Antidepressants Case Study

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Throughout many studies, antidepressants have been shown to help improve depression in people. Antidepressants are drugs that are used in the treatment of mood disorders, such as depression, to alleviate symptoms so that people who suffer from depression may live a normal life. However, evidence has shown that antidepressants cause minimal improvement in depression, occasionally help with bipolar depression and can also cause suicide rates to increase. Therefore, I will be arguing that although antidepressants help some people, antidepressants are not a good solution for curing depression. The first study by Dimidjian, S., Hollon, S. D., Dobson, K. S., Schmaling, K. B., Kohlenberg, R. J., Addis, M. E., et al. (2006), was an experiment that …show more content…

This means that while antidepressants are supposed to improve depression and lower suicide rates, in this study they did not. It was shown that those who did not take the antidepressants also led to higher suicide rates. Concerns were raised about some of them, such as the SSRIs, on whether or not they would cause different results with the risk of suicide. This is because there are so many different types of antidepressants, and each person is affected differently with every medicine that they take. There is not one specific antidepressant that works for everyone so far. Overall, this experiment supports that antidepressants are shown to have both good and bad effects on people, in the end it depends on how the person reacts to the drug. By using antidepressants, depression can be reduced in some situations. They can help those who have bipolar depression, and in most cases suffer from depression. However, the last study showed that taking some antidepressants such as SSRIs can cause suicide rates to go up. Though the studies did show that antidepressants can be a good treatment for depression in some cases, it is not always likely. Therefore, it is uncertain to know whether or not antidepressants are an effective method to treat

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