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Depression & Mental Health FAQs
US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimated 40 million Americans living today will suffer from major depressive illness during their lives. Seasonal affective disorder is major depression that appears in the fall or winter and goes away in spring, thought to be caused by lack of sunlight.
Postpartum depression occurs within four weeks of a women giving childbirth. Most new mothers suffer from some form of the �baby blues.� Postpartum depression, by contrast, is major depression, thought to be triggered by changes in hormonal flows associated with childbirth. Catatonic depression is a rare form of major depression characterized by (at least two): Stupor, excessive motor activity, extreme negativism, peculiarities in voluntary movement, and repetition of other people's words or actions. - mcmanweb.com
Psychotic depression is a rare form of depression characterized by delusions or hallucinations, such as believing you are someone you are not and hearing voices.
According to the National Institute of Mental Health, approximately 18.8 million American adults, or about 9.5 percent of the US population age 18 and older in a given year, have a depressive disorder. Depression is a chronic illness that exacts a significant toll on
America's health and productivity. It affects more than 21 million
American children and adults annually and is the leading cause of
disability in the United States for individuals ages 15 to 44.
Lost productive time among U.S. workers due to depression is estimated
to be in excess of $31 billion per year. Depression frequently
co-occurs with a variety of medical illnesses such as heart disease,
cancer, and chronic pain and is associated with poorer health status
and prognosis. It is also the principal cause of the 30,000 suicides
in the U.S. each year. In 2004, suicide was the 11 th leading cause of death in the United States, third among individuals 15-24.
According to the World Health Organization, depression is presently on track to becoming the world's second-most disabling disease (after heart disease) by the year 2020. Depression is responsible for some $87 billion a year in lost productivity in the US (a conservative estimate), and according to Bank One, is responsible for most lost work days in its employees after pregnancy and childbirth. Additionally, one million people worldwide die by their own hand, most as a result of a mood disorder. Finally, the linkage between depression and a host of physical illnesses makes it arguably the world's greatest killer.
Research presented at the 56th Annual Conference of the Canadian
Psychiatric Association shows a marked link between bipolar disorder
and migraines. The odds of migraine in persons with bipolar disorder were 40% higher than the general population. Data
obtained from 36,984 people aged 15 and over, who screened positive for
manic or depressive episodes with migraine, were compared against those
who screened positive for mania but who didn�t suffer from migraines. Amongst
males, 14.9% of those with manic episodes were also diagnosed with
migraines compared with 5.8% of the general population. Amongst
females, 34.7% had both migraines and bipolar disorder compared with
14.7% who only had migraines.unquote.gif While the research was
skewed towards persons who were already diagnosed with bipolar
disorders, what does it mean for people who suffer from migraines but
who may have an undiagnosed bipolar disorder?
Migraines and headaches aren�t fully understood but the manifestations are very real and debilitating for their sufferers: Throbbing pain Nausea Heightened sensitivity to light or sound Seeing dots, wavy lines, flashing lights, or blind spots Difficulty with speech, sensation, or movement
An estimated 2.1 million
American adolescents have experienced major depression within the last
year, according to a new comprehensive government study. Researchers
surveyed more than 67,000 young people ages 12 to 17 and found that one
in 12 had suffered from serious depression in the previous year.Nearly
13 percent of girls had struggled with depression, compared to less
than 5 percent of boys. Odds of depression increased with age -- just 4
percent of 12-year-olds experienced depression but that climbed to 11
percent for older teens.
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Weighing the Risks: The Coming of Age on Antidepressants
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Who Are We? Coming of Age on Antidepressants
By RICHARD A. FRIEDMAN, M.D.
“I’ve grown up on medication,” my patient Julie told me recently. “I don’t have a sense of who I really am without it.”
At 31, she had been on one antidepressant or another nearly
continuously since she was 14. There was little question that she had
very serious depression and had survived several suicide attempts . In fact, she credited the medication with saving her life.
But now she was raising an equally fundamental question: how the
drugs might have affected her psychological development and core
identity.
It was not an issue I had seriously considered before. Most of my
patients, who are adults, developed their psychiatric problems after
they had a pretty clear idea of who they were as individuals. During
treatment, most of them could tell me whether they were back to their
normal baseline. Julie could certainly remember what depression felt like, but she
could not recall feeling well except during her long treatment with
antidepressant medications. And since she had not grown up before
getting depressed, she could not gauge the hypothetical effects of antidepressants on her emotional and psychological development.
Her experience is far from unique. Since their emergence in the late 1980s, serotonin reuptake inhibitors like Prozac and Zoloft
have become some of the most widely prescribed drugs in the world, for
depressed teenagers as well as adults. Because depression is often a
chronic, recurring illness, there are certain to be many young people,
like Julie, who are coming of age on these newer antidepressants.
