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OnePlusYou Quizzes and Widgets

You have no doubt seen or heard the commercials: "Where does depression hurt? EVERYWHERE. Who does depression hurt? EVERYONE." Mental illnesses can consume you, take over your entire life and hurt everyone around you if you let it. I am no exception.

My life feels like I am stuck riding on a rollercoaster in the middle of a hurricane. I have ups and downs, and I have left a path of destruction in my wake. My sanity dangles on a tiny fragile string, and through this blog I am giving the world a look into my broken mind and my unstable life.

In the end, I am just a girl trying to maintain my sanity in a candy-coated world of misery. Here you'll get a glimpse at just how true those commercials are. Keep your arms and legs inside the blog at all times, hold on tight, and prepare yourself for a very bumpy ride ...

Feel free to comment here on the blog or email me at bpdokc@yahoo.com.

Monday, November 28, 2011

Finding Purpose After Living With Delusion

By New York Times News Service

ATHENS, Ohio — She was gone for good, and no amount of meditation could resolve the grief, even out here in the deep quiet of the woods.

Milt Greek pushed to his feet. It was Mother's Day 2006, not long after his mother's funeral, and he headed back home knowing that he needed help. A change in the medication for his schizophrenia, for sure. A change in focus, too; time with his family, to forget himself.

And, oh yes, he had to act on an urge expressed in his psychotic delusions: to save the world.

So after cleaning the yard around his house — a big job, a gift to his wife — in the coming days he sat down and wrote a letter to the editor of the local newspaper, supporting a noise-pollution ordinance.

Small things, maybe, but Greek has learned to live with his diagnosis in part by understanding and acting on its underlying messages, and along the way has built something exceptional: a full life, complete with a family and a career.

He is one of a small number of successful people with a severe psychiatric diagnosis who have chosen to tell their story publicly. In doing so, they are contributing to a deeper understanding of mental illness  and setting an example that can help others recover.

''I started feeling better, stronger, the next day," said Greek, 49, a computer programmer who for years, before receiving medical treatment, had delusions of meeting God and Jesus.

''I have such anxiety if I'm not organizing or doing some good work. I don't feel right. That's what the psychosis has given me, and I consider it to be a gift."

Doctors generally consider the delusional beliefs of schizophrenia to be just that — delusional — and any attempt to indulge them to be an exercise in reckless collusion that could make matters worse. There is no point, they say, in trying to explain the psychological significance of someone's belief that the CIA is spying through the TV; it has no basis, other than psychosis.

Yet people who have had such experiences often disagree, arguing that delusions have their origin not solely in the illness, but also in fears, longings and psychological wounds that, once understood, can help people sustain recovery after they receive treatment. .

Now, these psychiatric veterans are coming together in increasing numbers, at meetings and conferences, and they are writing up their own case histories, developing their own theories of psychosis, with the benefit of far more data than they have ever had before: one another's stories.

''It's a thrilling time, because people with lived experience are beginning to collaborate in large numbers," said Gail A. Hornstein, a psychologist at Mount Holyoke College and author of "Agnes's Jacket: A Psychologist's Search for the Meanings of Madness." ''They are developing their own theories, their own language about what their experiences means from the inside."

Greek is one of the most exceptional, having built a successful life and career despite having schizophrenia — and, he says, because of it. He manages the disorder with medication, personal routines, and by minding the messages in his own strange delusions.

''Schizophrenia is the best thing that ever happened to me," he said. "I know a lot of people with the diagnosis don't feel that way, but the experience changed me, for the better. I was so arrogant, so narcissistic, so self-involved, and it humbled me. It gave me a purpose, and that purpose has been very much a part of my recovery."

THE VILLAGE ECCENTRIC

Like many idealistic undergraduates, Greek arrived at Ohio University in Athens on a mission. Only, like many undergrads, he wasn't completely sure what it was.

''To discover a psychological code that people should live by, to create world peace," he said. "Something like that."

The town was ready to listen, regardless. It was fall 1981, and Athens still had one sandal planted in the 1960s; communes thrived in the Appalachian foothills to the north, and big ideas were in the air, at least in the streets and bars near campus, where professors and students gathered.

One stood out.

''You can't imagine how intense he was back then," said June Holley, a friend and business consultant in Athens. "He had this long, very thick, curly chestnut hair and wild eyes; he looked like a lion. He could be loud, and I think a lot of people just didn't want to deal with it."

