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Feeling sad or anxious? Pop a pill

Drug makers benefit when lines blur between disorders, ordinary anxieties

Health & Fitness

People's Pharmacy

December 22, 2002|By Linda Marsa , Special to the Sun

The ads seem to be everywhere, on TV, in magazines, doctors' offices, the Internet: Are you feeling tense? Having difficulty sleeping? Scared of criticism?

If so, they suggest, the answer could be a pill -- an antidepressant, to be exact.

The drugs that revolutionized the treatment of depression a decade ago now are increasingly used to treat anxiety disorders, mental illnesses that can cause paralyzing worry or intense fear of social situations. Caused by a deficiency in brain chemistry, the disorders can indeed be remedied by potent mood-altering medications such as Paxil and Effexor.

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Drug companies commonly seek new uses for their drugs; it's a way of expanding their market and getting a greater return on the money spent doing research. But now it appears they could be capturing a new segment of patients -- those with less serious disorders, such as occasional anxiety.

Since the federal government approved the drugs for generalized anxiety disorder and social phobia, prescriptions for the medications have soared. Doctors and other health experts, meanwhile, report a marked increase in the number of patients claiming anxiety disorders and seeking relief.

Just about everyone has experienced situational anxieties -- when personal or professional stress keeps us keyed up and disturbs our sleep -- and it can be difficult to pinpoint when life's mundane worries escalate into a full-blown psychiatric disorder. "There are few conditions where there's a black and white cutoff," said Dr. Franklin Schneier, a psychiatrist at Columbia University in New York.

Consequently, some mental health experts say, people with normal angst may get powerful medications they don't need, sometimes suffering from side effects such as agitation, insomnia, loss of libido and, when they try to quit the drugs, withdrawal symptoms.

Doctors and psychologists say the broad push to prescribe medications for anxiety is further indication we're medicalizing normal variations in temperament. The advertising is "a double-edged sword," said Dr. Michael Brase, medical director for behavioral services for WellPoint Health Networks Inc., the parent of Blue Cross of California. "It's helped some people realize they need to be on medication, but others may be just going though a bad patch in their lives. And that's what muddies the waters."

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