(This article was originally published in the June issue of The Community Edition.)
Religion. Politics. Donald Trump. Some conversation topics have a knack for making people want to abandon civilized conversation and just punch each other in the face.
Antidepressant medication for anxiety and depression is one of those topics. On one side you've got doctors and pharmaceutical companies who are eager to tell you that your brain is just broken, and medication is the only solution. On the other side is a jumbled alliance of those who believe a) taking medication is a sign of weakness, or b) anything produced by a pharmaceutical company comes to us directly from the mind of Satan.
Here are four reasons to adopt a more moderate stance when it comes to antidepressants.
1) Medication reduces the severity of symptoms. It's a fact: antidepressants rapidly reduce the symptoms of anxiety and depression. Among other things, it helps people sleep better, have more control over their emotions, and be less preoccupied with the past or future. Anyone who's experienced severe depression or anxiety will appreciate how much that could help.
2) Medication is not a silver bullet. While drugs do reduce symptoms, they don't do so nearly as effectively as you'd think. For the treatment of anxiety and depression, antidepressants outperform placebos by between 2 and 4 points on a 56-point scale. It's a shockingly low number, but those 4 points could be the difference between life and death. It could also give someone enough relief to begin to address the underlying issues of depression or anxiety in therapy.
3) The "brain-disease" model is bad science. I'm going to say this as diplomatically as possible: the idea that depression and anxiety are caused by faulty brains is total bullshit. First of all, unlike with diseases that actually exist, there's no brain scan, blood test, or any other diagnostically valid and reliable method of determining whether you're one of these unlucky people with a broken brain. Second, if treating depression and anxiety were a simple matter of correcting a "chemical imbalance," drugs would be much more effective than they actually are, and the prevalence of depression and anxiety would not continue to increase whilst we prescribe record-breaking numbers of psychoactive medication.
4) Some causes of depression and anxiety are sociological. Poverty, rampant child abuse, patriarchy, homophobia, and other forms of oppression contribute in enormous ways to the prevalence of depression and anxiety - and it takes a hell of a lot more than pills to deal with such issues. Reducing anxiety and depression to questions of brain chemistry is a pretty convenient way of diverting attention away from overarching systems of privilege and oppression.
In severe cases of depression and anxiety, antidepressants can literally save lives - and that's awesome. But the idea that medication alone will solve our problems just isn't true. If we're serious about dealing with depression and anxiety, then, along with medication, we'd better start prescribing a lot more counselling - and some pretty major social change.