T
Ta555
Enlightened
- Aug 31, 2021
- 1,317
The usual disclaimer: they are lifesavers for some people etc etc. No stigma about taking medication. Obviously take it if it helps you.
However, I think it is irrefutable by now that these drugs ruin lives. People suffer horrific side effects and then even worse when they try to stop.
I am sensitive to medications and have had horrible experiences with psychiatric meds in particular but every specialist I see just wants to throw SSRIs at me because my health issues are too complex to bother with.
Just yesterday I had another specialist, an otherwise nice woman, suggest an SSRI would perk and rebalance me right up. Her speciality has nothing to do with the brain btw. Her rationale was that someone in her family had atypical depression and it fixed them, let alone the fact that I'm not depressed, I'm just struggling with some sort of unidentified neurological/mysterious health problem and if I wasn't I'd actually be pretty content.
The thing that floored me though was her casually saying "The worst that could happen is they don't agree with you and don't help and then you just stop taking them."
No, I'm sorry, but that's not the worst that could happen. People have had long-term damage from just a few weeks on these drugs and this is not a risk I'm willing to take in my condition.
I don't know why doctors are like this. Are they really just ignorant or they know the horrors that could happen but it's just easier to fob people off onto antidepressants and hope it will fix them without them having to investigate any further.
I'm still gobsmacked
However, I think it is irrefutable by now that these drugs ruin lives. People suffer horrific side effects and then even worse when they try to stop.
I am sensitive to medications and have had horrible experiences with psychiatric meds in particular but every specialist I see just wants to throw SSRIs at me because my health issues are too complex to bother with.
Just yesterday I had another specialist, an otherwise nice woman, suggest an SSRI would perk and rebalance me right up. Her speciality has nothing to do with the brain btw. Her rationale was that someone in her family had atypical depression and it fixed them, let alone the fact that I'm not depressed, I'm just struggling with some sort of unidentified neurological/mysterious health problem and if I wasn't I'd actually be pretty content.
The thing that floored me though was her casually saying "The worst that could happen is they don't agree with you and don't help and then you just stop taking them."
No, I'm sorry, but that's not the worst that could happen. People have had long-term damage from just a few weeks on these drugs and this is not a risk I'm willing to take in my condition.
I don't know why doctors are like this. Are they really just ignorant or they know the horrors that could happen but it's just easier to fob people off onto antidepressants and hope it will fix them without them having to investigate any further.
I'm still gobsmacked