Local residents gave him the sidewalk, avoided eye contact and generally accepted him as one variety of village lunatic — in a town with a rich history of them.

He knew the role, at some level. The son of a college math professor and a lawyer, progressives both, Milton Thomas Greek grew up in Roanoke, Ill., and neighboring Benson, about two hours southwest of Chicago. He declared himself an atheist early and often, which in a devout Christian community was one way to stir the air — and the boys who ruled the schoolyard.

''They told me I was damned — damned! — and came after me," Greek said. "Now I see that it was just an excuse, like picking on the fat kid for being fat, or the nerd for being a nerd. But at the time I thought it was all about religion."

He did not discover the secret to world peace and, by senior year, was in a troubled marriage, and began seeing and hearing things others did not. One day he saw a homeless man in the Athens bus station with eyes "like landscapes that went back into the man's head infinitely far, stretching on for eternity." God's eyes; who else?

Later, he was hitchhiking, and a man with long hair and sandals pulled over to offer a ride, his eyes rippling with the same eternal light as the street person's. Jesus? It had to be ("I'd already met God, so it made sense.") The man said something about a small town in the woods, and Greek thought that that town had to be heaven.

His marriage collapsed. His friends stopped calling. He was back at home in Illinois when a doctor finally gave him a diagnosis — schizophrenia — and prescribed medication.

It seemed like a charade, from start to finish. The doctor never asked what he thought his hallucinations meant, or whether the strange thoughts were linked to experiences in his life. He stopped taking the pills.

''I became very suicidal," he said. "I had no idea what's happening to me during this entire time. I had been this big atheist, but here I am thinking that the rapture is about to start and that I'm the Antichrist — all this religious imagery."

Why?

THE TOWN IN THE WOODS

The answer was obvious and ultimately liberating, but he had to spend a long time wandering in the woods — literally — to find it.

It was 1984, he had begged his way back into Ohio University for graduate studies in sociology, still lost in his own mind, his thoughts turning darker by the day. He was alienating classmates, professors, friends.

About the only exception was Holley, a graduate student some 15 years his senior who enjoyed his company, and one day he decided to visit the commune where she lived, with her family and several other families. It took him two days to find it, the first spent wandering the misty woods until dark in a waking, delusional dream, and the second stumbling into a clearing just off Hooper Ridge Road, where Holley and her friends took him in.

Over the next several months they sat with him, accepted him as member of the tribe and encouraged his mission to improve the world at face value. And save his life they probably did, in part by suggesting that he seek help.

It was Holley who delivered the message.

''I trusted her completely, so when she said I was hallucinating — when she used the word 'hallucination' — I knew it was true," Greek said. "I would have to give the medication another try."

He was lucky. It worked, blunting the psychosis enough that he was able to complete a programming course and find work, first in Illinois and later back in Athens at Ohio University's Information Technology department. In time he found something more: During a snowstorm in 1996, Greek knocked on the door of a neighbor he had seen around Athens, a single mother with two teenage children, carrying a full-time job plus graduate classes, who was at that very moment (he would learn later) praying for something to get her through the winter.

The man at the door did not exactly look like a savior, in his beat-up jeans and unruly hair, his soft eyes and half-smile. But he offered to cook dinner — stir fry — on a day when the fridge was nearly empty.

The two neighbors became friendly, then close, and finally fell for each other. Neither can say exactly when it happened, but she remembers looking out her window one day to see Greek pull up to his apartment across the street, his old Honda coughing white smoke. He popped the hood and backed away from the car in slow motion, staring at the engine, then turned abruptly toward his apartment — and vanished, falling face-first into some bushes.

''I thought, 'Well, OK, he's got something," she said. "I'm not sure what. Absentmindedness, maybe?"

They married in 2003 (Greek's wife, an artist, asked that her name not appear in this article, for her own privacy), and she helped him fit his religious delusions, now controlled by medication, into a coherent personal story that has guided his day-do-day life.

The frightening voices and ominous signs saying that he was damned were no more than embodiments of his very real childhood terror of being cast out, as the schoolyard boys threatened. His search for heaven on earth was in part an attempt to escape that fate, to find a secure place. But it also dramatized a longing to put the world right, a mission that may have started as vain fantasy, but in time became an emotional imperative, a need to commit small acts of kindness, like cooking dinner for a snowed-in neighbor.

