Antidepressants are now the best-selling drugs in the USA – and their consumption has doubled in the last 10 years.
This was established by a meta-analysis of studies from 1996 to 2005 among 50,000 children and adults and published in the Archives of General Psychiatry. Currently 10 percent of Americans – about 27 million people – are taking antidepressants, approximately twice as many as in 1996.
Only half of these people, however, are actually treated solely for depression, the rest are taking the drug because of back pain, fatigue, insomnia and other problems. So the increased consumption doesn’t necessarily mean that more people are depressed, but that the drugs are used to manage or facilitate everyday life, and probably also as mood enhancers.
This also fits the other findings, namely that the proportion of people who take antidepressants and who are undergoing psychotherapy at the same time dropped from 31 to 20 percent. Presumably many feel insecure about dealing with the reasons for their psychological problems or are uncertain about whether psychotherapy could really help – while the belief in the effectiveness of drugs is increasing. Also, ‘dropping a pill’ is simple and costs less money – at least in the short run, especially since many American insurance companies don’t pay for psychotherapy, and doctors prefer prescribing drugs over dealing with their patients thoroughly as this saves valuable time for other patients waiting in the queues.
The study’s authors argue that an essential factor for these changes may represent the enormous dedication of funds for advertising: for advertisements aiming at end users (patients), 32 million USD were used in 1996, but already 122 million USD in 2005. Only 14% of the proceeds from sales had been reinvested in research and production by the industry – the rest goes to marketing and profit distributions.
Live the happy life you planned! Richard L. Fellner is head of the Pattaya Counseling Center in Soi Khopai and offers consultations in English and German languages (after making appointments at 0854 370 470).