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Everyone wants a pill as a quick effortless fix, but IMO it seems a lot of our modern afflictions come down to an gross imbalance of exercise, diet, sleep, and social connection. Most likely the way society (see disclaimer) currently functions - how we work, how we consume our limited leisure time is sort of an occupational hazard to peak health. Not to mention, exercise is "too hard" for most, the food supply is weaponized with sugar and FUD, everyone is so tired at the end of their "BS job" workday, so hit the couch and stream the streams. And now you have a vicious flywheel that quickly turns people into candidates for the latest big-pharma "cure" HN Disclaimer: I'm in the US and making generalizations based on my observations. Not saying that there aren't needs for pharma / pills / afflictions that aren't solvable by the above, etc... |
For what it's worth, exercise, diet, sleep, social engagement, and lifestyle changes are well-known inputs to addressing depression. Therapists will explore and encourage improvements in all of these areas. Good psychiatrists will as well, given enough time and a patient who is open to listening.
One of the difficult issues is that many depressed patients often don't want to hear any suggestions that depression might be due to anything other than external factors. This is why the pop-science version of the "chemical imbalance" theory became so popular in the mainstream: It gives a plausible explanation that depression is just something that happens to you due to no fault of your own, which is weirdly easier to accept for many people.
There are similar treatment problems with a host of health issues, such as obesity. The trend on social media and pop culture is to explain obesity away as a chemical or societal problem, minimizing the input of personal choice and actions. It's very popular to propose theories that "counting calories doesn't work" or hear anecdotes about people who claim to only eat less than 1000 calories per day but never lose weight (which isn't possible, even 100% sedentary coma patients need more calories than that).