A REGIMEN FOR COPING

''He has this long list of causes that he's extremely passionate about, and he has strong opinions about almost everything, but he's also very sensitive to his relations with people and open to other philosophies," said Melissa Van Meter, who has worked with Greek at the university and holds very different political views. "It has just impressed me that he could handle so much personally and do so well professionally."

''When I began to see the delusions in the context of things that were happening in my real life, they finally made some sense," Greek said. "And understanding the story of my psychosis helped me see what I needed to stay well."

Greek's regimen combines meditation, work and drug treatment with occasional visits to a therapist and a steady diet of charitable acts. Some of these are meant to improve the community; others are for co-workers and friends, especially those dealing with a psychiatric diagnosis.

To help others experiencing psychotic delusions, he relies on his own theory of what delusions may mean. In an analysis of 20 delusional experiences, all described by sufferers in the first person, Greek identifies four story lines.

Among them are the rescuer (on a mission to save a particular group); the self-loathing person (lost in a sense of extreme worthlessness); the visionary (on a journey to spiritual realms to bring back truth); and the messianic (out to transform the world through miracles, or contact with deities) — the last of which is his own psychosis story.

Each, in Greek's reading, grows out of a specific fear or trauma, whether isolation, abuse or family dysfunction, in the same way his own delusional story symbolized a fear of being a social reject. He is preparing the study for publication in a psychiatric journal and has put much of his thinking into a manual for families dealing with psychosis, called "Schizophrenia: A Blueprint for Recovery."

Greek's analysis of the story lines in psychosis is certainly not the first of its kind, nor the most comprehensive. Psychiatrists, psychologists, therapists and brain scientists have spun out hundreds of ideas about what goes on during a delusion.

But until recently patients themselves — that is, nonprofessionals who have lived with hallucinations and delusions — had little more than their own strange story to study, in any detail. Now they have dozens, and Greek is one of a small number of such "native" theorists who argue that the content of a delusion should not be ignored but engaged, carefully, once a person has his or her hallucinations under control.

UNDERLYING NEEDS

''By exploring a person's anomalous beliefs and experiences, we are better able to understand the underlying feeling and needs that give fuel to these experiences," said Paris Williams, a psychologist who has struggled with psychosis and recently published a doctoral dissertation analyzing the content of six people's delusions, which has informed Greek's work.

For instance, said Williams, who is working on a book called "Rethinking Madness," ''we can find ways to make them feel safe when they believe they are being persecuted by malevolent forces, or find ways to help them feel empowered when they experience demanding voices."

One place Greek feels safe is in a clearing in the woods behind his house, where on a recent afternoon he disappeared wearing a tie-dyed shirt and old jeans with the knees worn completely through. He practices mindfulness meditation here, tuning in to the rhythms of life that usually pass unnoticed.

Back at home, he runs thoughts and perceptions by his wife.

''He says things like, 'Is that a marching band I'm hearing, or am I just hallucinating?'" she said. "I'll say, 'Uh no, I don't hear a band, Milt,' and he's fine."

And he visits a therapist when stress levels are running very high. The therapist has given him diagnoses of schizophrenia and "mood disorder, not otherwise specified," according to his medical records, and she treats him in sessions and with an antipsychotic drug, adjusting the dosage up or down depending on his mood.

Since his mother's death, Greek and his wife have taken several more emotional blows, with other close relatives dying. He has been especially stretched, between his work, various community projects and traveling to speak, often to police groups about how to understand psychotic thinking when dealing with people on the street.

It was too much, and in August he visited his therapist again, and soon after made a deal with his wife.

''She and I signed a contract identifying and limiting volunteer work I will do next year," he said in an email. "I am being coached on how to say no."

The world is not yet saved from itself, nor for that matter is Athens. But even a messianic rescuer needs a day off, if only to come back stronger the next.


Tracey Gold overcame an eating disorder and found her 'inner tomboy'

By McClatchy-Tribune News Service

People who remember the sunny little girl, Carol Seavers, on "Growing Pains" would be surprised to see Tracey Gold today. An energetic, 42-year-old wife and mother of four boys, she not only overcame the burdens of being a child actress, she also vanquished an eating disorder that almost killed her.

Gold is trying to help other women who find themselves in the grip of anorexia or bulimia, the way she was when "Growing Pains" ended after seven years.

"After being out there and so public about my own struggle, I would always have people come up to me and say, 'My daughter ...' 'My sister ...' 'My friend ...' They go off into a corner and talk to me quietly about it," she says over a soda at a hotel here.

