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davmre | 2 years ago
(yes, I've tried psychedelics; they're fascinating and super promising, but at least for me, not transformative in the way that fluoxetine was)
No individual depression treatment works for everyone. SSRIs are not a magic bullet. Neither are psychedelics. But if you're depressed and haven't tried SSRIs, you owe it to yourself and everyone in your life to at least test the hypothesis that they might help.
Scott Alexander's page on SSRIs is a great, relatively objective resource, from a psychiatrist who regularly prescribes them: https://lorienpsych.com/2020/10/25/ssris/
elliotec|2 years ago
Prozac actually saved my life. Psychedelics since have certainly enhanced it, but they could not accomplish what prozac did. I can go into more detail if interested.
DiggyJohnson|2 years ago
What was your experience like? And do you still take it?
hndamien|2 years ago
drcongo|2 years ago
fsloth|2 years ago
macNchz|2 years ago
swalling|2 years ago
I think in my part my negative reaction is, like many people, having observed the effects of SSRIs on young people. It's well known that risks like suicidal ideation are actually higher among those under 25, and in general it is awful to see the mental health crisis among young people dealt with primarily via instantly reaching toward semi-permanent medication, rather than considering other treatments.
Karrot_Kream|2 years ago
alwaysbeconsing|2 years ago
unknown|2 years ago
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fullofstack|2 years ago
fallingfrog|2 years ago
heavyset_go|2 years ago
nonameiguess|2 years ago
For what it's worth, synthetic opioids and spinal fusion saved my life. If I'd listened to the Internet, I'd have likely never pursued treatment or maybe just taken Kratom and gotten massages or something, fearing I'd end up a drug addict with a worse spine than I started with.
perfecto_maduro|2 years ago
holden_nelson|2 years ago
My advice is to take a breath and focus on the present. Chip away at what’s causing your anxiety. Don’t shy away from working on yourself. Use your medication as a tool, not as a solution.
I’m painfully aware that these are all much easier said than done. It was a three year journey for me. And who knows - I may start having panic attacks again. If I do, I’m going to try buspar.
Also. Don’t be afraid to switch medications. Don’t just live with severe side effects. Sexual dysfunction, lethargy, significant weight gain - this is no way to live your life. I found the Prozac - Wellbutrin combo to be pretty tame in that department.
Podgajski|2 years ago
I have schizoaffective disorder, bipolar type So I am prone to being more sensitive to SSRI. This is mostly to do with my genetically odd 5HT2A receptors.
Depression is no longer really a part of my life anymore after I found I was zinc deficient. But now I do tend towards the manic and have issues with psychosis still so I need to be careful with my serotonin.
4star3star|2 years ago
unknown|2 years ago
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dackerlunghack|2 years ago
stef25|2 years ago
The bad sides of of SSRI's are as overblown as the good sides of psychedelics are. It's easy to form an opinion from reading personal experiences online but that doesn't reflect the real world imho.
kawhah|2 years ago
> That is, there are a bunch of tests that ask you a bunch of questions about your feelings and symptoms, and you can add them up and call that a “depression score”, and if you do that, antidepressants have an effect size of 0.3. Or you can ask patients “how depressed do you feel on a scale of 1-10”, and if you do that, antidepressants have an effect size of 0.5. I think the latter is better, because it’s what we actually care about (how patients are doing), and the tests are kind of dumb and ask about a lot of symptoms most people realistically aren’t experiencing.
(In other words, if you ask a patient with depression how they are feeling, and they say 'great', and then you ask them questions like "are you managing to shower every day", or "did you think about suicide a lot this week" and they give the same answers as a depressed person, they are cured!)
Does weird napkin math which clearly can't be justified:
> For those people, they will have a large real effect size of 1.0, plus a large placebo effect size of 0.9, for a very large total effect size of 1.9.
(How do you get to add the placebo effect back on to the postulated 'large real effect size'??)
Says that extremely common side effects are 'very unusual':
> It can be any or all of decreased libido, difficulty orgasming, difficulty getting an erection, difficulty enjoying sex, or decreased sensation in the genitals. These usually go away a few weeks to months after stopping the medication, but in rare cases they might linger for months or years, and there are a few people who say their sexual side effects never went away. These cases are very unusual and still not well understood.
(Note that in the same article he points out that, in general, the medication only improves mood or anxiety while you keep taking it, when you stop taking it you still have the depression or other conditions. So the fact that sexual disfunction usually gets resolved after stopping taking the medication isn't much relief. For most people SSRIs will never lead to a steady state where you are stable with regards to your mental health issue and also are able to enjoy sex.)
Makes armchair psych connection between well-studied things which are not the same:
> When everything goes right, SSRIs blunt negative but not positive emotions. But many people even at reasonable doses will notice that their most extreme positive emotions become a little less extreme (this may be part of the problem with sex).
(Difficulty getting aroused or orgasming or feeling in the mood for sex is not the same as "most extreme positive emotions becoming a little less extreme")
zdragnar|2 years ago
What I am on now (Lexapro) was life changing in a good way, with only minor sexual side effects that more or less went away.
As such, studies that day "SSRIs have this effect on people" or "have these side effects" are fundamentally flawed. Despite belonging to a common class, there isn't a universal experience.
unknown|2 years ago
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stcroixx|2 years ago
brookst|2 years ago
holden_nelson|2 years ago
Eumenes|2 years ago
mnky9800n|2 years ago