A massive, peer reviewed study, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, back in January 2010, Dead Link Removed found that except for "major depression" SSRIs were no more effective than placebos. Their effectiveness in "major depression" is not exactly breath taking either, as virtually any psycho stimulant will show an effect.
I gather that since that study, freedom of information requests have brought to light clinical trials which had failed to show any statistically significant difference to placebos, that the drugs companies had hidden away.
Having been in long term intimate relationships with people who were taking SSRIs, I have close knowledge of the downsides of something that was no more effective than a sugar pill.
High money price, six weeks of feeling crap before even the placebo effect began to take hold, suicidality, Hideous withdrawal (far worse than heroine - but given a different name). Weight gain, permanently trashed sexual function...
and problems for babies born to mothers who were on SSRIs http://jama.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=1555130
In the light of those findings, is a doctor who now prescribes SSRIs for anything other than a "Major Depression" in contravention of the first part of their Hippocratic Oath; "Do no harm"?
and are they opening themselves up to potential compensation claim?
____________________________
One of the users here recently started SSRIs then stopped them, on the basis that unless they were experiencing the difficulties that the SSRIs were meant to mask / suppress, they could not learn to cope with those (very significant) difficulties.
anyone have thoughts on this?
I gather that since that study, freedom of information requests have brought to light clinical trials which had failed to show any statistically significant difference to placebos, that the drugs companies had hidden away.
Having been in long term intimate relationships with people who were taking SSRIs, I have close knowledge of the downsides of something that was no more effective than a sugar pill.
High money price, six weeks of feeling crap before even the placebo effect began to take hold, suicidality, Hideous withdrawal (far worse than heroine - but given a different name). Weight gain, permanently trashed sexual function...
and problems for babies born to mothers who were on SSRIs http://jama.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=1555130
In the light of those findings, is a doctor who now prescribes SSRIs for anything other than a "Major Depression" in contravention of the first part of their Hippocratic Oath; "Do no harm"?
and are they opening themselves up to potential compensation claim?
____________________________
One of the users here recently started SSRIs then stopped them, on the basis that unless they were experiencing the difficulties that the SSRIs were meant to mask / suppress, they could not learn to cope with those (very significant) difficulties.
anyone have thoughts on this?
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