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1 in 6 Americans Are Now On Psychiatric Medication
1 in 6 Americans Are Now On Psychiatric Medication
By Dr. Mercola
Recent research shows that American doctors are still over-prescribing many different kinds of drugs, 1 especially
antibiotics and opioid pain killers , despite repeated calls for prudence.
U.S. health care expenses have also risen, hitting $3.2 trillion annually as of 2015, and rising prescription prices
combined with over-prescribing are significant drivers of these rising costs, according to a government report.2,3,4,5
While psychiatric drugs were not included in that report, statistics reveal a very clear trend of over-prescribing here as
well. According to recent research, 1 in 6 Americans are now on antidepressants or some other type of psychiatric
drug, and most appear to be taking them long-term.6,7,8,9,10
That's quite an extraordinary number, and a significant increase, nearly doubled, from 2011 when 1 in 10 American
adults reported using a psychiatric drug.11 According to lead author Thomas J. Moore, a researcher at the Institute for
Safe Medication Practices:12
"To discover that 8 in 10 adults who have taken psychiatric drugs are using them long term raises safety
concerns, given that there's reason to believe some of this continued use is due to dependence and
withdrawal symptoms."
Dr. Mark Olfson, a professor of psychiatry at Columbia University, commented on the findings saying it reflects a
growing reliance on prescription medications to manage common emotional problems.
Nearly 17 percent of American adults used one or more psychiatric drugs in 2013, up from 10 percent in 2011
12 percent of users are taking antidepressants; 8.3 percent are taking anxiety drugs, sedatives and/or sleeping
pills; 1.6 percent are taking antipsychotics
Caucasians are twice as likely to use psychiatric drugs than African-Americans, Hispanics and Asians (20.8
percent were Caucasian, 9 percent African-American, 8.7 percent Hispanic. Only 5 percent of users are Asian)
25 percent of seniors between the ages of 60 and 85 are taking at least one psychiatric drug. This despite the
fact that incidence of diagnosable mental problems tends to be lower in seniors than younger adults overall
Nearly twice as many women use psychiatric drugs than men (21 percent and 12 percent respectively)
According to researchers, part of the problem appears to be that primary care physicians are under-educated on the
risks associated with psychiatric drugs. As reported by Scientific American:13
"For antidepressants, there is limited information available about how long an individual should stay on
the drug … For certain drugs in the sedative, hypnotic and anxiolytic category, however, people can
become dependent, the researchers noted.
To improve the safety of psychiatric drugs, Moore and Mattison suggested increasing the emphasis on
prescribing these medications at the lowest effective dose and continually re-assessing the need to keep
individuals on the drugs."
Suicide rates are at a 30-year high, prescription drug abuse and overdose deaths have become a public health
emergency, and mental disorders are now the second most common cause of disability, having risen sharply since
1980.16
All of these statistics suggest that far from being helpful, the availability of psychiatric drugs and the ease of getting
them are making the situation worse.
Sure, these drugs may be helpful for a small minority of people with very severe mental health problems, such as
schizophrenia, but clearly, the vast majority of people using these drugs do not suffer from severe psychiatric illness.
Most are struggling with sadness, grief, anxiety, "the blues" and depression, which are in many ways part of your
body's communication system, revealing nutritional or sunlight deficiencies and/or spiritual disconnect, for example.
The underlying reasons for these kinds of troubles are manifold, but you can be sure that, whatever the cause, an
antidepressant, sedative or antipsychotic will not correct it.
"The American Psychiatric Association, the American Psychological Association and big pharma explain
the deterioration of mental health nationally by proposing that not enough people are getting treatment.
But this suggestion seems a bit self-serving.
Another explanation points to the vague nature of psychiatric diagnoses … [M]ental disorders … seem to
expand and contract with the economy. Thus, changes in the prevalence of mental disorders may not
necessarily reflect changes in the biology of mental illness.
It is also possible that we are hampered by not having new treatments for patients seeking help. As it
turns out, drugs developed in the past 20 years perform like older medications …
[I]t is paramount that we discover new mechanisms to treat mental illness … [T]here is one unique,
promising treatment that is struggling to get approval: psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy.
Preliminary evidence suggests that drugs such as LSD and psilocybin could be used episodically,
together with psychotherapy, to enhance the healing process."
Indeed, I recently wrote about research showing a single dose of psilocybin, also known as magic mushrooms, helped
many cancer patients in two separate studies achieve immediate and long-lasting relief from anxiety and fear of death.