"I began to feel like there needed to be a light shone on it for there to be more exposure. It was always such a hushed, quiet thing that people were embarrassed about. I just wanted to show eating disorders the way they truly are and take the idea of throwing the word 'anorexic' around so lightly, and also take on the idea that it's somehow a glamorous thing."

To combat this sinister disease Gold is hosting a reality show, "Starving Secrets with Tracey Gold," premiering Friday on Lifetime.

The show was her idea. "I watch TV and understand what people are watching and I thought through my involvement it could be something that was really good. So I approached GRB, the production company which does the show 'Intervention' who I had a relationship with before, and thought they'd be perfect to produce the show."

Gold's own ordeal began with an innocent diet. "I'd always been a skinny, thin child and when I was around 18, 19 I started to gain little bit of weight. I was told by the producers that I needed to lose weight," she says.

"There were also some fat jokes written in the script about my character. When you're writing about my character's body you're also writing about me. It hurt my feelings, and I was sensitive about it, but I didn't do anything drastic ... But then when I was ordered to lose weight I had to take it seriously and my parents took it seriously, and I was put on a very strict diet. And I lost about 20 pounds in a month, really quick," says Gold, who's dressed in a dark gray pin-striped jacket and black top.

She received so much positive reinforcement with that weight loss that she kept at it. "I'd gone on such an extreme diet that once I hit my goal weight it was OK. Now I can move on. I didn't really know how to eat healthy. I knew how to be the girl who ate what I wanted or be the girl who was completely restricted. I didn't know a happy balance. So it started to cycle."

For a year she binged and starved. "I was maintaining a healthy weight. I appeared to be healthy, but my behavior was not. Then at the end of that year I met my husband. I was 20 and it was the first time I'd ever fallen in love. My world was really changed. I went from child actress, working, coming home, working, being with my family. I was far from Los Angeles, was very sheltered. And I met him.

"And I remember one day we were going out to dinner on a Wednesday night and we'd only been dating a couple weeks and he said, 'What do you want for dinner?' I said, 'I don't eat during the week.' He's like, 'What?'"

Her husband, Roby Marshall, proved to be not only the love of her life, but one of the factors that helped her overcome her disorder.

"My husband is from New Jersey, not a Hollywood background," she says. "And it was a shock to him. He'd never known what that was, but he was really in love with me and that was the key. We have a bond that from the moment we met, that was it. It was going to take a lot to tear us apart. But it was hard. He tried loving me, getting mad at me, holding me, pushing me away — everything. But I'm a big believer: I could have a million knights in white horses trying to save me, but until I was ready to get better it wasn't going to happen."

She would eat lunch with cast members on the set in her dressing room. As soon as everyone left, she would purge. Marshall came to the set one day with a hammer and nails. "He nailed shut my bathroom door so I couldn't use it anymore. He was extremely helpful, to this day, he's been with it all the time and knows all the little tricks," she smiles.

While she occasionally performs, her main job, she says, is being a wife and mother to her boys, ages 14, 12, 7 and 3.

That's a whole new challenge, she says. "I'm a girly-girl who loves clothes and makeup and all those things, and I'm not exactly rough and tumble. But once you have boys you have to kind of go with the flow a little bit and find your inner tomboy somewhere."

Post secret favorites



Sunday, November 20, 2011

Post secret favorites

Here are my favorite Post Secret cards from last week and this week. (I was apparently absent-minded and forgot to ever post last week's favorites)








Friday, November 11, 2011

Do antidepressants during pregnancy cause autism?

By Stacey Singer at The Palm Beach Post

As scientists strive to find what's behind a spike in autism, especially in boys, a new study has raised the possibility that antidepressants taken by their mother may be one of the culprits, a finding that has set off fear and concern among women and their doctors.

Rodents exposed to the antidepressant Celexa displayed autism-like changes in both the structure of their brains and the behavior of their pups, especially the males, according to the study published last month in the Proceedings of the National Academies of Sciences. Celexa is a commonly prescribed antidepressant in a class that includes Lexapro, Zoloft and Prozac.

Another study has found that autistic children were twice as likely as other children to have been exposed to antidepressants before birth. First-trimester exposure created nearly four times the risk, according to the report published in July in the journal Archives of General Psychiatry.

