cupcake-unicorn's comments

cupcake-unicorn | 1 year ago | on: Psychiatric risks for worsened mental health after psychedelic use

I honestly wonder if it isn't less rare in adults or if adults just are more likely to fall through the cracks and to have whatever underlying disorder blamed on the behavior. Children are a more vulnerable group who has a parent who is witness to the obvious behavior changes and can staunchly advocate for their child. Many adults starting SSRIs are isolated, don't have great support networks or friends looking out for them and are meeting with their doctors for the first time. For all the doctors know, behavioral issues were underlying, things just got worse, etc.

Anecdotal, but I've never once met a doctor who adequately described the risks of an SSRI to me as a patient, and even some who have pushed back when I've told them of my own dangerous reactions and other risk factors the drugs have. They really should, as should the risks of new psychedelic based drugs hitting the market. I don't have a problem with the study that's posted. What I do have a problem with is that I feel as if this information is going to be disproportionately used to deny access to RX psychedelics, when existing RXs with similar or worse risk factors aren't discussed in this manner at all.

cupcake-unicorn | 1 year ago | on: Psychiatric risks for worsened mental health after psychedelic use

Sure, but if that's what's going on, it should be researched further and taken seriously during prescribing. 100% guarantee that when psychedelics hit the market, doctors will fall prey to overstating the harms from studies like this while turning a blind eye to the wealth of evidence of greater likelihood of harms in prescriptions they churn out without blinking an eye.

I'm not anti medication, and I'm not saying that there are cases where the benefit doesn't outweigh the harm, but I do think the potential harms of each medication should be thoroughly investigated equally. Large companies with the ability to withhold damaging trials, sway the public opinion, and have a giant PR team and legal team at their disposal shouldn't be impacting our understanding of the real risks and science.

cupcake-unicorn | 1 year ago | on: Psychiatric risks for worsened mental health after psychedelic use

No problem, I like to spread awareness of this stuff! BTW here are a few more RCTs about the relationship https://www.madinamerica.com/2021/03/antidepressants-still-l...

Honestly it's hard to say and I'm not even sure if you'd be able to study this empirically in this population. I do think that's why doctors fall prey to this bias, and especially so in a stigmatized population. "Ah, they were likely to have these symptoms anyway". It would be interesting to do a wider study, but there already was a history of these companies withholding damaging trials and results so I doubt it would be done, especially given that suicides have occurred in these trials.

I really do believe that these classes of medications are treated differently due to the great power the industry has on this issue. If you look up the background of NAMI it's quite suspect and reminds me about how doctors were getting textbooks that were written by the opioid prescribing company. NAMI goes on to inform public opinion and then this stuff becomes "fact". I'm glad the "too little serotonin" thing is being examined but it was crazy to see how many weirdly defensive memos and articles there were out when it first came out. I see I'm getting downvotes on my original comment but I do think it's extremely important to examine these intuitions and where they came from, because as we've seen some of this stuff has been based on profits/trial P-hacking/junk science.

cupcake-unicorn | 1 year ago | on: Psychiatric risks for worsened mental health after psychedelic use

I can understand why you would have that reasoning, but SSRIs are commonly prescribed off label to populations for non-mental health related reasons, for example ED or urinary incontinence, and in these populations the relationship holds, leading to some governments and regulatory bodies to recommend or warn against use for these conditions.

"Although duloxetine reduced the symptoms of stress urinary incontinence and improved women’s quality of life, the harms related to suicidality and violence were 4 to 5 times more common with duloxetine than with a placebo, a meta analysis using patient level data by researchers from the Nordic Cochrane Centre showed." https://www.bmj.com/content/355/bmj.i6103

cupcake-unicorn | 1 year ago | on: Psychiatric risks for worsened mental health after psychedelic use

This really just feels like fearmongering because this is a threat to big pharma. I mean, several commonly prescribed antidepressants have black box warnings about increased risk of suicide. When they trialed Prozac on people with no history of mental illness, someone committed suicide out of the blue. Fairly certain someone could cobble together a much more compelling meta analysis about even worse adverse effects of psych meds on similar populations, but due to NAMI and big pharma I think there's pressure not to draw those lines too clearly.

