Do antidepressants  "cure" depressants? No, says Joanna Moncrieff, a
psychiatrist at University College London-no more so than insulin
"cures" diabetes or alcohol "cures" social anxiety.

Moncrieff, who has published several critical studies of psychiatric
drugs in leading medical journals, advocates a "drugs-centered" rather
than "disease-centered" model for understanding psychoactive
medication. "Instead of relieving a hypothetical biochemical
abnormality," she says antidepressant themselves cause "abnormal brain
states," which may coincidentally relieve psychiatric symptoms.

As for curing depression, Moncrieff notes that "there are know
drug-induced effects consisting of long-term elevation of mood," nor
is there is any evidence that medication corrects a "chemical
imbalance," as both pharmaceutical advertising and physicians often
claim. These results may explain why, despite much greater use off
antidepressants in recent years, there is "little evidence outside of
controlled drug studies that long-or short-term outcomes for
depression are changing."

Indeed, Moncrieff adds, some studies show that depressive episodes are
more frequent and last longer among antidepressant users nonusers. A
drug-centered approach to treating psychiatric conditions, she says,
would look at each medication's specific alleviating effects-some act
as stimulants or as sedatives, whereas some blunt emotions-rather than
labeling any as an "antidepressant" when no drugs has been proved to
deliver long-term mood elevation.


Happy Learning,

Yovan P. Putra

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