Subscribe X
Back to Top
Donate

Learn

Archives

June 1, 2020 by Leah Hardy | The Telegraph

How to deal with your teenager’s depression

There’s growing evidence of the pandemic’s mental health toll – but how do you ease your kids’ worries without adding to their stress?

Like many parents of teenagers right now, my life feels very different to how it did this time last year. The ‘new normal’ – the endless rounds of washing and cooking, the inability to plan a holiday or visit family – is becoming increasingly irksome. But most of all, we worry about our children. Why are they in their rooms all day? Are they studying? What will happen about their exam grades, their university options and their friendships? When will they be able to go back to school? And most of all, are they happy?

This week, Anne Longfield, the Children’s Commissioner for England revealed new research showing the shocking toll that lockdown is taking on children’s mental health. Last month her office asked 2,000 children aged 8 to 17 years old about their experience of stress. She says, “not surprisingly many children told us that the virus was their biggest reason for feeling stressed”. Even more worryingly, a recent consultation found that a quarter of 15- year-olds are self-harming. No wonder more than half of parents reported worrying about their children’s mental health.

Earlier this month 30 organisations wrote to the Prime Minister, urging him to take steps to reduce the impact of coronavirus on the mental health of the young – “both now and in the future”.

Read More

June 1, 2020 by RxISK.org

Children of the Cure

Missing Data, Lost Lives, and Antidepressants

Samizdat Health Writer’s Co-operative Inc., has just published Children of the Cure – the story of Study 329, the most famous clinical trial in medicine.

Study 329 was a clinical study that began in 1994 giving a new antidepressant to teenagers. It led to a fraud charge, a $3 billion fine, and a Black Box Warning. Despite now knowing that all trials of antidepressants done in children are negative, sales of these drugs to children and adolescents continue to increase dramatically.

Read More

May 22, 2020 by JAMES HAMBLIN | The Atlantic

Is Everyone Depressed?

Suddenly, many people meet the criteria for clinical depression. Doctors are scrambling to determine who needs urgent intervention, and who is simply the new normal.

NAMRATA GOSAVI

The word I keep hearing is numbness. Not necessarily a sickness, but feeling ill at ease. A sort of detachment or removal from reality. Deb Hawkins, a tech analyst in Michigan, describes the feeling of being stuck at home during the coronavirus pandemic as “sleep-walking through my life” or “wading through a physical and mental quicksand.” Even though she has been living in what she calls an “introvert heaven” for the past two months—at home with her family, grateful they are in good health—her brain has dissented. “I feel like I have two modes,” Hawkins says: “barely functioning and boiling angry.”

Read More

May 17, 2020 by Martin Plöderl et al | Journal of Affective Disorders

Commentary to “antidepressants and suicidality: A re-analysis of the re-analysis”

After discussing important issues concerning the re-analyses of the FDA data on suicidal behavior in antidepressant (AD) trials by Kaminski and Bschor (2020) (henceforth KB) and Hengartner and Plöderl (2019) (henceforth HP), we decided to publish a collaborative response. We want to address several limitations of our publications and add information necessary for clarifying the controversial question if treatment with ADs is associated with increased suicide risk.

Read More

May 17, 2020 by Miranda Levy | The Telegraph

‘We are a sedated society’: the rise in antidepressants during lockdown

One in six of the population is on antidepressants, and the numbers are rising. Are GPs being too “trigger-happy” with prescriptions?

As Britain slowly unlocks, we are emerging blinking into the sunlight. But nine weeks of social distancing and self-isolating has left its mark. New evidence is starting to show that ‘mental illness’ — however you wish to define that — is on the rise. And, with Mental Health Awareness Week starting today (18th May), this issue is increasingly relevant.

Read More

May 10, 2020 by Wilfred R. Pigeon, PhDTodd M. Bishop, PhD | Psychiatric Times

The Strong Relationship Between Sleep and Suicide

The steadily rising rate of suicide in the US is a vexing public health crisis. Between 2007 and 2017, suicide was the 10th leading cause of death, claiming the lives of nearly half a million people.1 It is perhaps even more striking that suicide is the fourth leading cause of death for individuals aged 35 to 54 as well as the second leading cause for those aged 10 to 34. Based on 2018 epidemiologic data, 1.4 million adults per year make a non-fatal suicide attempt and 10.4 million have serious thoughts of suicide.2 Among the many risk factors for suicidal thoughts and behaviors, one that consistently emerges as an independent risk factor is sleep disturbance (broadly defined) along with the specific sleep disorders of insomnia, nightmares, and sleep apnea.3,4

One reason that this sleep-suicide relationship is so important is that sleep disorders represent a modifiable risk factor. As noted a decade ago, several sleep medicine interventions can potentially make a difference in the lives of individuals who may be on a trajectory to suicide.5

It has yet to be firmly established if improving sleep actually reduces suicide. However, in a recent analysis of a large medical record study, it was observed that having a sleep medicine consultation was a protective factor for subsequent suicide attempts among those with a sleep disorder.6 There are also some indications that cognitive-behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) reduces suicidal thoughts.7,8

