Medications Are the Answer!
Well, yes, they are a part of the answer, but in no way are they the whole answer for most people. For serious mental disorders – like depression, anxiety, ADHD, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, etc. – medications are almost always recommended. They help alleviate symptoms usually more immediately (although many antidepressants can take 6 to 8 weeks before their full effect is felt), and reassure a person that there is medicine (e.g., “science”) that is helping us. Because to most Americans, science comes in encapsulated pills, not in knowledge itself.
Some people believe we are overmedicated, we rely too much on medications for all of the answers. In general, I’d have to agree. There are far too many people who believe that medications do offer all the answers, and don’t even consider additions to medications to help with their treatment (what professional might call “adjunctive treatment”).
The problem is hurt, not helped, by physicians who are often all too willing to be complicit in the oversimplification of mental disorders. They write the script for the medications they know, make the cursory referral to a mental health professional, but don’t do much more than that. They don’t insist. They rarely educate patients about the complexities involved in mental disorders, that a prescription alone is unlikely to cure their ills. And followup varies widely from doctor to doctor.
It’s not clear whether this behavior is as a result of the general practitioner’s training, experience, harried schedule, or desire to try something out they know their patient will go along with, with the least amount of resistance or argument. I’ll give most physicians the benefit of the doubt and say it’s often a combination of all of the above. But just as a family doctor wouldn’t dream of conducting surgery on their patients, I’m not sure why they feel comfortable in believing they can simply prescribe a psychiatric medication and hope the patient will feel better in time.
Family physicians are the first-line, front-line professional most people go to for mental health issues. I have no doubt most are excellent screeners for most general mental disorders. But that should be the extent of their role, in most cases, for most people’s mental disorders. Treatment should nearly always be handed offer to a team of mental health professionals for care and followup.
The Combined Approach
The default conversation has to change. People need to stop expecting quick fixes for serious, complex issues in their lives. Depression isn’t like a virus that strikes a person out of nowhere. Bipolar disorder isn’t simply passed down from generation to generation. Schizophrenia isn’t simply about taking your medication every day.
Professionals and researchers need to stop promising or suggesting that such quick fixes are available as well. There is no treatment on this earth – medication, psychotherapy, self-help approach – that will offer instant relief or a cure. There just isn’t. It’s a lengthy, involved process, and it’s going to take time. It’s going to take effort. It’s going to take change. And, at the end of the day, even all of that may not be enough.
Because we’re still in the early years of fully understanding mental disorders. I like to say we are today where physicians were a hundred years ago in understanding how the heart works. We may very well have another century before the brain and these disorders – and effective treatments – are fully realized.
Grohol, J. (2007). Changing the Treatment Conversation. Psych Central. Retrieved on February 14, 2012, from http://psychcentral.com/lib/2007/changing-the-treatment-conversation/
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Last reviewed: By John M. Grohol, Psy.D. on 1 Oct 2007
Published on PsychCentral.com. All rights reserved.
