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...understand several fundamental facts about psychiatric disorders and medications. Antidepressants—that is, serotonin and serotonin-norepenephrine reuptake inhibitors, or SSRIs and SNRIs—relieve symptoms of clinical depression by balancing levels of certain chemicals in the brain. Psychiatrists believe that if a person who does not suffer from clinical depression—that is, who has healthy brain chemistry—were to take an antidepressant, he would experience any number of negative side effects while not getting any benefit from the medication...

Author: By Emily R. Kaplan | Title: An Ignorant Argument | 2/29/2008 | See Source »

...away; a person whose brain chemistry is balanced (with or without the aid of medication) feels sad, even miserable—just not hopeless or suicidal for months or years on end. (Thus, the argument that antidepressants eliminate great art is not only incredibly selfish—let others suffer so that I may look at paintings!— it is misinformed: even if suffering does enable the production of profound literature or heartrending symphonies, antidepressants do not by any means eliminate suffering...

Author: By Emily R. Kaplan | Title: An Ignorant Argument | 2/29/2008 | See Source »

...only would people who don’t suffer from depression (which is the disorder most discussed in the context of these debates) not experience any benefit from taking this type of medication, but they might experience any number of these medications’ undesirable side effects, which include insomnia, constipation, diarrhea, muscle pain, increased sweatiness, nausea, constant fatigue, extreme weight gain, memory loss, decreased sexual desire, and inability to orgasm. (Let people who question the reality of depression note that people who take antidepressants decide that living with these pretty awful side effects is better than living with depression...

Author: By Emily R. Kaplan | Title: An Ignorant Argument | 2/29/2008 | See Source »

...that it is an illness. As much as drug companies have been criticized for advertising their medications to the general public, we must acknowledge that the increased awareness of mental illness these ads have generated have had the positive effect of getting information about treatments to those who may suffer from mental illness. All of this misinformed and ignorant talk of drug companies turning Americans into unthinking pill-popping drones runs the very serious risk of discouraging those same people from seeking the help they so desperately need...

Author: By Emily R. Kaplan | Title: An Ignorant Argument | 2/29/2008 | See Source »

...facilities see more use than others, they all face an uncertain future. The typically overscheduled Harvard student often has little leisure time available to take advantage of these unsung spaces.The perpetual dearth of students using Lowell House’s art room provides just one example of a venue suffering from the busy student schedules. “Admittedly, last year we had a number of workshops,” Moore says. “We had a make-your-own furniture workshop and a cartooning workshop. This year, I scaled down on the formal workshops because I found they...

Author: By Eric W. Lin, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Finding Rooms for Art | 2/29/2008 | See Source »

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