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:rofl:
Let me try an analogy: Pneumonia is a symptom that can be caused by bacteria, viruses, chemical exposure, inhaling stomach contents or water in the lungs. Someone tests an antibiotic by giving it to a group of people all of whom have pneumonia from different causes. The antibiotic cures the people with bacterial pneumonia but does squat for the other people. Is the antibiotic effective or not?
Clearly, the antibiotic is effective if it is given to people with the right kind of pneumonia and useless for others. I think any given SSRI is useful for some depressives, partly effective for others, and useless for the rest. If you test a SSRI with a random group of depressives, you may decide that the SSRI is no better than a placebo. Give the SSRI to the people with the right kind of depression, and the SSRI is a miracle drug. Some people swear by Prozac, others find it does nothing. Some people depend on Celexa, others can't stand the side effects, etc., etc. In fact, I've read articles suggesting that the variable responses to different SSRIs and related drugs indicates different causes for depression. Depressives may all look alike from the outside, but these people have a malfunctioning hypothalamus while those people have a seratonin deficit while this other group needs more dopamine, etc.
This would explain the recurring articles claiming that SSRIs as a class are no better than a placebo while we know that once we find the right SSRI, it's the difference between life and death.
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