But rats are not humans. The authors caution that years of research are ahead before a cause of autism is known. In 1998, a small study in the medical journal Lancet, since retracted, had wrongly suggested a childhood vaccine might be a cause of the syndrome. Millions of dollars were spent disproving that connection. Meanwhile, mistrust of vaccines surged and the true causes of autism have gone undiscovered.

Antidepressants on rise

The number of pregnant and nursing women taking antidepressants has surged in the past decade, from one half of 1 percent in the mid-1990s to about 10 percent today, the authors reported. Doctors have favored treating the depression as studies mount showing infants of severely depressed women fare worse on most measures of learning and development.

And as the numbers of women taking antidepressants has risen, the number of children diagnosed with autism has increased dramatically.

In the early 1990s, scientists estimated 1 in 1,500 children had a disorder that placed them on the autism spectrum. By 2002, the estimate had increased to 1 in 150, and more recent research suggests that 1 in 90 children may have an autism-spectrum disorder.

While genetics likely play a role, many researchers suspect something in the environment. Whether mothers' exposure to the SSRI (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor) class of drugs is that trigger, whether it's unrelenting stress or something else is a question that requires much more research, scientists said.

Another drug that acts on the brain, sodium valporate, used to treat seizures, has also shown a possible link to autism.

The uncertainty puts doctors such as Natalie Sohn, a West Palm Beach obstetrician-gynecologist, in a quandary.

Sohn remembers watching a fellow doctor take a pregnant patient off antidepressants only to learn the woman later committed suicide.

”Depression needs to be treated. Women with depression can be suicidal; they can be nonfunctional in major depression,” Sohn said. ”The real problem with psychiatric disease in pregnancy is all these medications have never really been studied.”

Sohn said she'd be hesitant to stop prescribing the medications if she believes a woman's depression is severe, a decision in keeping with advice from the National Institutes of Health's director, Dr. Thomas Insel.

The studies show an elevated risk, but they were done on rats. Were the loner rats really autistic or simply lost and confused? Plus, the rat mothers started from normal baseline serotonin levels, a chemical messenger in the brain. People who are severely depressed may have abnormally low serotonin. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors keep the brain from clearing out the neurotransmitter, so that larger amounts remain in the space between neurons for longer periods of time.

”These studies will help to balance the mental health needs of pregnant mothers with possible increased risk to their offspring,” Insel said.

Affecting development

The study showed that altering serotonin levels can affect how the fetal brain develops, and in ways that mimic autism, said Dr. Rick Lin, professor of neurobiology and anatomical sciences at University of Mississippi Medical Center.

Lin has spent more than a decade researching both the stress hormone norepinephrine and serotonin. Many things can affect serotonin, not just taking SSRIs, Lin said. Stress is a major factor, he said.

”SSRIs are still the best drugs for depression, and there is no way we can stop treating the mothers right now,” Lin said. ”My opinion? All mothers should try to do their best to reduce stress. Kid around — take a walk, get husbands and grandparents to chip in and help, exercise, talk to another person. Try biofeedback, massage, yoga.”

Lin and colleagues Kimberly Simpson and Ian Paul conducted the study with researchers at the University of California, San Francisco.

For the study, Lin said rat pups born to normal parents were exposed to either saline injections or the SSRI drug for two weeks after birth, in an amount comparable to human doses. Since rats are born less developed than human babies, the timing of their exposure correlated to the last trimester of pregnancy and first three months of postnatal development in humans.

The researchers found the SSRI-exposed rat pups behaved differently from ones given only saline injections. They were fearful of new sounds and experiences, and avoided the play and company of other pups, even into adulthood — behavior that's similar to that of autistic children.

The rats' brains had a malformed structure where left-right brain networking takes place. The insulation on the neurons was thick in some areas, thin in others. Similar malformations have been documented in autistic children's brains.

The rat pups also had damage to other parts of their brains, especially sensory-processing areas including the area used to process sound.

What's more, the malformations were seen three times more frequently in the male rat pups exposed to SSRIs shortly after birth than female rat pups. That, too, is a hallmark of autism in humans. In children, autism is three to four times more frequent in boys than girls.

Opportunity for study

When asked to comment on the NIH-funded research, the NIH's Insel chose his words carefully.

”While one must always be cautious extrapolating from medication effects in rats to medication effects in people, these new results suggest an opportunity to study the mechanisms by which antidepressants influence brain and behavioral development,” he said.


