Episodios

  • Science News: No Link Between Serotonin and Depression - What Does That Mean for Antidepressants?
    Aug 4 2022

    In this 30-minute podcast, Peter Simons reports on the latest scientific articles in psychiatry. The goal is to provide more detail than is usually found in conventional research news and to help listeners understand how to interpret the findings.

    This month, Peter Simons covers in detail a new systematic review that debunks the widely popularized myth of low serotonin in depression, the “chemical imbalance theory.” He then follows up with a study that found less than 25% of people respond to depression treatment in real life, and a study that found that screening for depression in adolescents is ineffective.

    • No Evidence Low Serotonin Causes Depression
    • Response to Criticism of Our Serotonin Paper
    • Less Than a Quarter of Those with Depression Respond to Treatment in Real Life
    • Psychiatric Drugs Do Not Improve Disease or Reduce Mortality
    • Screening for Depression in Adolescents Does Not Prevent Hospitalizations or Suicide Attempts
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    31 m
  • Science News: Pharma Corruption, Dangers of Antidepressants, And More
    Jun 2 2022

    In this 30-minute podcast, Peter Simons reports on the latest scientific articles in psychiatry. The goal is to provide more detail than is usually found in conventional research news and to help listeners understand how to interpret the findings.

    Articles covered in this podcast include:

    • How the mental health app Cerebral is facing accusations of dangerous and unethical practices;
    • How Biogen withdrew its European application for failed Alzheimer’s drug aducanumab;
    • How pharma company Cassava was the subject of a New York Times exposé on its Alzheimer’s research and outcome data;
    • How social media influencers are the new pharma marketers;
    • Researchers document how psychiatric textbooks and reviews endorsed the chemical imbalance myth;
    • A study finding that antidepressants don’t improve quality of life;
    • A study on antidepressants’ dangerous effects on the fetus if taken during pregnancy;
    • A paper explaining the difference between antidepressant withdrawal and relapse;
    • A paper on the dangers of benzodiazepine withdrawal;
    • A study finding that a sense of meaningfulness in life protects against mental distress; and
    • A paper by Joanna Moncrieff on the ties between the commodified mental health system and neoliberal capitalism.
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    32 m
  • Science News: Psychology: Flawed as a Science and as Evidence-Based Medicine
    May 5 2022

    In this 30-minute podcast, Peter Simons reports on the latest scientific articles in psychiatry. The goal is to provide more detail than is usually found in conventional research news and to help listeners understand how to interpret the findings.

    Articles covered in this podcast include:

    • Researchers write that “psychology is fundamentally incompatible with hypothesis-driven theoretical science”;
    • Researchers suggest that “evidence-based medicine” is more corporate gimmick than reliable science;
    • Psychiatrists deliver the lowest-quality healthcare of any medical specialty;
    • A report by the Council of Europe promotes non-coercive mental health treatment;
    • Black patients in the US were more than twice as likely to be described negatively in electronic health records;
    • A peer-supported Open Dialogue program shows early success in the UK;
    • Antipsychotics are often prescribed without informed consent;
    • Antidepressants are ineffective for children and adolescents;
    • Psychiatric drugs increase dementia risk threefold after COVID in 65+ population; and
    • Official guidelines on antidepressant discontinuation fail practitioners and patients.

     

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    33 m
  • Science News: Brain Imaging Results False; Unpublished and Missing Trials; Why Meditation May Not Work for You
    Apr 7 2022
    Peter Simons covers a study in Nature finding that the positive results of psychiatry’s brain imaging studies are false; a study demonstrating that more than half of negative antidepressant trials remain unpublished or are misleadingly “spun” as positive; an article that may explain why some people don’t find meditation to be helpful; and more!
    • Nature: Brain Imaging Studies Are Most Likely False
    • Negative Antidepressant Trials Still Unlikely to Be Published
    • Did Pharma Companies Hide Failed ADHD Drug Studies From Regulators?
    • Study Discovers Extensive Undisclosed Conflicts of Interest in Medical Research
    • Esketamine: Dangers and Lingering Questions
    • Antipsychotics Worsen Cognitive Functioning in First-Episode Psychosis
    • Your Mindset Matters When You Meditate
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    28 m
  • Science News: How Effective Are Therapy and Medication, and What Do They Treat?
    Mar 3 2022
    Peter Simons covers a study that found both therapy and medication to have very limited effectiveness; an article suggesting that general practitioners need to prescribe fewer antidepressants; a study that concluded no brain imaging test has been able to identify a meaningful brain difference in depression; and more!
    • Major Review Finds Limited Effectiveness for Medication and Therapy
    • Family Physicians Must Change Antidepressant Prescribing Practices
    • SSRI Antidepressants Do Not Improve Depression After a Stroke
    • Clinicians and Patients Often Disagree on Mental Health Outcomes
    • No Meaningful Brain Differences in Depression
    • Shifting Away from ECT and Antidepressants for Depression
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    29 m
  • Science News: Lithium, Antidepressants, Esketamine—All No Better Than Placebo?
    Feb 10 2022
    Peter Simons covers a clinical trial that found lithium ineffective at preventing suicide attempts, an essay by Allen Frances on the overdiagnosis of depression and overprescription of antidepressants, a review of the ineffectiveness and dangers of antidepressants, and an analysis that revealed that esketamine failed five of its six clinical trials.
    • Lithium No Better Than Placebo for Preventing Suicide Attempts
    • New Review: Antidepressants Come with Minimal Benefits, Several Risks
    • Allen Frances Takes on the Over-Prescription of Antidepressants
    • Esketamine Failed in Five of its Six Efficacy Trials
    • Ketamine Withdrawal Has Severe Consequences
    • New Study of Ayahuasca Users Shows Placebo Effect in Action

     

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    32 m
  • Science News: Unscientific Diagnoses Medicalize Normal Human Experiences
    Jan 5 2022
    Peter Simons covers articles about the validity of psychiatric diagnoses, the medicalization of normal human experiences like grief, and how the pharmaceutical industry co-opts feminist messaging to gain approval for ineffective drugs.
    • Kenneth Kendler: “Implausible” That Psychiatric Diagnoses Even “Approximately True”
    • Neurobiological Explanations Can Foreclose Self-Understanding
    • Medicalizing Grief May Threaten Our Ability to Mourn
    • Research Reveals Mental Health Professionals’ Participation in Rape Culture
    • Why the FDA Approved Ineffective Drugs for Low Sexual Desire in Women
    • Overuse of Psychiatric Drugs is Worsening Public Mental Health, Doctor Argues
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    32 m
  • Science News: Antidepressant Research - Placebos and Withdrawal
    Nov 23 2021
    This week, Peter Simons covers a study about the controversial practice of placebo run-in periods in antidepressant studies, a study about withdrawal symptoms being mistaken for relapse, and a book chapter that addresses stigma and discrimination.
    • Researchers Push to End Placebo Run-in Periods in Antidepressant Studies
    • Withdrawal Symptoms Cloud Findings of Antidepressant “Relapse” Trial
    • Experiences of Prejudice and Discrimination in Mental Healthcare
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    12 m