<code id='64C2EB9862'></code><style id='64C2EB9862'></style>
    • <acronym id='64C2EB9862'></acronym>
      <center id='64C2EB9862'><center id='64C2EB9862'><tfoot id='64C2EB9862'></tfoot></center><abbr id='64C2EB9862'><dir id='64C2EB9862'><tfoot id='64C2EB9862'></tfoot><noframes id='64C2EB9862'>

    • <optgroup id='64C2EB9862'><strike id='64C2EB9862'><sup id='64C2EB9862'></sup></strike><code id='64C2EB9862'></code></optgroup>
        1. <b id='64C2EB9862'><label id='64C2EB9862'><select id='64C2EB9862'><dt id='64C2EB9862'><span id='64C2EB9862'></span></dt></select></label></b><u id='64C2EB9862'></u>
          <i id='64C2EB9862'><strike id='64C2EB9862'><tt id='64C2EB9862'><pre id='64C2EB9862'></pre></tt></strike></i>

          leisure time

          leisure time

          author:leisure time    Page View:6311
          Two people stare at a keyhole in a human head in between them, as the short-haired person on the left holds a key — first opinion coverage from STAT
          Adobe

          In many ways, psychiatry is still flying blind. People experiencing mental health conditions are prescribed various drugs until one (or a combination) finally works — a painful process that can take years. As a psychiatrist and neuroscientist, I became increasingly impatient and frustrated with this ineffective way of treating patients. This guided the core question behind my research: Can biology explain how people with the same psychiatric disorder respond differently to the same treatment?

          Since I first began exploring this question more than a decade ago, mental illness has become a global epidemic. Despite significant efforts, progress in psychiatric drug development has remained disappointingly slow. There have been a few notable approvals in recent years, and a renewal of interest by Big Pharma, following a retreat from psychiatric research in the mid to late 2000s. But the landscape remains predominantly marked by failures and a dry drug development pipeline. Approved drugs follow the same pattern of prescribing via guesswork, with most patients not responding to a given drug. This cycle of trial-and-error drug development producing trial-and-error treatment arises from a simple source: We have not systematized a process for learning from our failures and successes.

          advertisement

          Related: A ‘renaissance in neuroscience’ could deliver a fresh crop of psychiatric medicines

          For example, take depression: While the rise of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) in the 1980s and 1990s seemed to provide a solution, seminal studies in the 2000s exposed fundamental limitations of our treatment options. Antidepressants are widely prescribed, but their efficacy relative to placebo is modest.

          Get unlimited access to award-winning journalism and exclusive events.

          Subscribe Log In

          comprehensive

          What does generative AI mean for health care? We asked experts
          What does generative AI mean for health care? We asked experts

          MikeReddyforSTATHealthcarecompaniesareracingtoincorporategenerativeAItoolsintotheirproductpipelinesa

          read more
          Congress may force more Covid
          Congress may force more Covid

          HouseOversightChairmanBradWenstrup(R-Ohio)AnnaMoneymaker/GettyImagesTheHealthandHumanServicesDepartm

          read more
          FDA approval of Sarepta Duchenne genetic therapy gives me hope
          FDA approval of Sarepta Duchenne genetic therapy gives me hope

          Duchennemusculardystrophyhistopathology.Dr.EdwinP.Ewing,Jr./CDCWhenIwasdiagnosedwithDuchennemuscular

          read more

          Impact of Dobbs ruling felt at reproductive medicine meeting

          MathieuLewis-Rolland/GettyImagesNEWORLEANS—TheannualmeetingoftheAmericanSocietyofReproductiveMedicin