A major part of this remarkable recovery appears to be related to the spiritual intensity of the experience.
Apart from the spiritual reconnection itself, the feeling of love and being "one" with everything also appears to result in
alterations in the brain — a mechanism ascribed to neuroplasticity, where your brain actually changes in accordance to
experience. Indeed, a majority of the participants ranked it among "the most meaningful" experiences of their lives,
which in turn resulted in a feeling that everything has purpose, including their own struggles.
In my view, it is lack of life meaning and lack of connection to something larger than ourselves that pervades the lives
of so many these days, and the answer is not to shut down or mask your emotions with a pill. The relief you seek is
more likely to be found through careful soul searching and implementation of strategies to boost your emotional
resilience, which can include spiritual practices.
Anatomy of an Epidemic
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Six years ago, I interviewed journalist and Pulitzer Prize nominee Robert Whitaker about his books "Mad in America"
and "Anatomy of an Epidemic," both of which address the dramatic rise of mental illness in the U.S., and its treatment.
When looking at the research literature, short-term trials show that antidepressants fail to provide any clinically
significant benefits for mild to moderate depression when compared to a placebo.
Indeed, if you believe in following the recommendations of science-based medicine, you simply would not take an
antidepressant. You might as well take a sugar pill and avoid all the side effects. As noted in a 2014 paper on
antidepressants and the placebo effect:18
"Antidepressants are supposed to work by fixing a chemical imbalance, specifically, a lack of serotonin in
the brain … But analyses of the published data and the unpublished data that were hidden by drug
companies reveals that most (if not all) of the benefits are due to the placebo effect ...
Analyzing the data we had found, we were not surprised to find a substantial placebo effect on
depression. What surprised us was how small the drug effect was. Seventy-five percent of the
improvement in the drug group also occurred when people were give dummy pills with no active
ingredient in them.
The serotonin theory is as close as any theory in the history of science to having been proved wrong.
Instead of curing depression, popular antidepressants may induce a biological vulnerability making
people more likely to become depressed in the future."
The FDA requires drug companies to provide data on all clinical trials they've sponsored, including unpublished trials.
As it turned out, nearly half of all clinical trials on antidepressants had never been published. When both published and
unpublished trials were included, 57 percent showed the drug had no clinical benefit over placebo. What's more, the
placebo response actually accounted for 82 PERCENT of the beneficial response to antidepressants!
These results were reproduced in a 2008 study 19 using another, even larger set of FDA trial data. According to Kirsch,
"once again, 82 percent of the drug response was duplicated by placebo." A major benefit of evaluating FDA trial data
was that all of the trials used the same primary measure of depression, which made the drug to placebo effects very
easy to identify and compare.
The primary measure of depression used in these studies was the Hamilton depression scale, a 17-item scale with a
possible score of 0 to 53 points. The higher your score, the more severe your depression.
Importantly, the mean difference between antidepressants and placebo was less than two points (1.8) on this scale,
which is considered clinically insignificant. To illustrate just how insignificant of a difference this is, you can score a 6-
point difference simply by changing sleep patterns without any reported change in other depressive symptoms.
The remaining 85 percent start having continuing relapses and become chronically depressed, and this tendency to
sensitize the brain to long-term depression appears to be the same both for the earlier tricyclic antidepressants and the
newer selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs).
This is one reason why antidepressant use among adolescents and young adults need to be strongly discouraged.
Children and adolescents are also at high risk of suicide when using antidepressants, even if they were not suicidal
before.
One of the reasons why your diet is so important is because it affects your gut microbiome, for better or worse. Many
studies have demonstrated that improving the diversity and increasing the number of beneficial bacteria in your gut can
have dramatic impact on your mental health, boosting mood and reducing your risk for more serious mental health
problems.
Some researchers in this field even refer to probiotics as "psychobiotics," noting that dietary treatments for mood
disorders may be part of the future of psychiatry. In addition to eating real food and avoiding processed foods as much
as possible, be sure to eat plenty of fiber — which help nourish important bacteria — and a variety of traditionally
fermented foods, which help reseed your gut with beneficial bacteria.
The following four supplements were found to improve the impact of the medication — which included serotonin
reuptake inhibitors (SSRI's), serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) and tricyclic antidepressants —
compared to medication only:
Fish oil
Vitamin D
Methylfolate (an effective form of folic acid)
S-adenosylmethionine (SAMe)
Fish oil produced the most significant improvement. Interestingly, while docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) is typically
credited with being the most important omega-3 fat for brain health, here, eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) was found to
have the most prominent effect. The best way to get these fats is from small fish like sardines and anchovies. If that is
not an option then krill oil is a far superior choice to fish oil as it is better absorbed and less oxidized.
