Medication Hesitation
Posted by fxckfeelings on August 9, 2010
Whether it’s wishful thinking, fear, or a powerful sales pitch from the church of Scientology, we have lots of emotional reasons for shutting down our logical minds when we have to make medication decisions about psychiatric illness. The good news is that, while those decisions should be made carefully, they’re not rocket science. The bad news is that it requires more courage than brains (or Thetans) to be a good manager of your own health.
–Dr. Lastname
I recently started going to a doctor for my depression. She thinks I should take pills, I’ve seen lots of articles about how antidepressants don’t work and the main reason they’re prescribed is because of the huge investment that big pharmaceutical companies have made in producing and marketing them. It makes sense to me that there are better natural, holistic solutions that get played down by the medical establishment because they can’t make money for anyone and threaten the profits made by those companies. My goal is to find treatments that work best, not the treatments that server the corporate interests.
The problem with most criticism of current drug treatments is its hopefulness; it implies that there are good, effective, cheap and low-side-effect treatments for depression (that are being suppressed). If only principal clause of that statement were true.
Sure, a magic bullet, holistic or otherwise, would be great (there are lots of other unsolved and incurable problems I can work on, so I’m not worried by the hit my business will take).
The truth is, however, that current treatments are time-consuming, weak, often costly, sometimes risky, and not guaranteed to work
Please resist the temptation to change the subject to tell me why current treatments are costly and often ineffective. You’re entitled to be angry about that sad fact, as about any other of the tragic, unfair and irritating facts of life, like tailgaters, the fact they cancelled “Firefly,” and almost anything having to do with hospitals and health insurance.
As much as I agree with you, I don’t want to hear it; you’ve got a job to do, and anger is a distracting escape from facing what you need to deal with if you’re going to manage treatment decisions for depressive illness. Instead of getting mad at your hand, play the cards you’re dealt.
Your treatment choices for depression aren’t that complicated…once you accept the fact that there’s no way to tell in advance which treatments are going to work or what side effects you’ll encounter. If you’re not in a hurry (i.e., if your depression isn’t about to push you out a window or immediately end your relationship with wife and family), you begin with non-medical treatments, like cognitive behavioral therapy, exercise, and diet and life-style changes.
If the symptoms are severe or longstanding or coming back after previous bouts, then you also experiment with antidepressant medications. This isn’t because Pfizer decrees it so, but because non-medical treatments are unlikely to perform miracles and an antidepressant medication improves your chance of recovery, even though it also has possible side effects.
If you want to try holistic remedies first, by all means, go ahead, but approach those treatments with the same care you would conventional ones; do your research to see what the data show in terms of results and what the side effects might be. Most data are inconclusive, but if you believe the treatment is working, then take that placebo to the bank.
Either way, you know the major principle of risk management: the more desperate your condition, the greater risk (pain, side-effects, cost, etc.) you should be prepared to bear in your effort to manage it. Draw on your own experience of your symptoms, their severity, and their impact on your life, as well as what the experts tell you about them, to decide how desperate you are.
It’s not a big pharma conspiracy against your health; your options just aren’t that great, and you have to figure out which one will work out, if not perfectly, then best.
STATEMENT:
Include your doubts about medication in a statement that focuses on management, not resentment or silly hopes for hidden cures stashed away in a cave with Sasquatch. “If I ever decide to use medication, it will be because I’m desperate and other methods haven’t worked. At that point, I’ll try to figure out their benefits and risks by looking at scientific, controlled studies, not emotional statements based on single cases or uncontrolled, badly selected patient populations. I will consult specialists and authorities to explain why they place faith in particular data or don’t like someone else’s data; but I will then make up my own mind, shutting out my emotional response to charisma or sincerity or a desire to include everyone’s opinion. When it comes to decisions about my health, I deserve a good, objective risk manager—me.”
I know the tranquilizer I take is addictive and interferes with my memory, but it’s the only thing that works when I get really anxious, and the other drugs I’ve been given for anxiety made me sick and didn’t work. I’m anxious because I’m stressed by some unusual recent events, which I’m sure I’ll get over in time, and then I won’t need to take medication. So my goal is to get the medication that works for me and avoid the stuff I know is going to make me sick.
It’s wonderful to get relief from severe anxiety, which is a terribly painful and frightening sensation. So I hate to make you more anxious by telling you that, unfortunately, there’s no good, safe medication that provides rapid relief.
The medications that provide rapid relief pose high risks of addiction and impair memory and balance, and the medications that are safer don’t provide rapid relief. That’s not very reassuring, but if you don’t cowboy up and face that fact, you’re in for trouble.
Remember, anxiety isn’t the worst thing that can happen. Much worse is what anxiety can make you do, like avoiding whatever stirs it up, medicating with alcohol, and making it your goal to feel less anxious. Given these dangers, your real goal is to do what you can to reduce anxiety while not letting it change what matters to you.
Don’t stop trying alternatives to addictive drugs because previous trials failed—that’s anxiety whispering its lies. It tries to tell you that everything that caused you pain in the past should be avoided now and in the future.
If you find yourself listening to that shit, you desperately need some cognitive therapy to help you straighten out your thinking. You can get it from books or a therapist or hanging out with anxious people who have learned how to manage their fears. There isn’t an actual Anxiety Anonymous, but there are groups like it.
If you stay with your current plan, you’ll not only lead a restrictive life, but you’ll tend to choose immediate relief over long-term advantages, whether it’s in treatment, jobs, or relationships. At that point, your anxiety is managing you, and that’s a real cause for worry.
STATEMENT:
Here’s a statement to keep you strong. “I need to develop new methods for dealing with anxiety because, as much as I wish it weren’t true, anxiety will always come back, eventually, and the tranquilizers that give me great relief in the short run will cause problems if I take them for too long. There are lots of non-medical techniques I should learn; and, if they aren’t sufficient, there are lots of non-addictive medications I should try that have a very low risk of causing serious harm. I need the courage to do what makes most sense to me, not what my anxiety would prefer.