Pet Belief -
Apr. 5th, 2005 07:00 amYou don't need drugs to kick depression; though, I do wonder if in a lot of cases, cognitive work and medication need to be used together for best effect.
"On the whole, these findings do not support the current American Psychiatric Association guideline, based on the TDCRP (the Treatment of Depression Collaborative Research Program) that 'most (moderately and severely depressed) patients will require medication,' " the study authors wrote.
"It appears that cognitive therapy can be as effective as medications, even among more severely depressed outpatients, at least when provided by experienced cognitive therapists," they wrote.
The report doesn't specify findings when medication and cognitive work were used together; it's my understanding that combination is the most successful of all.
Medication alone is cheaper; but it certainly doesn't appear to prevent future depressive periods. But cognitive work does not require a therapist once you've got it down - in my case, I have my books and I can add a pad of paper and a pencil at any time. Cognitive therapy is also not a two year, once or twice a week session obligation. *thinks* I was once a week for two months at my worst, and then nine months of once a month - and really, I cancelled out of the last three months. Too busy. My therapist was good with this - he preferred not to hospitalize anyone as he believed that "life is what happens to us while we're busy planning for other things."
*looks at study* 16 weeks. That's about right.
I'm also not of the mind, even more so now, that SSRI's should be considered "replacement" therapy - yes, depressive illnesses tend to cluster in families, but anyone dealing with dysfunctional families knows that there are a ton of landmines you have to deal that are learned behaviors. Mom does it; her mother did it too. Oh, and great-granddad was a winner. You ought to see the fallout....
You ought to see the history in the men in my family, particularly on Dad's side of the family. They've self-medicated for generations - the result has been a history of substance abuse that only one male member of my family has escaped in five generations. Dad died of an accidental overdose of barbiturates in 1967 (some people did NOT survive the sixties, sadly), but his father died of stomach cancer after being a fifth-a-day alcoholic, just like his father. And my brother's children, all three of the boys have police records related to drug possession and use. (Older brother seems to have escaped - but there are days I wonder. He also has my aversion to medication, which might explain it.) Younger brother got nailed, but has been in recovery for over 8 years now.
There are a lot of reasons people get depressed. There are also more than a couple of ways to deal/treat the depression.
And I'm sorry - just prescribing medication for the rest of your life is dumb-ass lazy. At least in this case, I think the research supports that stance.
(Paxil. "Usually." Wonder if they have any specs on the suicides attempted....)
"On the whole, these findings do not support the current American Psychiatric Association guideline, based on the TDCRP (the Treatment of Depression Collaborative Research Program) that 'most (moderately and severely depressed) patients will require medication,' " the study authors wrote.
"It appears that cognitive therapy can be as effective as medications, even among more severely depressed outpatients, at least when provided by experienced cognitive therapists," they wrote.
The report doesn't specify findings when medication and cognitive work were used together; it's my understanding that combination is the most successful of all.
Medication alone is cheaper; but it certainly doesn't appear to prevent future depressive periods. But cognitive work does not require a therapist once you've got it down - in my case, I have my books and I can add a pad of paper and a pencil at any time. Cognitive therapy is also not a two year, once or twice a week session obligation. *thinks* I was once a week for two months at my worst, and then nine months of once a month - and really, I cancelled out of the last three months. Too busy. My therapist was good with this - he preferred not to hospitalize anyone as he believed that "life is what happens to us while we're busy planning for other things."
*looks at study* 16 weeks. That's about right.
I'm also not of the mind, even more so now, that SSRI's should be considered "replacement" therapy - yes, depressive illnesses tend to cluster in families, but anyone dealing with dysfunctional families knows that there are a ton of landmines you have to deal that are learned behaviors. Mom does it; her mother did it too. Oh, and great-granddad was a winner. You ought to see the fallout....
You ought to see the history in the men in my family, particularly on Dad's side of the family. They've self-medicated for generations - the result has been a history of substance abuse that only one male member of my family has escaped in five generations. Dad died of an accidental overdose of barbiturates in 1967 (some people did NOT survive the sixties, sadly), but his father died of stomach cancer after being a fifth-a-day alcoholic, just like his father. And my brother's children, all three of the boys have police records related to drug possession and use. (Older brother seems to have escaped - but there are days I wonder. He also has my aversion to medication, which might explain it.) Younger brother got nailed, but has been in recovery for over 8 years now.
There are a lot of reasons people get depressed. There are also more than a couple of ways to deal/treat the depression.
And I'm sorry - just prescribing medication for the rest of your life is dumb-ass lazy. At least in this case, I think the research supports that stance.
(Paxil. "Usually." Wonder if they have any specs on the suicides attempted....)
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Date: 2005-04-05 02:34 pm (UTC)This isn't to say that *some* forms of depression don't do well with therapy only, or with medication AND theraphy. The probably I have with articles like Forbes' is they tend to sweep with a very broad brush.
