I have occasionally remarked that, while anti-depressants
are a good thing they are not that good of a good thing.
Today, Dr. Doris Iarovici of Duke University asks a similar
question. She knows that many students take pills to regulate their emotions. She
knows that many physicians think nothing of helping students to medicate the
emotions that arise from difficult life situations.
For some it might be a good thing. But there is surely a
downside.
Iarovici writes:
Antidepressants
are an excellent treatment for depression and anxiety. I’ve seen them improve —
and sometimes save — many young lives. But a growing number of young adults are
taking psychiatric medicines for longer and longer periods, at the very age
when they are also consolidating their identities, making plans for the future
and navigating adult relationships.
Are we
using good scientific evidence to make decisions about keeping these young
people on antidepressants? Or are we inadvertently teaching future generations
to view themselves as too fragile to cope with the adversity that life
invariably brings?
Good point. When psychiatrists hand out medication for every
emotional upset, they are telling young people that they cannot manage their
lives by using their own mental resources.
Even though psychiatrists are uncomfortable about handing
out so many brain-altering substances, students (among others) expect to
receive them. The media has been trumpeting the message that Prozac et al. will
save your life, even make you a new person. Better yet, insurance companies pay
more for writing prescriptions than they do for longer conversations.
More
students arrive on campus already on antidepressants. From 1994 to 2006, the
percentage of students treated at college counseling centers who were using
antidepressants nearly tripled, from 9 percent to over 23 percent. In part this
reflects the introduction of S.S.R.I. antidepressants, a new class of drugs
thought to be safer and have fewer side effects than their predecessors.
While bemoaning the fact that today’s patients are being
induced to believe that they cannot function without some psychoactive
substance, we must note that many of today’s psychiatrists do not know enough,
have not had enough training to help patients make their way through complex
life situations.
It’s nice to blame the insurance companies, but, for all we
know, many psychiatrists are at their best writing prescriptions, and at their
worst giving advice.
To illustrate her point, Iarovici describes a patient of
hers, a young women who was trying to get off of anti-depressants. The patient
was not happy with life without her anti-depressants, but still, Iarovici
points out, was she really ill or was she facing a difficult life situation.
Surely, the young patient was depressed, but she was also
suffering from anomie, the kind that is produced by disrupted routines and
social dislocation.
Iarovici describes the anomie:
My
patient had moved away from her husband to start graduate school, since his job
kept him in another state. She’d expected the temporary separation to be hard
but navigated it smoothly, focusing on school, with occasional visits.
In the
summer, she moved in with him and was surprised to feel emotionally “muted.” It
was nothing like her college depression, but she worried. She’d counted on the
reunion being easy.
As she
looked back, she acknowledged that moving again, leaving behind new school
friends and routines, and not having the structure of school or work to fill
her time might have challenged anyone. She noticed small ways in which she and
her husband were growing in different directions, and this alarmed her. She wanted
to resume medication, thinking that maybe the summer would have gone better
with an antidepressant.
And also:
But my
patient’s symptoms were only one part of a compelling life story: that of a
young woman trying to balance personal aspirations with intimacy. She was
discounting her emotional reactions to difficult life events. These struggles
might be the very moments that precipitate personal growth.
She concludes:
We walk
a thinning line between diagnosing illness and teaching our youth to view any
emotional upset as pathological. We need a greater focus on building resilience
in emerging adults. We need more scientific studies — spanning years, not
months — on the risks and benefits of maintenance treatment in emerging adults.
Maybe someday, treating people like this young graduate student, I won’t have
to feel like we’re conducting an experiment of one.
Iarovici is certainly correct. But, one would like to know how
many psychiatrists are trained to help their patients to build resilience and to manage their lives.
1 comment:
Parental Deficit Syndrome (PDS)
Post a Comment