View Single Post
 
Old Aug 05, 2014, 05:25 PM
glok glok is offline
Account Suspended
 
Member Since: Jun 2014
Location: South Overshoe
Posts: 7,657
Quote:
By and large, I don’t think so. In many respects, the claim that “too many Americans are taking antidepressants” is a myth. Are Antidepressants Really ?Over-Prescribed? in the US? | Psychiatric Times
Ronald W. Pies, MD, in a commentary, tells us why he does not believe the US is a "Prozac Nation." His commentary is another of many over the controversial use of antidepressants.

Pies concludes:
Indeed, the “story behind the story” is the poor access to specialized mental health treatment for depression in the US.5,11 As Dr González observed in an interview with The Wall Street Journal, “Few Americans with depression actually get any kind of care, and even fewer get care consistent with the [best practice] standards of care.”11 And therein lies the real failing of American mental health care: not the over-prescription of antidepressants—though it happens—but the under-availability of optimal treatment.12
The discussion I found useful simply because it brought to light more issues that affect the debate. The greater benefit to those with depression is the affirmation that the treatment we receive must get better and reach more sufferers.
Thanks for this!
hope2010, Rohag, waterknob1234