Read More

May 3, 2020 by Brent M. Kious & Amanda V. Bakian | Psychiatry Research

Evidence of new-onset depression among persons with migraine after discontinuing antidepressants

Highlights

  • We examined the risk of tardive dysphoria—the delayed onset of negative emotional symptoms such as depression attributed to antidepressant exposure—in persons taking antidepressants with no recorded history of psychiatric illness.
  • Exposure to antidepressants for migraine prophylaxis was not associated with a significantly increased risk of depression or anxiety, suggesting that tardive dysphoria did not occur.
  • However, antidepressant discontinuation was significantly associated with an increased risk of receiving a new diagnosis of a depressive disorder in patients not known to have any prior history of psychiatric illness.
Read More

April 13, 2020 by Andrew Solomon | The Guardian

For those of us with depression, coronavirus is a double crisis

I am among the many people who must seek to distinguish between ordinary fear and the beginnings of a breakdown

‘When I lived with the Greenlandic Inuit, I found their high rate of depression was tied not to the sunless winter, but to the intimacy it forced.’ A village in Greenland. Photograph: Uriel Sinai/Getty Images

From now on, when someone who hasn’t experienced clinical depression and anxiety asks me what they feel like, I won’t have to resort to florid comparisons. I’ll say: “Remember when the Covid-19 pandemic hit town?” and they will understand. Except that for people with depression and related conditions, the present moment is one of escalated distress. For this is a double crisis, of physical and mental health, and those living the psychiatric challenges need not only acknowledgment but also treatment. I have had dozens of letters and Facebook messages from people who are anxiously upping their doses of antidepressant and anxiolytic medication.

My depression and anxiety share a lot of territory with how most other people feel now: fear of getting sick and dying, fear of losing people I love, fear of unpredictable shortages and economic disaster. Others worry whether their cough is a symptom of Covid-19 or just an allergy. I am in the sizeable part of the population who must seek to distinguish between ordinary fear and the beginnings of a breakdown. I’ve had to alert the doctors who oversee my mental health that I am Code Fragile and will count on them to help me discern whether I cross over from ordinary unhappiness into neurotic paralysis. I have had to cancel my planned withdrawal from a medication that makes me sleepy and fat; lowering my dose would leave me unsettled for a spell, and that’s more than I’m up for now.

Read More

March 29, 2020 by Shan Li et al | International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology

The Role of Bacteria and Its Derived Metabolites in Chronic Pain and Depression: Recent Findings and Research Progress

Abstract

Background

Chronic pain is frequently comorbid with depression in clinical practice. Recently, alterations in gut microbiota and metabolites derived therefrom have been found to potentially contribute to abnormal behaviors and cognitive dysfunction via the “microbiota–gut–brain” axis.

Methods

PubMed was searched and we selected relevant studies before October 1, 2019. The search keyword string included “pain OR chronic pain” AND “gut microbiota OR metabolites”; “depression OR depressive disorder” AND “gut microbiota OR metabolites”. We also searched the reference lists of key articles manually.

Results

This review systematically summarized the recent evidence of gut microbiota and metabolites in chronic pain and depression in animal and human studies. The results showed the pathogenesis and therapeutics of chronic pain and depression might be partially due to gut microbiota dysbiosis. Importantly, bacteria-derived metabolites, including short-chain fatty acids, tryptophan-derived metabolites, and secondary bile acids, offer new insights into the potential linkage between key triggers in gut microbiota and potential mechanisms of depression.

Read More

March 28, 2020 by Scott Berinato | Harvard Business Review

That Discomfort You’re Feeling Is Grief

Some of the HBR edit staff met virtually the other day — a screen full of faces in a scene becoming more common everywhere. We talked about the content we’re commissioning in this harrowing time of a pandemic and how we can help people. But we also talked about how we were feeling. One colleague mentioned that what she felt was grief. Heads nodded in all the panes.

Read More


Related Blogs

  • Dr. David Healy

    Dr. David Healy

    Dr. Healy is a professor of psychiatry at Cardiff University in Wales and an author on the history of pharmaceuticals and government regulation.
    READ BLOG
  • Mad In America: Robert Whitaker

    Mad In America: Robert Whitaker

    Journalist and author Bob Whitaker distills the latest in pharmaceutical and mental health research.
    READ BLOG
  • Selling Sickness

    Selling Sickness

    Creating a new partnership movement to challenge the selling of sickness.
    READ BLOG
  • Kathy Brous

    Kathy Brous

    A serial of Kathy’s recovery journey as an adult with attachment disorder.
    READ BLOG
  • Nev Jones

    Nev Jones

    Exploring the intersections of psychiatry, philosophy, neuroscience, cultural theory, critical community psychology and the mad/user/survivor movement.
    READ BLOG
  • 1boringoldman

    1boringoldman

    Retired psychiatrist and raconteur offers insightful analysis of the day’s events from the woods of Georgia.
    READ BLOG