A place to discuss privacy and freedom in the digital world.
Privacy has become a very important issue in modern society, with companies and governments constantly abusing their power, more and more people are waking up to the importance of digital privacy.
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Dont take abilify if you are allergic to constant surveillance, as this may cause you to kill yourself.
Don’t take psychiatric drugs (edit: ever) is the real advice.
Such bad advice.
Uh, how?
Psychiatric drugs are straight up placebos that cause harms.
Do you have a peer reviewed source for that?
Yep! (I know some references are blog posts, but mad in america makes good summaries; and also I should get to work on compiling sources I used.)
General
Antipsychotics
Antidepressants.
Stimulants.
As mental disorders cannot be objectively falsified through testing; it is impossible to discern a control group from people with a “mental disorder”. proper clinical trials unsurprisingly show this through the drugs being as effective as placebo.
I’ll edit this comment if I find flaws.
Selective publication of antidepressant trials and its influence on apparent efficacy: Updated comparisons and meta-analyses of newer versus older trials ↩︎
https://www.reuters.com/article/health-us-trials-idUKTRE72H31320110318 ↩︎
[https://www.madinamerica.com/2020/07/randomized-controlled-trial-confirms-antipsychotics-damage-brain/] ↩︎
[https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4172306/] ↩︎
[https://www.madinamerica.com/2022/08/antidepressants-placebo-caution/] ↩︎
Moncrieff, J., Cooper, R.E., Stockmann, T. et al. The serotonin theory of depression: a systematic umbrella review of the evidence. Mol Psychiatry (2022). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41380-022-01661-0 ↩︎
[https://www.madinamerica.com/2022/09/no-evidence-long-term-safety-efficacy/] ↩︎
Sachkova, A., Doetsch, D. A., Jensen, O., Brockmöller, J., & Ansari, S. (2021). How do psychostimulants enter the human brain? Analysis of the role of the proton-organic cation antiporter. Biochemical Pharmacology, 192, 114751. doi:10.1016/j.bcp.2021.114751 ↩︎
Treatment for Stimulant Use Disorders: Updated 2021 [Internet]. Rockville (MD): Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (US); 1999. (Treatment Improvement Protocol (TIP) Series, No. 33.) Chapter 2—How Stimulants Affect the Brain and Behavior. Available from: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK576548/ ↩︎
Thank you a lot for those links. Your post has been very interesting and informative, I’ll probably take quite some time to review all of it.
Some of the articles you linked are either peer reviewed by few people or have few citations. On the other hand, especially #4 as a review article of several studies was very interesting. It also shows that there’s truth in your statement “Studies from drug companies have publication bias”, which I myself always suspected.
Your links “only” show some of the medication isn’t effective or may cause long term harm, not all of them. The claim that “Psychiatric drugs are straight up placebos that cause harm[]” isn’t completely supported by your links. If you’d tone it down to “many psychiatric drugs are equally effective as placebos and most of them cause harm” I would be more inclined to support that claim.
One example: Antipsychotics like Haloperidol are often used only for a very short time to keep patients from harming themselves or others and to stop the synapses from firing, so to speak. There’s some risk-reward tradeoff to be analysed there. If you say that all psychiatric drugs are ineffective, you also say that Haloperidol isn’t effective and giving people placebos would be the proper response in an acute psychosis, which is probably something most clinical doctors in psychiatry wouldn’t agree with.
Re #7: Is ADHD really a mental disorder? Isn’t it classified as developmental disorder or developmental disability? The site’s name is a bit unfortunately chosen, but apart from that their content seems to be at least worth a look.
I wish there was a simple table or list of all tested (types of) medication with their reported efficacy and a pro/contra list of using them, like the review article about antidepressants, but easier to digest. If you have more links and more information, I appreciate you throwing them my way. Maybe I’ll throw some of them into my own wiki.
You’re welcome :)
Peer review by few people is not inherently scientific on it’s own; peer reviewed can be performed with biased reviewers.
Peer review is a technique to fix errors not found by the author of the studies.
Yeah that’s unfortunate to find out.
Technically you’re right.
However, psychiatric drugs fundamentally cannot be effective in treating psychiatric disorders. Psychiatric disorders are formed from assertion and lack objective testing for potential disproval. (This is why Psychiatry is not a science.)
This is why I claim that all psychiatric drugs won’t be effective; we can’t test for their effectiveness on psychotic people, because psychosis lacks objective testing.
First problem is
“often used only for a very short time”
Not really. Antipsychotics are used for way longer than “a short time”.
" keep patients from harming themselves or others"
Antipsychotics harm people; and they aren’t that effective.
" and to stop the synapses from firing, so to speak."
Synapses are supposed to fire; neurons pass signals to each other through synapses, so synapses are neccessary for the brain.
I absolutely would.
I disagree. As psychiatric disorders cannot be objectively falsified (through testing); humans cannot potentially disprove the claim that antipsychotics are effective at treating Psychotics.
ADHD is classified as a developmental disorder; but that doesn’t make it a developmental disorder. Otherwise, this would be a etymological fallacy.
It’s the same reasoning for why I don’t consider Autism to be a developmental disorder.
Yep. Found some websites.
https://www.antidepressantstatistics.com/ https://rxisk.org/drug-search/
Not at all true, from my own experience.
That’s anecdotal, not substantial, evidence.
I didn’t say it was evidence. I don’t need to give evidence for a claim this mainstream. Look it up yourselves.
So if Chiropratics were mainstream, then I wouldn’t need evidence to trust them. Chemical imbalance theory is mainstream in psychiatry, therefore I can just trust it! /s
Argumentum ad populum and also peak “tRuSt Me BrO”.
I work in behavioral health and know how important compliance is…and I think this is a terrible idea.
This isn’t even how you get compliance. You get compliance by treating patients like humans, not buggy computer programs.
Why the fuck is this allowed? Why do you need to count my steps, what is the medical purpose of that?
Control. It has to be control at this point; there is no other reason why they would do this…