Thursday, November 3, 2011

Eating, exercise disorders need to be addressed

By Dayton Daily News

DAYTON, Ohio -- A healthier heart, greater bone density, strength and muscle mass, decreased body fat and stress reduction are just a few of the benefits of an exercise program. The key to enjoying safe, long-lasting benefits and results, however, is to recognize and understand the difference between training and over-training.

Although not widely publicized, a growing number of people struggle with an obsessive and compulsive need to exercise. Those with body-image illnesses are particularly preoccupied with the notion that they do not "measure up." Within this mindset, diet and exercise can be a means to fix a perceived flaw, rather than for purposes of good health.

One body-image disorder that often goes hand in hand with compulsive exercise is anorexia nervosa, which is characterized by a preoccupation with weight, size and dieting.

According to the Mayo Clinic, anorexia nervosa is an eating disorder that causes people to obsess about their weight and the food they eat. People with anorexia nervosa attempt to maintain a weight that's far below normal for their age and height. To prevent weight gain or to continue losing weight, people with anorexia nervosa may starve themselves or exercise excessively.

Often suffering with low self-esteem, compulsive exercise and food restriction may be used as a form of self-punishment for eating too many calories, not performing well on a test or at work, annoying a friend or family member, etc. Obsessive workout sessions are usually extremely long in duration and/or high in intensity, and often contain a ritualistic aspect .

Symptoms of anorexia nervosa and compulsive exercise may include fear of body fat and gaining weight, misperception of self (not seeing themselves as they really are), desire to become thinner and thinner, and in females, loss of menstrual periods.

Other warning signs include working out with injuries or when sick, extreme worry or mood swings if sessions are missed, and the need to work out more than once a day or for many hours per day.

Those with compulsive exercise disorders become anxious and feel extreme guilt when they are unable to work out, and rarely find it fun or enjoyable.

Treatment of obsessive-compulsive exercise and other body-image disorders is extremely important. Without intervention, health and physical safety, emotional well-being and many other areas of life are affected considerably.

Obsessive-compulsive illness affects both men and women, and it should be noted that body weight alone is not always a marker of the condition. Spotting such clues usually comes from someone close to the person. This may be a family member, friend, teacher, coach or anyone else familiar with warning signs.


Is therapy obsolete?

By St. Joseph News-Press, Mo.

The use of antidepressant drugs rose dramatically over the last 20 years, according to a national study. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that since 1988, the use of antidepressant drugs like Prozac and Zoloft has risen nearly 400 percent. The most frequent users are people between 18 and 24.
Missouri mental health professionals gave a few possible reasons for this increase. They attributed the spike to everything from people trying to cope with a struggling economy to easier accessibility.

Janice Mayer, a mental health and family nurse practitioner with the Heartland Psychiatric Clinic, said part of the reason for the increase is there is a better understanding of mental illness and its treatment. Prozac and similar drugs introduced in the 1980s targeted specific chemical imbalances in the brain.

These drugs are not only used for mental disorders, but for pain and other conditions.

"We're beginning to understand the biology of pain better and how some of these chemicals work in helping a person modify or decrease their pain," she said.

Ms. Mayer said the increase can also be attributed to our "fast-food society," in which we want a quick fix for everything, including depression. And it's more affordable than cognitive therapy.

Medicaid and insurance companies only allow for certain providers to perform therapy. And even if your insurance does cover therapy, you may have a $30 co-pay -- compared to a $4 prescription for Prozac at Walmart.

"Medication plays a good role in helping with mood, and helping to focus. But medication doesn't help you understand how you define yourself. I think therapy has a lot to do with that," Ms. Mayer said.

Kristina Hannon, clinical director for the Family Guidance Center for Behavioral Healthcare, sees a couple of reasons for the increase in the use of antidepressants. First, there is less of a stigma attached to taking medication for depression than there was 40 years ago.

Another reason is advertisements. On any given night, you will see several commercials for Zoloft, Paxil or Prozac on TV.

"I also think primary care providers are becoming more comfortable across the board in prescribing medications, where maybe 30 or 40 years ago if you went into a doctor's office and said 'I feel depressed,' you might receive a referral to a psychiatrist," Ms. Hannon said.

The economy also plays a role, as more people are dealing with the stress of losing their jobs, homes and retirement funds. The barrage of bad news on TV doesn't help, either.

"Those things can become very depressing and can make people sad," she said.


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