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by fellow_human
1426 days ago
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Your appeal to reductio ad absurdum here fails because it's not established that SSRIs work by restoring an imbalance. SSRIs are only little more effective than a placebo, suggesting there's something deeper at play with regards to depression. Yes they may be an effective measure in serious cases of depression but they certainly are not a cure and many people do not just turn "normal functioning" after SSRI treatments like you're suggesting. The disease model of depression simply is not true. |
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Alternatively, that there is more than one cause of what we call "depression", and that SSRIs are only effective against some (but not all) of those causes.
"Little more effective than a placebo" conflicts with the large number of patients who claim SSRIs have been a life-changing treatment for them.
One way to reconcile this is by observing that if (just making up numbers here) 50% of people have no effect and 50% have a good effect, the overall effect is going to probably appear small, despite the fact that 50% of the patients had a very real positive effect.