Saturday, January 12, 2008

The Politics Of Depression

There was a fascinating exchange of letters in this month's American Journal of Psychiatry concerning just how much depression doctors should accept in their patients and the implications of such decisions. What prompted the initial letter was the federally-funded STAR-D trial, which showed that current depression treatments--including some psychotherapies--are no where near as robust as doctors (and presumably patients) would like. What the trial showed, in short, was that various anti-depressants had anywhere from an 8 percent to 30 percent chance of success in remitting symptoms of depression.

That leaves a large subset of people who do not get relief using current therapies and that raises a host of practical issues for the mental health field. This situation affects millions of Americans.

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