#psychiatric-drugs

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Medicine
fromSocial Media Explorer
1 day ago

The Silent Two-Decade Build-Up of Alzheimer's - Social Media Explorer

Changes in the brain associated with Alzheimer's can begin years before symptoms appear, yet assessments often occur only after noticeable cognitive decline.
#adhd
Medicine
fromNature
2 months ago

ADHD treatments move beyond stimulants

Stimulant medications rapidly improve ADHD symptoms but cause side effects, carry misuse risks, and are ineffective or unsuitable for up to 30% of patients.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

ADHD Medications Work Differently Than Previously Thought

ADHD combines attention deficits, hyperactivity, and impulsivity; psychostimulants target reward and wakefulness centers, and sleep deficits critically influence symptoms.
Healthcare
fromThe Verge
2 days ago

This chatbot can prescribe psych meds. Kind of.

Utah allows an AI system to prescribe psychiatric drugs, raising concerns about risks and the effectiveness of expanding mental health care.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

What Weight-Loss Drugs Reveal About How We Judge Effort

Visible struggle in weight loss is often misinterpreted as greater effort, while underlying biological and psychological factors play a significant role.
#glp-1-medications
Medicine
fromNature
1 month ago

Do obesity drugs treat addiction? Huge study hints at their promise

GLP-1 medications reduce addiction risk across multiple substances and lower substance abuse mortality by 50% in people with existing addiction.
Cannabis
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

Cannabis is not an effective treatment for common mental health conditions, says review

Cannabis lacks sufficient evidence for treating anxiety, anorexia nervosa, psychotic disorders, PTSD, and opioid use disorder despite widespread patient use for mental health conditions.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

The Facts About Bipolar Disorder in Older People

Older adults face ageism in mental health services, complicating the diagnosis and treatment of conditions like late-onset bipolar disorder.
Medicine
fromNews Center
2 weeks ago

Schizophrenia Study Finds New Biomarker, Drug Candidate to Treat Cognitive Symptoms - News Center

Northwestern researchers identified a novel schizophrenia biomarker in cerebrospinal fluid that could enable new treatments for cognitive symptoms through a synthetic protein therapeutic approach.
from6abc Philadelphia
2 weeks ago

Scientists say marijuana doesn't ease anxiety or other mental health conditions

We found no evidence any form of cannabis is effective in treating anxiety, depression or post-traumatic stress disorder, which are three of the leading reasons for which cannabis is prescribed. The cannabis medications being administered in these studies were largely oral formulations, such as capsules, sprays or oils. In real life, people typically use smoked cannabis, and there is even less evidence of its effectiveness for mental health.
Cannabis
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

The Link Between Medicine and Psychology

Mental health significantly impacts heart and brain health, necessitating integration of mental health care into traditional medical practices.
Medicine
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 weeks ago

Why some people get hooked and others don't: genetics, childhood and brain circuits explain addiction

Addiction is a mental disorder requiring professional treatment, not a matter of willpower or personal choice, yet society continues to stigmatize it as a moral failing.
Social justice
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

What if Addiction Isn't the Problem?

Addiction's lack of clear definition undermines regulatory efforts against corporations; reframing addiction as a common human state rather than inherently harmful could better address actual harms and protect children from exploitative design.
Medicine
fromwww.npr.org
2 weeks ago

Sparse evidence for cannabis to treat mental health conditions highlights research gap

A comprehensive review of 45 years of cannabis research finds little to no high-quality evidence supporting marijuana's effectiveness for treating anxiety, depression, or PTSD, despite widespread medical use for these conditions.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

Treating Psychosis: Why We Aren't Hearing Our Patients

Healthcare providers often fail to listen to patients with psychosis, allowing their own anxiety and certainty to override genuine curiosity about the patient's lived experience and perspective.
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
3 weeks ago

Can a Ketogenic Diet "Cure" Schizophrenia?

Ketogenic diets may help some people with schizophrenia, but rigorous scientific studies remain lacking and claiming to 'cure' severe mental illness through diet alone oversimplifies complex chronic conditions.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

Can Hyperbaric Oxygen Treat Psychiatric Disorders?

