity, with long, long periods of lethargy and listlessness. Think stoned but jittery, with moments of sharp and fast clarity.
    The important thing to remember is that there is a vast difference between mild depression, and very serious depression. Serious depression will stay with you for your entire life, while mild depression is more transitory. It hits you hard, regardless of whether it's 'mild' or not, but it's less likely to come back in any significant capacity if it's milder depression.

    Don't forget that by muting the depths of depression, you can actually benefit a lot with the alleviation of many of the other associated problems. I found that my horrific insomnia (as in 1-2 hours of real sleep a night, tops) started to ease, purely because my mind wasn't working overtime on considering and worrying about my problems. That proved to be enough to help me start to fix myself, which is, I believe, the real purpose of antidepressants. Despite my doctor's belief that they're some kind of magic bullet...

    --
    http://xkcd.com/313/
  29. Re:Meta-analysis? by philspear · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I could definitely see the FDA approving a drug that really offers little effect. It must be easy to pad numbers when your test is essentially "Scale of one to ten, how happy are you today?"

    I'm just thankful that the efficiency of most drugs aren't measured that way. "On a scale of one to ten, ten being about to die of cancer and one being cancer free, how do you feel?"

  30. Re:well prozac works by grammar+fascist · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Sadly the doctors think my depression is because I smoke a couple of spliffs a week...

    Most likely you're self-medicating, and if the doctors don't immediately see that it may be time to get different doctors.

    At the same time, try laying off the recreational drugs while you're on the prescription ones. Interactions between recreational drugs and prescription drugs have not been studied as well as prescription vs. prescription. Recreational drugs also tend to be more complex. In general, mixing the two can be pretty dangerous.
    --
    I got my Linux laptop at System76.
  31. Pills only kick-start the process by spun · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's interesting. Basically, people with the short form of the seratonin synthesis gene are prone to depression, if they have a traumatic triggering event or events at the right stage of their development. The researcher who did the experiment tested herself and found she had the short form, but had not experienced any major trauma growing up, and so wasn't herself prone to depression.

    By chemical imbalance I mean, "Unable to properly synthesize enough seratonin for normal functioning." The thing that medication does, for those suffering from real, clinical depression, is it lets us get over the hurdle of, "How do we motivate ourselves to do thing things we know will help get us out of it?" I mean, that's the real killer. You know what to do to get yourself out, you just don't have the motivation to do it, even knowing it will help. The medication lets us engage that motivation enough to get out of it.

    That's the thing this study doesn't take into account. You need to do more than just take the pills, they only kick-start the process.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  32. Re:mod parent up by dbjh · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Would you care to back that claim up with some references? From what I've read about anti-depressants it's not even possible to cause "long and lasting damage" by stopping suddenly. To the contrary, some anti-depressants may not be used longer than a certain period because they cause irreversible brain damage. Maybe you meant that by stopping suddenly the depression will come back in full force, causing the depressed person to commit suicide? That's certainly long and lasting damage...

  33. Re:mod parent up by Ayeffkay · · Score: 3, Funny

    You can do long and lasting damage by quitting antidepressant medication cold turkey. Unless it's just a placebo.