Transcript Andri

Antidepressants:
Treatment or Legal Drug Culture?
By Andri Tai-Ward
INTro: Key Words
• Antidepressants - any form of psychiatric drug
used to alleviate the symptoms of depression.
• Depression – commonly used to describe a
temporary mood of “feeling blue”. Symptoms are
often fleeting and will pass within a few days.
• Clinical Depression – more than just sadness; a
severe yet common psychiatric disorder which
interferes with daily life, normal functioning, and
causes pain for both the sufferer and those who
are close to them.
Intro: Context & History
• No single known cause to depression; combination of
genetic, biochemical, environmental, and
psychological factors.
• Many different antidepressants: Zoloft, Celexa,
Prozac, and Paxil are all prescribed to treat clinical
depression.
• Can significantly and positively treat symptoms of
depression for many people but can also worsen
depression, especially when prescribed when not
really needed.
• Harmful side effects include insomnia, anxiety,
restlessness, loss of libido.
Assignment Instructions
• Analyze the usage of antidepressants and the
image it receives. Write an essay in which
you describe what the most important
aspects and symptoms doctors should be
aware of when prescribing
antidepressants. What should be
considered critical and what should be
cured with a more natural remedy? Should
the usage of antidepressants be examined
more carefully?
Overview of Sources
• Source A - signs and symptoms of depression from
medical dictionary.
• Source B - New York Times article on the possible
link between youth suicide rates and antidepressants.
• Source C - Article about using antidepressants to
medicate unhappiness.
• Source D - Cartoon parodying the practice of
prescribing antidepressants.
• Source E - Article criticizing the frequent prescription
of antidepressants as a “legal drug culture”.
• Source F - Graph showing how significantly
antidepressant drug prescriptions have risen from ‘91
- ‘01.
Position & Arguments
• Doctors treating patients suffering from
depression should consider and exhaust all
other therapeutic options before resorting to
antidepressants.
• The over-prescription of antidepressants has
created a “legal drug culture” that fails to
reach the root causes of depression and
masks symptoms instead of curing.
• Complement usage of antidepressants with
therapy, closely monitor signs and symptoms,
and come to terms with the fact that feeling
sad and feeling depressed, occasionally, are
perfectly normal.
The OTher Side …
• Antidepressants should be prescribed to
patients with depression only when they
present symptoms of major depressive
disorders anyway.
• “Quick and easy” method to alleviate the
symptoms of depression; antidepressants
aren’t meant to “cure” depression.
• “Since 1986, Prozac has helped 54 million
people,” (http://www.prozac.com).
Debate, Argue, Discuss:
• Read the role sheet that you have picked.
• Write/develop an argument/position
for/against/qualifying the use of
antidepressants based on your role and the
information given.
• Each person will summarize their role and
read their position, and a mini-debate will
follow based on the following questions.
DEBATE QUESTIONS
• Do we have a “legal drug culture” and a
“medicalization of unhappiness”? What
implications do these hold for our society and the
people who are on and need antidepressants?
• Who do we know we can trust when it comes to
our health? Who can really decide what is the
best treatment option? When severely depressed,
does that person forfeit the right to decide what’s
best?
• What has changed in our society that accounts
for the rapid increase in the prescription of
antidepressants? What does the future hold?