I think there's a clear bias in cases of big pharma approved meds to jump to "Oh, it wasn't the medication, the condition just worsened" and with psychedelics/weed to jump to "The substance use is causing this". Even when there is proof of RX medication worsening mental health conditions, it's common to have these relationships straight up denied by the prescribing doctor.

This isn't to say that there isn't a similar relationship in psychedelics, but it feels really disingenuous to me to be mentioning this outside of the wider context of psychiatric meds which somehow get a free pass for causing a much wider and dangerous range of side effects. If psychedelics cause less harm than commonly prescribed drugs in the same population, isn't that a good thing? We should understand these harms, but the bias of Big Pharma needs to be taken out of the picture.

cupcake-unicorn | 2 years ago | on: Low serotonin levels might explain some Long Covid symptoms, study proposes

That was exactly my take on this study, and I wasn't happy about seeing the jump to "WE NEED MORE SSRIS, LOOK IT'S SEROTONIN" - it's already been proven that serotinin disruptions in depression are a symptom so this is the same but doctors/pharma continue to cling to the outdated "low serotonin"

The other side effect this may have is delegitimatizing the condition, much like SSRIs are thrown at chronic pain, menstrual issues and more. Since the medical institution doesn't really take these conditions seriously this is going to become another half recognized condition that doctors can say "Maybe it's Long Covid HAVE YOU TRIED SSRIS" vs working with the patient or doing research into the true causes.

cupcake-unicorn | 2 years ago | on: Does the microbiome hold the key to chronic fatigue syndrome?

This is not at all surprising and has been noticed by actual chronic fatigue sufferers for years - maybe we should have listened to them?

https://cfsremission.com/2015/10/19/miyarisan-clostridium-bu...

This is an open sourced microbiome site that's run by the author of the above blog, someone who has CFS and a background in science: https://microbiomeprescription.com/

You can easily spend around 200 dollars to get a full sequencing of your stool and suggested food and probiotics to take.

The problem is most probiotics you can get over the counter are pretty much a scam. Lactobacilli don't survive fecal transit. Even suggestions like changing diet don't really help if your microbiome is that messed up, and you will see more cutsey suggestions like "Eat more resistant starch to increase butyrate producing bacteria!".

The two probiotics that consistently actually work for CFS patients are Mutaflor (a probiotic E. Coli Strain) and C. Butyricum. You can only now just get this in the US from Pendulum, but it's been available in Japan for years as the Miyarisan probiotic, which you can easily order from eBay.

Butyrate/buytric acid is a game changer and is being studied in a variety of diseases. It's a Histone deacetylase inhibitor, but without the side effects of the drugs on the market. A relative of mine with Parkinsons supplements buytric acid and this has controlled her tremor. PD and autism are also associated with disrupted gut biome and benefit from Butyrate or Butyrate producing probiotics. You can read more about it here:

https://thehomeschoolingdoctor.com/butyrate-series/

But, I guess big pharma, and CFS patients be faking/crazy, and probiotics are "hippie" stuff (along with the fact that you can't actually buy the ones that make a dent in these condition easily in the US). Really wish patients and their lived experiences were taken more seriously.

cupcake-unicorn | 2 years ago | on: I’ve worked hard my whole life and I can’t afford food

I noticed this as well. I'm also on benefits and have subsidized housing, although in the US as a single person, and I don't have this issue with food insecurity - although now that the public health emergency has ended I lost roughly 400 dollars a month from programs that were extended. It would help if she broke down her monthly budget. Maybe she has some kind of scenario with past debt, or if she was in the US medical stuff, but that shouldn't be the case in Canada. Still confusing

cupcake-unicorn | 3 years ago | on: A world grain shortage puts tens of millions at risk

This kind of stuff really bothers me in addition to the ridiculous "meat shortage" or "save the coal miner's jobs" stuff. Let's use this as an opportunity to move past things that were popularized that don't really make that mucuh sense anymore.

Even for those who don't have celiac/gluten intolerance, gluten is high in lectins, and the molecule size is such that it can really cause damage to a lot of tissue. Wheat and dairy are extremely rough on the body and as time has gone on we've basically mutated to tolerate it.

