Recent Developments and Current Controversies in Depression

  • K. P. Ebmeier
  • , C. Donaghey
  • , John Douglas Steele

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

In this review of the last 5 years' developments in research into depression we focus on recent advances and current controversies. We cover epidemiology and basic science as well as the treatment of depression in adults in all its forms. Depression in childhood and adolescence, as well as in old age has been covered in recent Seminars in The Lancet. Depression in adulthood remains a very common and under-treated condition, resulting in a high degree of disability. Increasingly detailed knowledge about impairment of information processing in depression is being supplemented by quantitative studies of the brain processes underlying these impairments. Most patients improve with present treatments. The mechanisms of action of antidepressants are not fully understood; the hypothesis that reversing hippocampal cell loss in depression may be their active principle is a fascinating new development. Moral panic about the claim that antidepressant serotonin reuptake inhibitors cause patients to commit suicide and become addicted to their medication may have disconcerted the public and members of the medical profession. We will try to describe the considerable effort that has gone into collecting evidence to enlighten this debate.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)153-167
Number of pages14
JournalThe Lancet
Volume367
Publication statusPublished - 2006

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

Keywords

  • TRANSCRANIAL MAGNETIC STIMULATION
  • SEROTONIN REUPTAKE INHIBITORS
  • TREATMENT-RESISTANT DEPRESSION
  • RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL
  • POSTTRAUMATIC-STRESS-DISORDER
  • OBSESSIVE-COMPULSIVE-DISORDER
  • RECURRENT MAJOR DEPRESSION
  • FACTOR GENETIC-POLYMORPHISM
  • LEFT PREFRONTAL ACTIVATION
  • PROBLEM-SOLVING TREATMENT

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