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Date: 2005-04-05 02:35 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2005-04-05 02:40 pm (UTC)I think the key here is a competent MD who also gives a damn. Sometimes you need one, sometimes you need the other, sometimes you just need a little boost to get you far enough up out of the hole you're in that you can see the green grass all around... but I get the feeling that at least some of them have the attitude of "here's your drugs, now get out of here, I've got a tee time..."
And don't get me started about school systems ordering bright, bored kids onto the stuff...
Of course, the flip side of this whole rant is that when life throws you a dot-bomb, ships all your jobs to India and generally makes you feel worthless, you will damn well get depressed, and the only thing you can do is downsize your life and figure out how to make a living without a keyboard, or similar drastic measures. Hmmm. I smell a post coming on.
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Date: 2005-04-05 02:47 pm (UTC)I also got a lot of cognitive training in my first two years of college - strangely, enough. They called it "health training."
Being able to roll with the punches is the key to getting by in life - I don't care about the size of them.
However, as I found out on April Fool's Day, I am very susceptible to pranks based on bad news. Bad news I always believe; good news is never taken for granted. Strange.
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Date: 2005-04-05 02:41 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-05 02:48 pm (UTC)Cognitive work at its best.
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Date: 2005-04-05 03:19 pm (UTC)I hope this is making sense. I'm trying to type while music is playing and am still working on shaking loose the last of the cobwebs from my brain on top of that.
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Date: 2005-04-05 07:55 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-05 03:20 pm (UTC)Sigh.
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Date: 2005-04-05 07:57 pm (UTC)They used to give them methamphetamine in the sixties for the same reason.
(Wow, taking responsibility pretty quick there, weren't you?)
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Date: 2005-04-05 03:23 pm (UTC)I'm fairly anti-medication when it comes to things like that, though, and I think being on Paxil one day more or less proved out why I'm the way I am on the subject. Anti-medication, and anti-therapy pretty much.
Always thought there had to be other and better ways for me, even though I have yet to find a good solution.
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Date: 2005-04-05 08:01 pm (UTC)http://dogbert.abebooks.com/servlet/BookDetailsPL?bi=447281746
Get the book - read it, but most of all, do the exercises in it. At first you'll think you're wasting your time. Until it begins working. Trust me.
My personal experience...
Date: 2005-04-05 03:35 pm (UTC)So much so that I don't need either at this time, but I am quite aware of how well the combination works, so should I need some help in the future, when things get that bad again, at least I know that I can get back to my old self eventually.
Re: My personal experience...
Date: 2005-04-05 08:03 pm (UTC)I also know now that I can be sad and angry without it being a pathology. Believe it or not, that's priceless.
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Date: 2005-04-05 03:45 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-05 08:06 pm (UTC)The book is a buck. Get it, read it and follow the instructions. Cheapest therapy you'll ever buy.
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Date: 2005-04-05 04:50 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-05 08:06 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-05 07:41 pm (UTC)Medicine works best I've noticed in the short term. It stabalizes your mood long enough to learn other ways of managing the depression. I know for me it kept me lucid enough to allow for the therapy to work. Now I'm off meds, but I still use the techniques I learned in therapy to manage my depression.
However, there are some kinds of depression which are caused by a genuine chemecial imbalance and the maitenece meds are nessecary. It's not true for every kind of depression, but I know my grandmother had to be on medication for her whole life because when she was not on her meds, she was both physically and mentally unable to function at all. (I wish I could remember her exact diagnosis/illness.)
But it takes a long time to determine who honestly needs long term medication and who needs it for a short time or not at all. HMO's just want to take the easy way out, hence they just stick you one one kind of generic drug and send you on your way. it took me almost a decade to finally find the right doctor and therapist to actually treat me, and not just assign me a maitenece med like many others had before.
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Date: 2005-04-05 08:16 pm (UTC)The only replacement therapy I know of - truly - is lithium in the treatment of bipolar disorder. It requires blood level monitoring through a lab every two weeks and has a host of side effects. But it is a lifelong medication, once started. (Subjective as HELL - I'm not a trained professional.)
It's one of those cyclical situations - if you're needing care, you often don't have the mental resolve or financial wherewithall to fight a HMO for proper care. So you continue to cycle further and further into trouble. Sometimes it's just dumb luck to stumble on the right therapy, I swear it.
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Date: 2005-04-05 08:08 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-05 08:17 pm (UTC)http://dogbert.abebooks.com/servlet/BookDetailsPL?bi=447281746
I recommend it above everything else - at the very least, as a starting point.
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Date: 2005-04-05 08:56 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-05 09:10 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2005-04-05 09:53 pm (UTC)Re: Hello hello!
Date: 2005-04-05 10:48 pm (UTC)I'm going to be up there for a wedding in June - think you might have some time for me on a Sunday afternoon?
Chiming in with a "but"
Date: 2005-04-05 11:54 pm (UTC)Re: Chiming in with a "but"
Date: 2005-04-06 12:33 am (UTC)That's a shame -
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Date: 2005-04-06 11:42 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-06 02:19 pm (UTC)I also want to pretty it up as well, as you might understand -
I'll try to get it on its way by this time next week -
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