Sorghum is a gluten free crop that's hardy and grows with less water, in addition to having a favorable nutrient profile full of antioxidants. Getting more antioxidants in the diet can really be the tipping point for those who have a genetic predisposition to autoimmune and other disorders and that's why things have gotten so bad under the crappy western diet.

Sorry if I'm just being dense here but I really don't understand why "grain shortage" or "meat shortage" are thrown around in the media as being life and death situations. There are surely grains that are more heat tolerant and we can further cultivate and select for types of healthier grains that are instead of trying to make wheat happen because "mm bread/beer". I don't eat either of those things and I suspect that communities who suffered a shortage of either of those things would also find a way to make do, potentially to their benefit by integrating more diverse foods.

I guess if at the end of the day climate change is such that nothing can grow we're screwed but then why is this article so focused on wheat in particular? If a certain crop or export just isn't making sense sustainability wise this ends up just looking like the old "buuuttt the coal miners will lose their jobs" type story.

cupcake-unicorn | 3 years ago | on: At Wells Fargo, a Quest to Increase Diversity Leads to Fake Job Interviews

The incentives here are so twisted. This is purely based on an output metric so they can say "We increased our hiring of diverse candidates by X%". Meanwhile, minorities suffer a lot of issues that aren't taken seriously (racism, sexism, homophobia, etc) and they end up quitting - and often signing an NDA with a settlement to keep them from speaking out...rinse and repeat, now we get more new hires that we can brag about.

As the other comments state this is unsurprising as people are really suffering a lack of identity under peak capitalism and neoliberalism is fueling this with this crappy virtue signalling stuff while continuing to make things objectively worse for minorities.

cupcake-unicorn | 3 years ago | on: Inside London's first Ketamine therapy clinic

With telehealth the US is way ahead of the curve with this one. It's easy enough to find a clinic that will prescribe the dissolvable troches for at home use, so you can use them during your own meditation/integration sessions in the comfort of your home. There is a lot of fuss about IV being more bioavailable and all that but it really is so much easier and at the end of the day you can have the same effect cheaper, safely, and no fuss when taking the troches at home. Check out the TherapeuticKetamine subreddit for recommendations.

cupcake-unicorn | 3 years ago | on: California study begins screening for MDMA-assisted therapy for PTSD

Gave you an upvote. CBT has done so much damage and really is a step backwards for those with trauma. It's ridiculous how all the knowledge we have about trauma still hasn't hit the mainstream psychiatric institution yet and 9 out of 10 times with the average provider it comes down to "Have you tried CBT?" versus trauma informed treatments that actually work (somatic therapy, IFS, EMDR, ketamine/psychedelics, stellate ganglion block, etc)

The irony is you may not believe you're really traumatized if you've been spent 10 years in standard CBT being gaslit about your "cognitive distortions" and wondering why it's not working...

cupcake-unicorn | 3 years ago | on: California study begins screening for MDMA-assisted therapy for PTSD

Probably not, we need more recognition but as of now it's not an official diagnosis :/ I don't meet the official criteria for PTSD because there wasn't just one event. It hasn't restricted me getting treatment so much but you can get misdiagnoses and have to advocate for yourself more. Once this is approved it would probably be available off label for anyone with trauma but I doubt they'd let people with CPTSD in the trial. I have been turned down for trials in my city due to this.

cupcake-unicorn | 4 years ago | on: Tell HN: There needs to be a “right to speak with a human”

It shouldn't have to be this way but you can get pretty far using consumer advocacy hacks. Find out the CEO/board member/VP of customer service's name through the company page/linkedin and from there it's usually easy to guess an email address. I've been able to get an actual human to call me from companies that you wouldn't associate with this like Ebay, Google, and Mint.com/inuit. I've used it also with my insurance company and that awful shipping company that NewEgg uses when a laptop was stolen. I was able to talk to humans there but it didn't come to anything. I've also used it with bank issues, you can Google executive customer service plus your bank. The service was like night and day after this method.

There can be discomfort in doing this because it feels intrusive but companies do deserve it if they don't offer consumers rights like this. Once you get past the discomfort it's so empowering. If you're with someone unhelpful on the phone you can ALWAYS hang up. That includes 911. You can set a limit for yourself, that you'll try the "normal" customer service route 1-2 times before escalating it but if you reach that wall with what the company is giving you do not feel bad for using the consumer advocacy strategies.

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