We know a lot about the course of untreated depression, probably
more than we do about very long-term antidepressant use in this
population. We know, for example, that depression in young people is a
very serious problem; suicide
is the third-leading cause of death in adolescents, not to mention the
untold suffering and impaired functioning this disease exacts.
By contrast, the risk of antidepressant treatment is small. A 2004 review by the Food and Drug Administration,
analyzing clinical trials of the drugs, did show an elevated risk of
suicidal thinking and nonlethal suicide attempts in young people taking
antidepressants — 3.5 percent, compared with 1.7 percent of those
taking a placebo. But since the lifetime risk of actual suicide in depressed people ranges from 2.2 to 12 percent, risk from treatment is dwarfed by the risks of the disease itself.
Still, what do we know about the effects of, say, 15 to 20 years of antidepressant drug treatment that begins in adolescence or childhood? Not enough.
The reason has to do with the way drugs are tested and approved. To
get F.D.A. approval, a drug has to beat a placebo in two randomized
clinical trials that typically involve a few hundred subjects who are
treated for relatively short periods, usually 4 to 12 weeks.
So drugs are approved based on short-term studies for what turns out
to be long-term — often lifelong — use in the world of clinical
practice. The longest maintenance study to date of one of the newer
antidepressants, Effexor, lasted only two years and showed the drug to
be superior to a placebo in preventing relapses of depression.
What do I say to a depressed patient who is doing well after five
years on such a drug but can’t stop without a depressive relapse and
who wants reassurance that the drug has no long-term adverse effects?
I usually say that we have no evidence that the drug poses a risk
with long-term use; and since the risk of untreated depression is much
greater than the hypothetical risk of the drug, it makes sense to stay
on it.
This large gap in our clinical knowledge is compounded by the
public’s growing and well-founded skepticism about research sponsored
by drug makers. A study in the January 2008 issue of The New England Journal of Medicine,
involving 74 clinical trials with 12 antidepressants, found that 97
percent of positive studies were published, versus 12 percent of
negative studies.
Clearly, physicians and the public need much better data on the
safety and efficacy of drugs after they hit the market, which at
present consists mainly of anecdotes and case reports.
Congress recently reauthorized the Prescription Drug User Fee Act,
which will expand the F.D.A.’s post-marketing drug surveillance, though
I think it did not go far enough in mandating the use of powerful
epidemiological strategies to monitor drugs over the long term.
Beyond these concerns, there are other important issues to consider
in long-term use of antidepressants, especially in young people. One
patient, a woman in her mid-20s, told me that she felt pressured by her
boyfriend to have sex more often than she wanted. “I’ve always had a
low sex drive,” she said.
For the past eight years she had been taking Zoloft, which like all
the antidepressants in its class is known to lower libido and to
interfere with sexual performance. She had understandably mistaken the
side effect of the drug for her “normal” sexual desire and was shocked
when I explained it: “And I thought it was just me!”
This just underscores how tricky it can be to use psychotropic drugs
during adolescence — when the brain is still developing, when one’s
identity is still work in progress.
The drugs save lives, and we often have no choice but to use them —
even if we have questions about their long-term use. But the questions
are big ones, and we owe it to our patients to try to answer them.
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Depression Forums would like to hear from you!
Depression Forums would like to hear from you!
Mental illness affects one in seventeen Americans. We
would like to invite you to share your story about
your Depression, as breaking the silence will help us to break open the
stigma surrounding mental health that keeps people from getting the
care that continues misunderstandings about those affected by mental
health disorders.
Stories with a positive outlook are most welcome. There is nothing better than to speak out, tell your story and get the word out!
There is hope! Together, we can help ourselves and others. Please PM Forum Admin for more information to submit your story. Warm Regards, ~Lindsay and The Depression Forums Administration Staff
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Depression & Mental Health FAQs 2
What is Clinical Depression? Clinical
depression can affect your body, mood, thoughts, and behavior. It can
change your eating habits, how you feel and think about things, your
ability to work and study, and how you interact with people. Clinical
depression is not a passing mood, a sign of personal weakness or a
condition that can be willed away. Clinically depressed people cannot
"pull themselves together" and get better. Depression can be
successfully treated by a mental health professional or certain health
care providers. With the right treatment, 80 percent of those who seek
help get better. And many people begin to feel better in just a few
weeks.
Depression a Big Factor in Poor Health World Health Organization Finds Depression Often Goes Untreated By Salynn Boyles WebMD Medical News Reviewed by Louise Chang, MD Sept.
6, 2007 -- Depression has a greater impact on overall health than
arthritis, diabetes, angina, and asthma, but it all too often goes
unrecognized and untreated, a report from the World Health Organization
(WHO) suggests. more... Depression a Big Factor in Poor Health
For Additional Information About Depression Write To: The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)6001 Executive Boulevard, Room 8184, MSC 9663 Bethesda, MD 20892-9663
For free brochures on depression and its treatment call: 1-800-421-4211. or visit: http://www.nimh.nih.gov
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