Initial Severity and Antidepressant Benefits: A Meta-Analysis of Data Submitted to the Food and Drug Administration

Last week a new article analyzing ALL the data from ALL the short term clinical trials submitted to the FDA for the licensing of fluoxetine, venlafaxine, nefazodone, and paroxetine was published in PLOS Medicine, [Public Library of Science, a peer reviewed open-access journal.]

Click Here to Read: “Initial Severity and Antidepressant Benefits: A Meta-Analysis of Data Submitted to the Food and Drug Administration” Irving Kirsch, Brett J. Deacon, Tania B. Huedo-Medina, Alan Scoboria, Thomas J. Moore, Blair T. Johnson, February 26, 2008.

The Editors’ Summary includes the following:

 “WHAT DO THESE FINDINGS MEAN?

These findings suggest that, compared with placebo, the new-generation antidepressants do not produce clinically significant improvements in depression in patients who initially have moderate or even very severe depression, but show significant effects only in the most severely depressed patients. The findings also show that the effect for these patients seems to be due to decreased responsiveness to placebo, rather than increased responsiveness to medication. Given these results, the researchers conclude that there is little reason to prescribe new-generation antidepressant medications to any but the most the severely depressed patients unless alternative treatments have been ineffective. In addition, the finding that extremely depressed patients are less responsive to placebo than less severely depressed patients but have similar responses to antidepressants is a potentially important insight into how patients with depression respond to antidepressants and placebos that should be investigated further.” 

So was the marketing of these drugs not justified based on the submitted data, or are the authors biased as some advocates of SSRIs as first line treatment for depression claim?
Some interesting comments on the article are at:http://tinyurl.com/3dpx6o

Paul Mosher

39th Annual Margaret Mahler Symposium on Child Development

39th Annual Margaret Mahler Symposium on Child Development
Saturday, April 26, 2008

Solis-Cohen Auditorium- Jefferson Alumni Hall
1020 Locust Street
Philadelphia, PA 19107

Co-Sponsored by Psychoanalytic Center of Philadelphia and Thomas 
Jefferson University

Dishonesty, Lying, and Inauthenticity:
Developmental, Clinical, and Socio-Cultural Aspects

Moderator- Salman Akhtar MD Continue reading 39th Annual Margaret Mahler Symposium on Child Development

May 3rd: Freud in the Northern Rockies

The Northern Rockies Psychoanalytic Institute announces
A Day of Conversation with Leo Rangell – May 3, 2008
rockies.jpg
Leo Rangell writes:

“The backdrop for this conference says it all. Freudian psychoanalysis, in its slow, covered wagons, has reached the last pristine western wilderness of our country, even as its long trail at the other end keeps fighting to survive and prosper. The range of craggy peaks, from deep down in earth, reaching upward toward the stars, and the small group of intellectual pioneers who gather here to preserve the human unconscious, as it too breaks through at intervals from below into the conscious light, is an awesome twosome, too striking not to further and nurture…”

Click here to read or download the full announcement.

Letter to the Editor on Taking Play Seriously from Leon Hoffman

Click Here to Read:  Taking Play Seriously by  Robin Marantz Henig on February 17th in the New York Times Magazine

Letter to Editor
NYT Magazine

Your February 17, 2008 article, “Taking Play Seriously,” is a very comprehensive discussion of the importance of play in human development. One area, however, was missing: The importance of recognizing that for children play has meaning. Continue reading Letter to the Editor on Taking Play Seriously from Leon Hoffman

International Psychoanalytic Conference On Love

International Psychoanalytic Conference 
On Love 
Affiliated Psychoanalytic Workshops (APW)
March 28- 30, 2008
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.
 
 The “malady of being two” [mal d’être deux] from which . . . patients suffer hardly frees them from Narcissus’ problem. It is a mortal passion that ends up taking its own life.
-Lacan, Le Minotaure
Continue reading International Psychoanalytic Conference On Love