Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

posted by martyb on Friday February 23 2018, @01:55AM   Printer-friendly
from the things-are-looking-up dept.

Anti-depressants: Major study finds they work

Scientists say they have settled one of medicine's biggest debates after a huge study found that anti-depressants work. The study, which analysed data from 522 trials involving 116,477 people, found 21 common anti-depressants were all more effective at reducing symptoms of acute depression than dummy pills. But it also showed big differences in how effective each drug is.

The authors of the report, published in the Lancet [open, DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(17)32802-7] [DX], said it showed many more people could benefit from the drugs. There were 64.7 million prescriptions for the drugs in England in 2016 - more than double the 31 million in 2006 - but there has been a debate about how effective they are, with some trial[s] suggesting they are no better than placebos. The Royal College of Psychiatrists said the study "finally puts to bed the controversy on anti-depressants".

The so-called meta-analysis, which involved unpublished data in addition to the information from the 522 clinical trials involving the short-term treatment of acute depression in adults, found the medications were all more effective than placebos. However, the study found they ranged from being a third more effective than a placebo to more than twice as effective.


Original Submission

 
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
Display Options Threshold/Breakthrough Mark All as Read Mark All as Unread
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
  • (Score: 2) by Aiwendil on Friday February 23 2018, @10:42PM

    by Aiwendil (531) on Friday February 23 2018, @10:42PM (#642682) Journal

    I know that feeling - for me I react at insanely low doses (a high dose of paracetamol for me is about 100mg, good thing the liquid kiddie-version has a great taste) combined with a very short halflife [nothing really is quite like having painkillers wear off while they are stiching you up after minor surgery]. Funnily enough I can take close to LD50 doses without much more effect than I had where the dose went to "strong" for me. I guess my basic physique has a lot to do with this (oxygenation and heartrate is what is expected from an athlete, I'm a couch potatoe with bad knees).

    I rarely eat resturant curry as well due to allergies, but my gf loves indian food so I basically just learned to make a couple of dozen indian dishes (personally I favour the japanese and persian regions). My lunch today was gyudon in which I'm currenty experimenting with making "lazy packages" I can keep in my freezer. Yesterday it was a chicken and potatoe coconut curry (reviewing how to stuff as much fat as possible into food without it adversly impacting taste in order to help friends with eating disorders to keep their bodyweight up - so far I'm up to about 75g of butter per portion).
    Oh, and due to some bananas being close to overripe I also made banana sponge-cake.

    Due to a bowel disorder I can't really eat much high fibre food (I miss high fibre bread) and need to stick with white rice.

    Good that you found a way that works :)

    Starting Score:    1  point
    Karma-Bonus Modifier   +1  

    Total Score:   2