URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v15/n570/a08.html
Newshawk: Kirk
Votes: 0
Pubdate: Fri, 09 Oct 2015
Source: Seattle Times (WA)
Copyright: 2015 The Seattle Times Company
Contact:
Website: http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/409
Author: Julie Holland, MD
Note: Psychiatrist Julie Holland is author of "Moody Bitches: The
Truth About The Drugs You're Taking, the Sleep You're Missing, the
Sex You're Not Having, and What's Really Making You Crazy." She is
editor of "The Pot Book: A Complete Guide to Cannabis."
THE MEDICATED STATES OF AMERICA
WE insist on all-natural products in our baby food and household
cleaners; why don't we demand natural moods for ourselves?
Americans suffer from an overabundance of processed foods, synthetic
hormones, virtual relationships, silicone breasts and, now, fake
moods, brought about by an ever-increasing percentage of us taking
psychiatric medications.
The patients I meet in my Manhattan psychiatric practice are
stressed, sad and scared. Many lead lives with little movement,
sunshine or human touch, spent staring into a computer screen, under
fluorescent lights. Chronically sleep-deprived and eating poorly,
they feel terrible. Women shuttling between work ( where they earn
less than men ) and home, straddling child care and aging parents, are
stretched to their limit. They escape by drinking, texting, shopping
or eating. My patients want pills to make them feel better but,
honestly, I'm afraid it's to make them feel less.
Many psychiatric patients are truly sick and need medication. It is
my job to understand the risks and benefits of these meds, and I've
seen them do a lot of good for people in real pain. But there is a
big push to lower the standards, especially for women, for being sick
and needing prescription drugs.
The pharmaceutical industry spends billions in advertising and
billions more paying researchers and prescribers directly. Women are
inundated with messages that it's pathological to feel sad or scared,
with a barrage of ads that advance the question from, "Should I take
an antidepressant?" to "Which one?"
Recently my psychiatric journals have been full of glossy ads
promoting a new diagnosis, "binge eating disorder." A picture of a
sad, lonely woman surrounded by junk food sits underneath text
introducing me to the diagnosis, encouraging me to ask my female
patients if they sometimes regret how much they eat, because they may
be ashamed to talk about it.
These ads were paid for by Shire Pharmaceuticals, the same company
that makes the amphetamine Adderall. But Adderall has lost its
patent, hence Vyvanse, a new, ultra, long-acting amphetamine. Shire's
newer ADHD ads also target women, recommending Vyvanse for 12-hour
control of symptoms "throughout her day."
It's getting harder to remain unmedicated in the Altered States of
America. Street drugs, speed and heroin, have come in, out of the
cold, and are now Adderall or Vyvanse, Oxy-Contin or Zohydro as Big
Pharma expands into the recreational market. More women are becoming
addicted to opiates and dying of overdoses, and more women are taking
antidepressants and sleeping pills than ever before. We are
medicating away our sensitivities and we are all the worse for it.
Women are being convinced that it's pathological to be emotional.
The first thing a woman says after she starts crying is, "I'm sorry."
We are uncomfortable with expressed emotion, and we have been
socialized to shut it down. But by suppressing this sensitivity,
we're stifling a piece that we need, that our partners and families
need, and that the world needs. When we are overmedicated as a
nation, we lose our empathy, the natural connection to humanity.
After 20 years of psychiatric practice, it's clear to me that women
today need more soothing than ever. Beyond our jobs and families, we
are exposed to traumas worldwide, courtesy of our phones. Our empathy
goes out across the country to kids shot on campuses; globally,
weapons bought with our taxes kill doctors and children. We are wired
for empathy, but it is all too much. For many, psychiatric
medications are a temporary Band-Aid; adding amphetamines is not
going to help. For real solutions, we have to look beyond the
prescription medical model and toward a more holistic approach.
With soaring drug prices and insurance premiums, it is no wonder a
revolution is slowly brewing, with more Americans taking their health
care into their own hands. They are rediscovering an herbal model of
health care, using remedies with names like Phoenix Tears and
Charlotte's Web. The medicinal cannabis community is growing,
educating and supporting one another. There is no patenting a flower.
Cannabis is an ancient medicinal plant, a weed that cleans the air
better than trees and puts nutrients into the soil. The crop yields
tons of hemp seeds - a complete vegetarian protein, oil for biodiesel
and fiber for paper, canvas, rope, building materials, compostable
packaging, and the list goes on. Forget Donald Trump, hemp can make
America great again.
And, of course, there's the flower of the female plant: a
painkilling, anti-inflammatory, metabolism-regulating,
cancer-killing, heart-opening medicine. Side effects include a shift
in perception, a dehabituation that may help you reconnect to the
earth, to your own body and to each other. Cannabis can help you to
feel more, not less.
Am I suggesting you ditch the antidepressants, opiates and
amphetamines in favor of a natural remedy? Not always. But the
balance needs to shift. And I do at least want to pose the question:
If we have a choice, isn't a natural mood better than a synthetic one?
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom
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