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy improves PTSD, depression, anxiety, and cognitive impairment by restoring cellular energy, reducing neuroinflammation, and stimulating neuroplasticity through oxygen pressurization and cycling.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

How Beliefs About Depression Can Harm

Beliefs about depression's nature significantly impact treatment outcomes, with biological explanations potentially hindering recovery through reduced agency and pessimism.
US news
fromwww.npr.org
1 month ago

A huge study finds a link between cannabis use in teens and psychosis later

Adolescent cannabis use increases later risk of bipolar disorder, psychotic disorders, anxiety, and depression.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

How Science Is Learning to Explore Ground Truth

Some clinicians have an uncanny quality. A colleague describes herself and others with this instinct as "witchy"-a capacity to know things about patients they haven't said yet, to follow a stray association to a song lyric or a half-remembered cultural reference and arrive, reliably, at something the patient urgently needed to say but couldn't reach on their own. We see with artificial intelligence these intriguing possibilities for discovery, especially as connections that human beings never would see pop out of apparently unrelated data.
Science
Medicine
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Weight loss drugs may stop people getting addicted to drugs and alcohol, study finds

GLP-1 receptor agonists reduce addiction risk to alcohol, tobacco, cannabis, cocaine, and opioids while decreasing overdose, hospitalization, and mortality rates in people with substance use disorders.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

The Deception of Depression

Depression is insidious. For people suffering from depression, joy is elusive. Depression is not only a general feeling of sadness or being down and out. It is a serious condition and needs attention. People suffering from depression cannot just get over it and move on. They need support, healing, and to discover the epicenter of their pain.
Mental health
Medicine
fromwww.independent.co.uk
1 month ago

Weight-loss drugs may help those who suffer from chronic migraines

GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy may reduce migraine severity, decreasing emergency care visits and medication needs for migraine sufferers.
Public health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

A Medical Treatment to Lower Your Alzheimer's Disease Risk

Vaccination against several infections reduces long-term dementia risk; vaccine hesitancy may therefore increase dementia rates.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Understanding How Medication and Psychotherapy Work Together

Combined medication and psychotherapy treatment is more effective than either approach alone for depression and anxiety disorders.
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

On Diagnosis and Formulation

Diagnosis and formulation serve distinct clinical purposes: diagnosis identifies what illness is present through observable symptoms, while formulation explains why it manifests in this particular person.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

A Genetic Map Redrawing the Borders of Mental Illness

Five broad genetic families underlie 14 psychiatric disorders, suggesting diagnostic categories reflect shared biological landscapes rather than distinct diseases.
fromwww.wired.com
1 year ago

I Tested 20 Over-the-Counter Sleep Aids to Find a Way to Beat My Insomnia

I tested AGZ's chocolate and mint flavors, which come with a frother, and you can blend the powder with water or milk, either warm or cold (although I think it tastes the best with milk, like a frothy hot cocoa). The drink doesn't taste overly sweet and has a nice, rich chocolate taste. The mix is melatonin-free, instead with adaptogens, herbs, and minerals, including magnesium, vitamin B6, L-theanine, ashwagandha, and calming herbs.
Alternative medicine
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

5 Things Therapy Can Do for You (and 5 Things It Can't)

Therapy provides skills and perspectives but cannot create motivation, directly change others, or guarantee specific outcomes; success depends on client commitment and readiness.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

We Need to Talk About the Fenfluramine Study

In the mid-1990s, child mental health researchers at top New York institutions injected grade-school boys with fenfluramine, also known as the diet drug "fen-fen," a substance that was later banned by the Food and Drug Administration, due to its links to valvular heart disease and pulmonary hypertension. The boys were all Black or Hispanic by design: Eligible participants were required to be African American or Hispanic because they were deemed to be at higher risk for developing disruptive behaviors.
Medicine
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Diagnosing mental health conditions need not be a case of yes/no | Letters

If we treat ADHD as binary (you have it or you do not), we are missing the possibility that we all lie somewhere on a continuum with diagnosed ADHD towards one end (and perhaps an ability to focus and concentrate at the other). A diagnosis of ADHD then depends on where the line is drawn. I suggest that this line has been moved in recent years, so that a large group of people have been caught up in the positive ADHD group, who would not have been previously.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Mental Health and Sickness Benefits: Lessons From History

Mental health diagnoses account for 80% of young people's benefit claims, but evidence shows psychiatric treatments produce minimal symptom reduction without proven long-term employment outcomes.
#depression
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

What's Going on With Generic Stimulants?

