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by spadros 1589 days ago
Unfortunately, we’re in the stone ages of mental health. There is no blood test or brain scan we can do to assuredly find depression, bipolar, or any other common mental health diseases. Hopefully you’re correct and in the future we will have some for sure predictor, but at the current rate we have very little to nothing. You’re optimism doesn’t seem to match the environment.
1 comments

There’s a huge number of leads in the search for markers. It’s just that nobody is talking about it. I’ve never met a lay person who had any clue of what’s going on in the space
Interesting. Care to elaborate?
Last year a couple of researchers published a paper on their approach to treat depression in otherwise-untreatable patients.

They implanted a chip in the patient's (yes, n=1) brain, which they trained to detect when the patient is going into depressing thoughts. Using Deep Brain Stimulation they terminate the signal propagation of that neural pathway.

Similar techniques have been used to treat Parkinson's.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32846987/

Interesting. I think the field of using electronic brain stimulation to help disease is moving forward in a good direction compared to the lobotomies and craziness of the 60s. That seems to be what you’ve linked here.

I’m talking about a simple, non intrusive way of testing someone’s mental health without talking to them. That stills seems far off on the horizon. Maybe some MRI research might be able to take us into the future in that regard.