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By the millennium Americans were spending more than 12 billion dollars yearly on antidepressant medications. Currently, millions of people in the U.S. routinely use these pills. Are these miracle drugs, quickly curing depression? Or is their popularity a sign that we now inappropriately redefine normal life problems as diseases? Are they prescribed too often or too seldom? How do they affect self-images?David Karp approaches these questions from the inside, having suffered from clinical depression for most of his adult life. In this book he explores the relationship between pills and personhood by listening to a group of experts who rarely get the chance to speak on the matter--those who are taking the medications. Their voices, extracted from interviews Karp conducted, color the pages with their experiences and reactions--humor, gratitude, frustration, hope, and puzzlement. Here, the patients themselves articulate their impressions of what drugs do to them and for them. They reflect on difficult issues, such as the process of becoming committed to medication, quandaries about personal authenticity, and relations with family and friends. The stories are honest and vivid, from a distraught teenager who shuns antidepressants while regularly using street drugs to a woman who still yearns for a spiritual solution to depression even after telling intimates "I'm on Prozac and it's saving me." The book provides unflinching portraits of people attempting to make sense of a process far more complex and mysterious than doctors or pharmaceutical companies generally admit.
Produktinformation
Utgivningsdatum2007-10-01
Mått127 x 197 x 20 mm
Vikt340 g
FormatHäftad
SpråkEngelska
Antal sidor304
FörlagHarvard University Press
ISBN9780674025516
UtmärkelserNominated for Award for Best Publication in Mental Health 2006
David A. Karp is Professor of Sociology at Boston College and the author of Speaking of Sadness: Depression, Disconnection, and the Meanings of Illness and The Burden of Sympathy: How Families Cope with Mental Illness.
Prologue:Doxepin Diary 1.Giving Voice 2.Unwelcome Careers 3. Married to Medication 4.Searching for Authenticity 5.Significant Others 6.Teens Talk 7.High on Drugs Epilogue:Lessons from the Inside Appendix A: Getting Stories Straight Appendix B: Commonly Prescribed Drugs for Anxiety and Depression Notes Acknowledgments Index
David Karp records voices of ordinary people with depression; in so doing he tells us what it's like to take one of the commonest types of drugs for one of the commonest disorders. And what it's like is as complex as people and depression are in America in our time. A revealing book!