Some generic amphetamine formulations vary by manufacturer or inactive ingredients, leading to reduced clinical effectiveness for some patients despite bioequivalence rules.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Could Glial Cells Be the Key to New Schizophrenia Treatments?

Anyone living with schizophrenia understands the true limitations of current treatment options. Antipsychotics remain the single leading treatment for the disorder, and they are riddled with undesirable side effects. Weight gain, tardive dyskinesia, and excessive drowsiness are a few. Much research is devoted to expanding the range of medication options, and few academics have pursued other avenues. However, there is a possibility that treatment for schizophrenia can be approached through cellular methods if long-term research validates early signs of hope.
Mental health
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

The Real World Effects of ADHD Medication

ADHD medication reduces symptoms and significantly lowers real-world harms—criminality, substance abuse, motor-vehicle incidents, and mortality—with benefits persisting after discontinuation.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Psychiatric drugs aren't always the answer | Letter

Yes, there has been a shocking lack of progress in developing transformative psychiatric medicine (We need new drugs for mental ill-health, 5 February), but this may be because in mental health, drugs are not always the answer (see, for example, Richard P Bentall's Doctoring the Mind). Huge progress has been made in the effectiveness of talking therapies for example, free effective treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is available to all UK army veterans through the charity PTSD Resolution.
Mental health
#microdosing
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

We need new drugs for mental ill-health | Letter

Governments should prioritise research and approval of innovative psychiatric treatments (MDMA-assisted therapy, esketamine, cannabidiol) to relieve widespread, long-term mental suffering.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Building a House: Treating Psychosis With Anti-Psychotics

Antipsychotics can provide early emotional stability and improved reality testing, serving as a temporary foundation while psychotherapy and life-rebuilding continue.
#dsm
fromNature
1 month ago
Mental health

Updates to the 'bible' for mental-health conditions will miss the mark - is it time to ditch the DSM?

fromNature
1 month ago
Mental health

Updates to the 'bible' for mental-health conditions will miss the mark - is it time to ditch the DSM?

Medicine
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Does Size Matter in Psychedelic Therapy?

Psychedelic therapy outcomes depend critically on dose: different doses produce distinct experiences, mechanisms, care needs, and mid-range doses may improve safety, accessibility, and cost-effectiveness.
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

The Compelling History of a Disease Basis for Mental Illness

Psychiatry pursued brain-disease explanations for mental disorders, driven by medicine's historical emphasis on physical disease, despite lack of definitive brain-disease findings this century.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

How We Define Psychosis Matters

Psychosis is a spectrum condition where reality becomes confusing or unclear, causing hallucinations and delusions that many people experience to varying degrees.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

More on Low-Dose Sublingual Ketamine

The standard explanation is that ketamine blocks NMDA receptors. These receptors bind glutamate, which is a chemical messenger found throughout the brain and body. By blocking NMDA receptors, ketamine increase "brain-derived neurotrophic factor" (BDNF), a protein which I refer to as "Miracle-Grow for the brain." BDNF promotes neuroplasticity-which is the growth of new connections (synapses) in the brain. This has traditionally been viewed as the primary mechanism responsible for ketamine's therapeutic benefits. But ketamine does so much more!
Mental health
Mental health
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 months ago

Psychiatrists plan to overhaul the mental health bibleand change how we define disorder'

The DSM will shift toward biomarker-based, more scientific diagnostic criteria and may rename the manual to emphasize "scientific" over "statistical".
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

How Biological Beliefs Influence Medication Use

Many antidepressant users endorse biological causes for depression, which associates with prognostic pessimism, longer treatment duration, and reduced attempts to discontinue medication.
#dsm-revision
fromNature
2 months ago
Mental health

The 'bible for psychiatry' is getting a rewrite: your guide to the next DSM

fromNature
2 months ago
Mental health

The 'bible for psychiatry' is getting a rewrite: your guide to the next DSM

Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Addiction: A Disease Both Like and Unlike Many Others

Addiction is a disease with genetic and environmental causes, but its unique social harms demand humanizing, candid disclosure rather than minimizing comparisons.
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

To Medicate or Not To Medicate Your Child or Teenager

Every day, many thousands of parents across the U.S. face the difficult question of whether to place their child or teenager on a psychotropic medication. Receiving a diagnosis of a mental disorder can be scary and confusing, for the youth as well as their parents/caretakers. What is ADHD? Depression? Anxiety? OCD? Bipolar? What are the available treatments? Do we have to use medications to treat the symptoms?
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Why Are We Still Calling People 'Schizophrenic'?