In my view, it would have been far more interesting to see how these supplements might have fared without the use of
medication, as the supplements could very well have been the true benefit. After all, studies have shown that both
omega-3 and vitamin D can help improve mental health all on their own, and if the medication doesn't add anything of
real value, why risk your health and wellbeing by taking it?
✓ Eat real food and avoid all processed foods, sugar (particularly fructose), grains and
genetically modified organisms (GMOs)
High sugar and starchy non-fiber carbohydrates lead to excessive insulin release, which can
result in falling blood sugar levels (hypoglycemia). In turn, hypoglycemia causes your brain to
secrete glutamate in levels that can cause agitation, depression, anger, anxiety and panic
attacks. Sugar also fans the flames of inflammation in your body.
In addition to being high in sugar and grains, processed foods also contain a variety of
additives that can affect your brain function and mental state, especially MSG and artificial
sweeteners such as aspartame. Gluten sensitivity is also a common, hidden cause of
depression, so going on a gluten-free diet can be part of the answer.
Recent research also shows that glyphosate, used in large quantities on genetically
engineered crops like corn, soy and sugar beets, limits your body's ability to detoxify foreign
chemical compounds.
As a result, the damaging effects of those toxins are magnified, potentially resulting in a wide
variety of diseases, including brain disorders that have both psychological and behavioral
effects.
You'll want to be within the therapeutic range of 40 to 60 ng/mL (100 to 150 nmol/L) year-
round. If you cannot get sufficient sun exposure to maintain this level, taking an oral vitamin
D3 supplement would be advisable. Just remember to also increase your vitamin K2 and
magnesium when taking oral vitamin D.
Your brain is 60 percent fat, and both DHA and EPA are crucial for good brain function and
mental health. 24,25 Unfortunately, most people don't get enough from diet alone, so make sure
you take a high-quality omega-3 supplement.
I recommend small sea foods like sardines and anchovies and if that is not possible then krill
oil, which has a number of benefits over fish oil, including better absorption.26
✓ Beneficial herbs and supplements: SAMe, 5-HTP and St. John's Wort
SAMe is an amino acid derivative that occurs naturally in all cells. It plays a role in many
biological reactions by transferring its methyl group to DNA, proteins, phospholipids and
biogenic amines. Several scientific studies indicate that SAMe may be useful in the treatment
of depression. 5-Hydroxytryptophan (5-HTP) is another natural alternative to traditional
antidepressants.
When your body sets about manufacturing serotonin, it first makes 5-HTP. Taking 5-HTP as a
supplement may raise serotonin levels. The evidence suggests 5-HTP outperforms a placebo
when it comes to alleviating depression27 — more than can be said about antidepressants.
One caveat: anxiety and social phobias can worsen with higher levels of serotonin, so it may
be contraindicated if your anxiety is already high. St. John's Wort has also been shown to
provide relief from mild depressive symptoms.
Sodium deficiency actually creates symptoms that are very much like those of depression.
Make sure you do NOT use processed salt (regular table salt), however. You'll want to use an
all-natural, unprocessed salt like Himalayan salt, which contains more than 80 different
micronutrients.
Studies reveal a strong correlation between improved mood and aerobic capacity. There's
also a growing acceptance that the mind-body connection is very real, and that maintaining
good physical health can significantly lower your risk of developing depression in the first
place.
Exercising creates new GABA-producing neurons that help induce a natural state of calm. It
also boosts your levels of serotonin, dopamine and norepinephrine, which help buffer the
effects of stress.
If you aren't sleeping well you can easily become depressed. Sleep and depression are so
intimately linked that a sleep disorder is actually part of the definition of the symptom complex
that gives the label depression. Most of us need a minimum of seven hours every night and
eight would be better.
Energy psychology techniques such as the Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT), can be
very effective for reducing symptoms of depression or anxiety by correcting the bioelectrical
short-circuiting that causes your body's reactions, without adverse effects.
Recent research has shown EFT significantly increases positive emotions, such as hope and
enjoyment, and decreases negative emotional states. EFT is particularly powerful for treating
stress and anxiety because it specifically targets your amygdala and hippocampus, parts of
your brain that help you decide whether or not something is a threat.28,29
For serious or complex issues, seek out a qualified health care professional that is trained in
EFT 30 to help guide you through the process.
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