SSRIs and the RPE
By Crispin Sartwell
Recent studies suggest that the anti-depressant
medications known as selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors (SSRIs) may drive
you to suicide, even as they improve your mood. This apparently paradoxical
result should lead to a deep re-thinking of medical science as we know it.
My own research suggests that the pro-suicide effect of SSRIs is not a
matter of brain chemistry or serotonin levels. Itıs just that when they tell
you that you need anti-depressants, theyıre telling you youıre depressed, which
is extremely depressing.
Depression is bad enough, but depression about the fact that you are
depressed is an infinite downward spiral into hell. The more depressed you are,
the more depressed you get. And the more depressed you get, the more depressed
you are. Once you enter this process, there is nowhere to go but down, down,
into the maw of death itself: the ultimate treatment facility.
Before you know it, you find yourself biting the Cobain stick.
Now on the other hand, many
doctors seem to believe one problem is that SSRIs are being overprescribed. So
letıs say your depression is misdiagnosed. When the whole thing starts out
youıre a happy-go-lucky sap.
Then the fact that they think you need anti-depressants is enough to
start you on the same downward spiral. You start asking yourself: if Iım so
depressed, why do I feel so happy all the time? Pretty soon your trust of your
own senses is entirely compromised and you become radically incapable of
self-reflection. Your very selfhood itself is shattered like a cheap mirror.
In short, misdiagnoses of depression
have probably dropped millions of happy-go-lucky suckers into an agony of
existential despair and obsessive self-loathing.
Before you know it, youıre swallowing that Marilyn cocktail.
But should you survive this far, the situation becomes far worse,
because the doctor indicates that whether you are suffering or not youıll
feel better when you take your meds. But because you are on anti-depressants
(see above) you are bummed out to an extent that matches or exceeds the relief
offered by the medication itself (and I am not denying that anti-depressants
are dramatically effective).
So the doctor increases your dosage or drops in another med, which has
precisely the same double-edged effect. You return to the doctor, and you catch
just that hint of an expression that you know means: Dude. If the
anti-depressants donıt work, thereıs really no hope. You feel that youıve been
condemned to a lifetime of despair, even if all the time youıre perfectly
happy.
Before you know it, youıre doing that Virginia Woolf doggy paddle.
A placebo is a completely ineffective dose of an inert substance, which
sometimes has a positive effect. The anti-depressant/suicide connection is an
illustration of the ³reverse placebo effect² (RPE), in which what are actually
effective medications have no actual effects, or actually have negative
effects.
Though this conclusion is only provisional and awaits future study, it
may be that all medications are subject to a reverse-placebo effect: for
example the fact that you need massive doses of opioids only convinces you that
you must be in severe pain. Then the more effective a medicine becomes, the
worse its results.
Itıs enough to make you bake that Sylvia Plath casserole.