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by PragmaticPulp
1126 days ago
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The problem is real, though. Drugs with overt recreational effects very frequently distract the patient from the therapeutic effect in unproductive ways. The recreational effects generally disappear quickly as tolerance develops, which can give patients the false impression that the medication “stopped working”. A common example would be ADHD stimulants, where the early stimulating and mood-boosting effects disappear over time while the concentration-enhancing effects mostly remain. This leads a lot of patients to assume the medication isn’t working because it doesn’t feel like those first few doses, which can lead to discontinuation or abuse. Ketamine has a similar story arc. The antidepressant effect doesn’t require full blown dissociation, but so many headlines and fame-seeking authors have hyped it as “psychedelic medicine” that some patients assume it isn’t working until they disassociate/hallucinate. This can create a sort of nocebo effect where patients may actually be improving but they think they’re not because they didn’t have the wild hallucinations they read about in some exaggerated internet article. |
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I think a possible reason why medical research prefers a pill that works forever for continued use is that if you buy something cheap twice in your life and it fixes whatever needs fixing the pharma industry can't make money off of you the same way they can put you on antidepressants for life. I'm not in the medical field so I'm just speaking out of my ass based on personal anecdotes though.