Inhaltsangabe
Anxiety and depression rank among the most serious medical disorders today. According to the World Health Organization, depression causes more disabilities than any other condition. Yet 80 percent of the 38 million Americans suffering from anxiety and depression receive inadequate treatment.
Inspired by their work with patients and patient-advocacy groups, the psychiatrists Dennis S. Charney and Charles B. Nemeroff are on a mission to help everyone get the best treatment available. Stressing that any treatment must be tailored to the individual, The Peace of Mind Prescription details the full array of medically approved drugs and therapies, highlights the latest breakthroughs, and explores future possibilities. It advocates treating most adults with a combination of psychotherapy and medication and confirms the link between serious anxiety and depression and physical diseases. The authors examine the controversial question of treating children with medication, and they provide vital information specific to both sexes and all ages.
The Peace of Mind Prescription arms readers with resources to assess claims made for both mainstream and alternative treatments. It features inspiring stories of patients who have overcome their anxiety and depression disorders. Fresh, authoritative, and empowering, this book is a prescription that can aid everyone in need.
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Introduction
Empowering People with Anxiety and Depression
Anxiety and depression are two of the most serious medical disorders. The
suffering caused by these conditions is not only miserable, grinding, and so
intolerable that suicide can appear a welcome relief, but it is diabolically long-
lasting if not treated. We used to view anxiety and depression as afflictions of
middle age. We now know that they strike the young with equal force and
can be ruinous throughout life unless treated. We used to think that anxiety
and depression were purely mental ills— disorders of emotion, thinking, and
perspective. In fact, anxiety and depression are deeply rooted in the body,
and their corrosive effects raise a person's risk of contracting a host of
diseases, including heart disease, stroke, diabetes, and osteoporosis.
Depression alone is the leading cause of disability in the United
States and the rest of the world. It costs employers an estimated $44 billion
a year in lost productivity, according to a 2003 article in the Journal of the
American Medical Association. Tragically, not only is the true magnitude of
the damage wrought by these diseases widely unknown, but millions of
people do not recognize their own anxiety or depression, or if they do, they
suppress this recognition because of the stigma that stubbornly clings to
psychological conditions of all kinds.
This book is our attempt to fight that stigma, raise awareness
about the true nature of anxiety and depression, help people find optimal
treatment, and empower them so they can better navigate often complicated
health-care systems.
We live in remarkably stressful times, filled with information
overload, demands to perform at high speed, and pressure to multitask. The
terrorism and war that have touched all of us in recent years have also added
uncertainty and tension to our lives. Unfortunately, humans are not built for
this kind of stress. Our brains, our moods, and our emotional responses
evolved over millions of years to deal with the challenges of a hunter-gatherer
lifestyle, in which new information came at a trickle and the pace of life was,
literally, at a walk. The contrast with the demands of the twenty-first century
is so stark that the steady rise in anxiety and depression is not surprising.
Between 1987 and 1997, for example, the percentage of Americans
diagnosed and treated for depression more than tripled. Anxiety and
depression are now the two most common mental disorders, affecting 38
million people in the United States alone.
We urgently want to address these dire statistics by improving
care for those who are anxious, depressed, or both. Until now no
comprehensive and authoritative guide has existed for people seeking the
optimal treatment they deserve. In part, that's because until recently experts
have considered anxiety and depression separate maladies. We now know
this is false: people often experience symptoms of both, and proper
diagnosis and treatment require an appreciation for the interrelatedness of
these two disorders.
This book offers the most up-to-date and high-quality information
available anywhere about the science and treatment of anxiety and
depression. Our recommendations, suggestions, and guidance are grounded
in evidence-based medicine, which simply means that we back up our
assertions with findings from recent well-designed studies published in peer-
reviewed professional journals. We have been fortunate to be involved with
dozens of such studies, thousands of patients, and key national patient-
advocacy groups. One of us, Dennis S. Charney, oversees scores of
research projects every year as chief of Mood and Anxiety Disorder Research
at the National Institute of Mental Health. The other, Charles B. Nemeroff, is
a professor and chair of the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral
Sciences at Emory University, a leading center for research, training, and
clinical care of patients with mood and anxiety disorders. He has treated
many of the patients whose stories appear in this book. Because of our
prominence in the field, we often consult with leading companies involved in
treating anxiety and depression. In the spirit of full disclosure, we list these
relationships in the endnotes. Such arrangements, very common in
psychiatry, are mutually beneficial and do not compromise our commitment
to writing a book based solely on the state of the science and weight of the
latest medical evidence.
Our understanding of anxiety and depression is not just a matter
of long clinical experience and formal academic training, however. We are not
removed from the conditions about which we write. We have our own human
foibles and have experienced our share of grief, tragedy, and pain. We would
never pretend to know exactly how anybody else feels, but we do have a
profound empathy and compassion for everyone who struggles with anxiety
and depression—an empathy rooted in our own struggles with life's slings
and arrows.
Our fundamental message is hopeful: people can overcome
anxiety and depression and find well-being, zest, and greater emotional
resilience. Everyone can make progress. Everyone can get better. Everyone
can be happier and healthier. We're not saying the path will be easy, quick,
or painless, but we are certain that good information is the foundation for any
successful treatment—and that is what this book contains.
In tackling anxiety or depression, recognize a fact sometimes
overlooked by physicians and the medical establishment in general: nobody
knows more about you than you do, and you may understand yourself better
than you realize. That doesn't mean you are all-knowing or have plumbed the
depths of your own multilayered consciousness. It simply means that you
are the ultimate judge of when you need help, when you feel well, and when
you think a change is needed in your treatment plan. Like most people, you
are wiser and stronger than you may think you are. In the grip of depression
or anxiety, you may minimize or dismiss your ability to change, heal, and
grow, and this self-doubt is in fact part of the insidious nature of these
illnesses.
Though we cannot hear your story directly or tailor what we have
to offer to your particular circumstances, we acknowledge the primacy of
your own unique life and all of the strengths and weaknesses you bring to
bear on dealing with challenges to your health and well-being. There is no
magic formula, no "absolutely effective" therapy, no "best" medication that
works for everyone. You must weigh the ideas, suggestions, and options
presented in this book against your own life, your own values, your own
situation, and then act.
Not Just Treatment, but Optimal Treatment
Sadly, millions of people with anxiety and depression are not achieving the
relief they deserve. Only about one in five of those with major depression gets
adequate treatment, according to a 2003 study. "Adequate" was defined as at
least eight half-hour sessions of counseling with a mental health professional
or four visits with any type of physician for prescription and management of
an antidepressant drug, used for at least thirty days.
Many people simply don't realize they are sadder, more tired, or
more anxious than they need to be. Others know they suffer but don't seek
treatment out of fear, embarrassment, or shame. Such concerns persist
despite decades of testimony by people from all walks of life that anxiety and
depression are medical conditions just like any other. Nobody is
embarrassed to admit...
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