Posts tagged - suicide

India Escapes Psychiatry (So Far)

Mental Health pixabayAccording to an article in The News Minute, some Indian states have less than 10 psychiatrists, and the Health Ministry is trying to change that. Instead of sensibly working to reduce the number of shrinks to zero, incredibly, India is trying to attract more of them!

According to the World Health Organization, over five crore Indians [one crore is 10 million] suffered from depression in 2015 and had the highest estimated number of suicides.

Perhaps the Health Ministry should review the figures: Psychiatrists find that prescribing drugs pays much better than communicating, and so they nearly always treat depression with antidepressants. If the Health Ministry succeeds in attracting a passel of shinks and their prescription pads here is what could happen:

First: Placebos are nearly as effective as antidepressants, and placebos cost less and have fewer side effects, such as suicide. Yes, one of the side-effects of antidepressants is suicide!

Second: A study revealed that communication works better at preventing suicide than antidepressants. But like the dinosaur, psychiatrists who can communicate have gone extinct in the survival of the richest.

Third: A 15-year study of Swedish women showed that instead of reducing suicides as expected, antidepressants actually increased the incidence of suicide.

Fourth: Antidepressants increase the risk of death by 33 percent as they block the absorption of serotonin by organs that need it.

Fifth: A Duke University study back in 2000 established that physical exercise was as effective at treating depression as Zoloft.

Sixth: Cutting out sugar in the diet –according to another study — reduced depression by 23%.

Seventh: Testing of antidepressants has ignored negative effects of the drugs according to Scientific American, and so statements of safety are as suspect as statements of efficacy.

Seventh: Those of Asian heritage have largely turned down psychiatric medications, as has India. China and India have huge populations and thus are prime targets for psychiatrists and their pharmaceutical partners.

So in Summary: If the Indian Ministry of Health wants to increase suicides and depression, empty the treasury, and make things worse all around, bring on the psychs! If, on the other hand, the Ministry wants to decrease suicides and depression, then find people who can communicate effectively with people who are depressed, dispense placebos, promote physical exercise, cut down sugar in the diet and get rid of the psychiatrists already in each state.

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Communication, Affinity Better Suicide Prevention Than Pills

Some 500,000 people are treated each year in U.S. hospital emergency rooms after harming themselves. So what’s the best way to help them? Turns out communication and affinity work better and cost less than most other treatments at preventing subsequent suicide attempts, according to a study by the National Institute of Mental Health.

Sending postcards at monthly intervals; making phone calls to offer support and encourage follow-up treatment; and cognitive behavioral therapy were found to reduce suicide risk from 30-50 percent.

As for antidepressants? They actually increase the rate of suicides, according to a recent Swedish study.

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Only Minor Difference Between Antidepressants and Placebos Says Study

A study by the University of Basil on children and adolescents revealed only “minor differences” in efficacy between placebos and antidepressants.

“…the difference is small and varies according to the type of mental disorder,” says an article in Science Daily.” However, the results also showed that the placebo effect played a significant role in the efficacy of antidepressants. The study also found that patients treated with antidepressants complained of greater side effects than those who received a placebo.”

Placebos are significantly cheaper than antidepressants and have no black box warnings such as the warnings by the FDA of “suicidality” in young adults on antidepressants.

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Antidepressants Increase Suicides, Says Study

A 15-year study of Swedish women  published this month revealed that contrary to the assumption that antidepressants would reduce suicides, the drugs actually increased them. The study concluded: “An increasingly larger proportion of young women who later committed suicide, had in the last few years been treated with antidepressants, prior to and at the time of the suicide. The previous assumptions that treatment with antidepressants would lead to a drastic reduction in suicide rates, are incorrect for the population of young women. On the contrary, it was found that an increasing tendency of completed suicides follow the increased prescription of antidepressants.”

The study was published in the International Journal of Risk and Safety in Medicine.

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