You will find this website contains 4800+ (FOUR THOUSAND EIGHT HUNDRED) of such cases.
SSRIs have some issues, but there's a huge problem with this sort of analysis. Before the days of SSRIs, antidepressants were not used very much because they had worse side effect profiles. Now we have some very tolerable drugs, and a LOT of people like them. Something like ten percent of the country is taking them. Some of the people who are taking them are unstable, and unstable people sometimes do bad things. What I'd like to know is how many of those cases would have occurred if the person had been taking a non-SSRI antidepressant or had been unmedicated? You're essentially claiming that the SSRI is causative in these cases, but I don't think that's been shown.
Some issues? Becoming fat, lazy, apathetic and sexually useless is a mild issue? A lot of people like them. Yeah, that's much better analysis. I'm sorry but critiquing my research and then immediately phasing into a argumentum ad populum fallacy not only destroys your credibility but makes you look quite childish.
Just because the general public doesn't know any better doesn't mean they
like it. SSRIs worsen bipolar disorder, one of the columbine students was bipolar. He was given SSRIs. Kablammo.
If we're going for anecdotes and fallacies, here are mine:I am bipolar as well, and SSRIs give me uncontrollable rage. While I am a rather calm and collected person usually, on SSRIs I kicked a guy in the face so hard he got brain damage. I don't know why. It was just impossible to control myself and it didn't seem 'wrong' at all. They have made my orgasms permanently less intense. I feel like I've been stupefied.
I know a girl whose mom takes SSRIs, her father beats her and the mother watches with complete indifference. I have a friend whose SSRI addled father is eating and buying his way to death while enabling his son's alcoholism with silent submission, bringing him whiskey to his room.
I'm an immortalist and wish to exist forever. I would have myself embedded in computronium and strive for eternal life. I've never had any spontaneous self-destructive thoughts in my entire life. Taking SSRIs was the only time in my life where I considered killing people and myself. My mother killed herself a week after taking SSRIs.
Just because these people stop complaining doesn't mean they're getting better, it means they're becoming dead on the inside. This is what they make you feel like, a corpse. Nothing matters, living pill to pill in a state of ignorant pseudo-bliss. It really churns my stomach to think about it.
Also I think you are missing the cases on that site where people are declared not guilty by reason of SSRI induced insanity.I also have trouble understanding why you dismiss meta-studies and purposely unpublished negative results. Have you taken SSRIs before? Do you know how they feel? Are you familiar with their method of action? You honestly think something with a 1% efficacy over placebo is worth permanent sexual side effects?
You do not seem to have read the main page of ssri stories or made any effort to understand my position, instead parroting the same thing every doctor tells every patient:
Antidepressants have been recognized as potential inducers of mania and psychosis since their introduction in the 1950s. Klein and Fink1 described psychosis as an adverse effect of the older tricyclic antidepressant imipramine. Since the introduction of Prozac in December, 1987, there has been a massive increase in the number of people taking antidepressants. Preda and Bowers2 reported that over 200,000 people a year in the U.S. enter a hospital with antidepressant-associated mania and/or psychosis. The subsequent harm from this prescribing can be seen in these 4,800+ stories.
Before the introduction of Prozac in Dec. 1987, less than one percent of the population in the U.S. was diagnosed with bipolar disorder – also known as manic depression. Now, with the widespread prescribing of antidepressants, the percent of the population in the United States that is diagnosed with bipolar disorder (swing from depression to mania or vice versa) has risen to 4.4%. This is almost one out of every 23 people in the U.S.
The Physicians' Desk Reference
The Physicians' Desk Reference lists the following adverse reactions (side effects) to antidepressants among a host of other physical and neuropsychiatric effects. None of these adverse reactions (side effects) is listed as Rare. They are all listed as either Frequent or as Infrequent:
Manic Reaction (Mania, e.g., Kleptomania, Pyromania, Dipsomania, Nymphomania)
Hypomania (e.g., poor judgment, over spending, impulsivity, etc.)
Abnormal Thinking
Hallucinations
Personality Disorder
Amnesia
Agitation
Psychosis
Abnormal Dreams
Emotional Lability (Or Instability)
Alcohol Abuse and/or Craving
Hostility
Paranoid Reactions
Confusion
Delusions
Sleep Disorders
Akathisia (Severe Inner Restlessness)
Discontinuation (Withdrawal) Syndrome
Impulsivity
Anatomy of an Epidemic: Magic Bullets, Psychiatric Drugs, and the Astonishing Rise of Mental Illness in America
by Robert Whitaker, provides a very interesting read on SSRIs and other antidepressant drugs.
Essentially, there is a lot of evidence that even if SSRIs may have some mild initial benefit (and even this claim is in question), they do actual harm over the long term. Whereas depression used to be a transient, self-limiting state in the vast majority of cases before SSRIs, it appears that SSRIs may themselves play a role in turning depression into a chronic disease by causing deleterious brain adaptations that are very hard to reverse, trapping patients in a downward spiral of more drugs and more depression.
Yes, I fully agree with this. Anyone who hasn't read this book, please do. A friend of mine who is a med school student was reading through new research on the pharmacology of SSRIs, and he mentioned that the mechanism of action seems to worsen the problems long term. The benefit from SSRIs is purely neurotrophic or ascribable to the sigma activity of certain new SSRIs, which explains why these are mildly more effective.
Edited by hooter, 31 January 2012 - 03:47 PM.