Schizophrenia is an unclear, stigmatizing, and clinically unhelpful diagnosis that should be retired in favor of more precise, useful terms.
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

A brain-based AI test could point to the best antidepressant for you - Silicon Canals

Before treatment began, participants underwent neuroimaging. Instead of relying on a single modality, the researchers fused structural connectivity (how regions are physically wired) with functional connectivity (how regions co-activate at rest). The goal was not to throw every possible feature at a black box, but to learn a constrained pattern-what the authors call structure-function "covariation"-that carries the most predictive signal for outcome. In other words, the model tries to find the smallest set of connections that meaningfully forecasts symptom change.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Low Dose Sublingual Ketamine

Statistics show that about one-third of people with depression achieve remission-meaning their symptoms are gone-with traditional antidepressant medications. This matched my experience treating people, and I had grown to accept that this was as good as it gets. Although I wasn't thrilled with the fact that many people continued to struggle with significant symptoms of persistent depression, it seemed this was as good as we could do.
Mental health
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Single dose of potent psychedelic drug could help treat depression, trial shows

A single intravenous DMT dose combined with psychotherapy produced rapid, sustained antidepressant effects lasting three to six months in treatment-resistant depression.
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

The Inflamed Brain in Psychiatric Disorders

A recent study published in Biological Psychiatry identified a distinct subtype of psychiatric illness marked by brain inflammation, one that cuts across traditional diagnoses and may explain why standard treatments fail for some people (Tang et al., 2025).This new brain imaging study offers an interesting clue. It turns out that across different psychiatric disorders, some people show clear signs of brain inflammation, visible on scans and confirmed through immune system tests.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Very Different Psychiatric Diagnoses Share Common Genes

Alcohol, cannabis, opioid, and nicotine use disorders share substantial genetic liability and cluster together as a single brain disorder, supporting a unified addiction-liability.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Psychology's Misdiagnosis Problem

AI can substantially reduce diagnostic errors in psychology by synthesizing complex, multi-source information that humans struggle to weigh accurately.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

How Scientists Finally Learned to Measure the Placebo Effect

Placebo effects can produce real, substantial improvements that make it difficult to determine whether depression treatments produce true therapeutic effects.
fromwww.mercurynews.com
2 months ago

Stanford's noninvasive brain treatment for depression proves helpful

Summer passed Valerie Zeko by when she was 27, as she vegged out on the couch watching TV instead of seeing friends or exploring the overcast beach near her house. She later learned that period was her first episode of depression. I felt like the fog was in my head as well as outside, said Zeko, now 57, describing the mood disorder that would squelch her happiness, motivation and self-esteem for 28 years until she finally found effective treatment.
Mental health
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

What I see in clinic is never a set of labels': are we in danger of overdiagnosing mental illness?

Ancient texts describe mental suffering resembling modern disorders, showing such conditions are timeless while psychiatric labels and diagnostic boundaries continue to change.
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

The Depression Clinicians Don't Talk About

They arrive on time, think clearly, and care about their clients. Outwardly, everything seems fine. In private, though, things can feel very different. A clinician's depression may not show up as clear despair. More often, it feels like emotional numbness, quietly withdrawing, or slowly losing interest in things that once mattered. Pleasure fades, curiosity lessens, and the work goes on, but it feels heavier and less alive.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Exercise Alone Is Not an Effective Treatment for Depression

That sounds impressive; however, the devil is in the details that the popular media completely ignored. For example, only 11 of those studies were focused on depression. The authors concluded that exercise had a medium effect on depression. It is impossible to know how a "medium" effect compares with drug therapy since the studies were not head-to-head comparisons. The study also reported that exercise benefited many other health conditions, including HIV or kidney disease, various mental disorders, and cancers.
Mental health
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