Depression
It is good that these facts are explained!
 

August 16th, 2018
By Kelly Brogan, M.D.
Guest writer for Wake Up World
What you think you know about depression is probably a myth.

It is good that these facts are explained!
7 Facts About Depression That Will Blow You Away

August 16th, 2018
By Kelly Brogan, M.D.
Guest writer for Wake Up World
What you think you know about depression is probably a myth.
A silent tragedy in the history of 
modern health care is happening right now in America, but no one is 
talking about it. We have been told a story of depression: that it is 
caused by a chemical imbalance and cured by a chemical fix — a 
prescription. More than 30 million of us take antidepressants, including
 one in seven women (one in four women of reproductive age). Millions 
more are tempted to try them to end chronic, unyielding distress, 
irritability, and emotional “offness” — trapped by an exhausting inner 
agitation they can’t shake.
It is time, even according to leaders in
 the field, to let go of this false narrative and take a fresh look at 
where science is leading us. The human body interacts in its environment
 with deep intelligence. Your body creates symptoms for a reason. Depression is a meaningful symptom of
 a mismatch, biologically, with lifestyle — we eat a poor diet, harbor 
too much stress, lack sufficient physical movement, deprive ourselves of
 natural sunlight, expose ourselves to environmental toxicants, and take
 too many drugs.[1] Inflammation is
 the language that the body speaks, expressing imbalance, inviting 
change. We usually suppress these symptoms with medication but that is 
like turning off the smoke alarm when you have a fire going on. Let’s 
get the facts straight:
1. Depression is often an inflammatory condition
Depression is often a manifestation of 
irregularities in the body that often starts far away from the brain and
 is not associated with so-called “chemical imbalances.” The medical 
literature has emphasized the role of inflammation in mental illness for more than twenty years (unfortunately, it takes an average of 17 years for
 the data that exposes inefficacy and/or a signal of harm, to trickle 
down into your doctor’s daily routine; a time lag problem that makes 
medicine’s standard of care “evidence-based” only in theory and not 
practice). Not a single study has proven that depression is caused by a chemical imbalance in the brain. That’s right:
 there has never been a human study that successfully links low 
serotonin levels and depression. Imaging studies, blood and urine tests,
 post-mortem suicide assessments, and even animal research have never 
validated the link between neurotransmitter levels and depression. In 
other words, the serotonin theory of depression is a total myth that has
 been unjustly supported by the manipulation of data. Much to the 
contrary, high serotonin levels have been linked to a range of problems,
 including schizophrenia and autism.
 So if you think a chemical pill can save, cure, or “correct” you, 
you’re dead wrong. That is about as misguided as putting a bandage over a
 nail stuck in your foot and taking aspirin. It’s absolutely missing an 
opportunity to “remove the splinter” and resolve the problem from the 
source.
2. Antidepressants have the potential to irreversibly disable the body’s natural healing mechanisms
Despite what you’ve been led to believe,
 antidepressants have repeatedly been shown in long-term scientific 
studies to worsen the course of mental illness — to say nothing of the 
risks of liver damage, bleeding, weight gain, sexual dysfunction, and 
reduced cognitive function they entail. The dirtiest little secret of 
all is the fact that antidepressants are among the most difficult drugs 
to taper from, more so than alcohol and opiates. While you might call it
 “going through withdrawal,” we medical professionals have been 
instructed to call it “discontinuation syndrome,”
 which can be characterized by fiercely debilitating physical and 
psychological reactions. Moreover, antidepressants have a 
well-established history of causing violent side effects, including 
suicide and homicide. In fact, five of the top 10 most violence-inducing
 drugs have been found to be antidepressants.
3. The effect of antidepressants is not a cure
Even if we accepted the proposition that these drugs are helpful for some people (82% of which is due to the placebo effect, according to Dr. Irving Kirsch),
 extrapolating a medical cause from this observation would be akin to 
saying that shyness is caused by a deficiency of alcohol, or that 
headaches are caused by a lack of codeine. And what about a genetic 
vulnerability? Is there such thing as a depression gene? In 2003, a study published
 in Science suggested that those with genetic variation in their 
serotonin transporter were three times more likely to be depressed. But 
six years later this idea was wiped out by a meta-analysis of 14,000 patients published in the Journal of the American Medical Association that denied such an association.
4. Most prescriptions for antidepressants are doled out by family doctors — not psychiatrists
Seven percent of all visits to a primary care doctor end with an antidepressan[2] and almost three-quarters of the prescriptions are written without a specific diagnosis[3].
 What’s more, when the Department of Mental Health at Johns Hopkins 
Bloomberg School of Public Health did its own examination into the 
prevalence of mental disorders, it found that most people who take 
antidepressants never meet the medical criteria for a bona fide 
diagnosis of major depression, and many who are given antidepressants 
for things like OCD, panic disorder, social phobia, and anxiety also 
don’t qualify as actually having these conditions.
5. Many physical conditions mimic psychiatric symptoms
Many different physical conditions create psychiatric symptoms but aren’t themselves “psychiatric.” Two prime examples: dysfunctioning thyroid and blood sugar chaos.
 We think (because our doctors think) that we need to “cure” the brain, 
but in reality we need to look at the whole body’s ecosystem: intestinal
 health, hormonal interactions, the immune system and autoimmune 
disorders, blood sugar balance, and toxicant exposure.
6. Basic lifestyle interventions can facilitate the body’s powerful self-healing mechanisms to end depression
Dietary modifications (more healthy fats and less sugar, dairy, and gluten); natural supplements like B vitamins and probiotics that
 don’t require a prescription and can even be delivered through certain 
foods; minimizing exposures to biology-disrupting toxicants like fluoride in tap water, chemicals in common drugs like Tylenol and statins, and fragrances in cosmetics; harnessing the power of sufficient sleep and physical movement; and behavioral techniques aimed at promoting the relaxation response.
7. Depression is a message and an opportunity
It’s a sign for us to stop and figure 
out what’s causing our imbalance rather than just masking, suppressing, 
or rerouting the symptoms. It’s a chance to choose a new story, to 
engage in radical transformation, to say yes to a different life 
experience.
Also by Kelly Brogan, M.D.- Psych Meds Put 49 Million Americans at Risk for Cancer
 - Depression: It’s Not Your Serotonin
 - Are You Fluoridated?
 - 5 Rules for Eating Away Your Depression
 - Fear Is The Sickness
 - Confessions of a Renegade Psychiatrist
 

Dr. Kelly Brogan is
 boarded in Psychiatry / Psychosomatic Medicine / Reproductive 
Psychiatry and Integrative Holistic Medicine, and practices Functional 
Medicine, a root-cause approach to illness as a manifestation of 
multiple-interrelated systems. After studying Cognitive Neuroscience at 
M.I.T., and receiving her M.D. from Cornell University, she completed 
her residency and fellowship at Bellevue/NYU. She is one of the nation’s
 only physicians with perinatal psychiatric training who takes a 
holistic evidence-based approach in the care of patients with a focus on
 environmental medicine and nutrition. She is also a mom of two, and an 
active supporter of women’s birth experience. She is the Medical 
Director for FearlessParent.org, and an advisory board member for GreenMedInfo.com. You can visit her website at kellybroganmd.com.
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