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19-06-2024 04:48 PM - edited 19-06-2024 04:57 PM
19-06-2024 04:48 PM - edited 19-06-2024 04:57 PM
So this article came up in my newsfeed this arvo:
https://www.msn.com/en-au/health/other/major-breakthrough-in-treatment-of-depression/ar-BB1oqLOJ
It gets a bit sciency - and maybe that in itself is something you'd like to address - but I'd be interested in reading other peoples' impressions on this.
19-06-2024 05:29 PM
19-06-2024 05:29 PM
Very interesting @chibam ,
I don't know what I can add to the link you shared except for "What this space". I'd certainly be interested to hear any follow-on research.
I personally don't like the term 'treatment resistant' because I feel it means the person doesn't need to hope that things will improve.
For me personally, when I understood the brain activity from a certain therapy, it helped me engage with the therapy better. But that might be different for other people.
19-06-2024 07:07 PM
19-06-2024 07:07 PM
@tyme here you go.
“the team is hoping that by being able to categorise the type of depression, they will also be able to pair it with the most appropriate treatment, removing the element of trial and error”
https://metro.co.uk/2024/06/18/major-breakthrough-treatment-depression-21055683/amp/
19-06-2024 07:49 PM
19-06-2024 07:49 PM
"Professor Williams and her team are now expanding the study to include more people, and hope to test treatments for all six biotypes – including those not traditionally used for depression."
One could potentially read good things into that line. But it concerns me that the overall tone of the article seems to be leaning towards medicalizing depression even more then it is now, not less.
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