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5 votes
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Omicron update: Dec 17
18 votes -
Vaccinia
6 votes -
Psychiatrists are uncovering connections between mental health and viruses
7 votes -
COVID-19 can infect the inner ear
9 votes -
New cancer therapy from Yibin Kang's lab holds potential to switch off major cancer types without side effects
6 votes -
The inside story of the Pfizer vaccine: A 'once-in-an-epoch windfall'
6 votes -
Omicron: Vaccine nationalism will only perpetuate the pandemic
11 votes -
America's forgotten vampire panic
7 votes -
Why US healthcare workers are quitting in droves: About one in five have left medicine since the pandemic started
12 votes -
Brain implant translates paralyzed man's thoughts into text with 94% accuracy
13 votes -
Post-SSRI Sexual Dysfunction
14 votes -
Tens of millions of filthy, used medical gloves imported into the US
7 votes -
Scientists used a tiny brain implant to help a blind teacher see letters again
6 votes -
How a false science ‘cure’ became Australia’s contribution to the pandemic
5 votes -
In a major scientific advance, a pig kidney is successfully transplanted into a human
8 votes -
A major reversal on aspirin highlights a concept everyone should understand
12 votes -
Women were the unseen healthcare providers of the Middle Ages
7 votes -
Henrietta Lacks estate sues company using her ‘stolen’ cells
12 votes -
This MIT engineer built his own bionic leg
3 votes -
Medical leave reflections plus empathy sphere essay
3 votes -
‘Smart toilet’ monitors for signs of disease
5 votes -
First malaria vaccine approved by World Health Organization
16 votes -
George Washington and the first mass US military inoculation
6 votes -
Merck says research shows its COVID-19 pill works against variants
13 votes -
Folding@Home's Covid Moonshot program to receive $10M grant
7 votes -
Two disbarred lawyers sued a Texas doctor who performed an abortion. Flustered ‘pro-lifers’ are backpedaling
12 votes -
The great measles immunity heist
8 votes -
A breathing tube through the butt could be an alternative to mechanical ventilators
10 votes -
The Sacklers, who made billions from OxyContin, win immunity from US opioid lawsuits
10 votes -
The great American science heist
9 votes -
Extended reality is radically changing the world of medicine
14 votes -
Millions of coronavirus vaccine doses around the world face expiration
4 votes -
Solving puzzles to create better COVID vaccines
2 votes -
Trials begin on lozenge that rebuilds tooth enamel
18 votes -
AI has the worst superpower… medical racism
23 votes -
Why right to repair matters – according to a farmer, a medical worker, a computer store owner
17 votes -
Thoughts on SSRIs?
Hello everyone, I recently got put on some SSRI for my worsening suicidal ideation and honestly I can't believe the difference it's made. It's like a version of myself that I find hard to believe...
Hello everyone,
I recently got put on some SSRI for my worsening suicidal ideation and honestly I can't believe the difference it's made. It's like a version of myself that I find hard to believe existed, but can draw parallels with the version of me before I got depressed, etc.
I'm just curious how I should be viewing these changes in me: Are they really me without depression/anxiety or is it a more lurid exaggerated version of that?
Any other thoughts on SSRIs in general welcome! I'm interested in seeing Tildians' thoughts on them :)
18 votes -
PrEP, the HIV prevention pill, must now be totally free under almost all US insurance plans
16 votes -
How to unlearn a disease
6 votes -
UCSF researchers achieve the ability to interpret neurological signals into speech
10 votes -
Time to assume that health research is fraudulent until proven otherwise?
9 votes -
Apophenia, audio pareidolia, and musical ear syndrome
5 votes -
The agony and the ecstasy of deep brain stimulation surgery
4 votes -
Can a $110 million helmet unlock the secrets of the mind?
6 votes -
Vicious doctors and cruel diseases in 18th-Century Jamaica
3 votes -
What is in the COVID-19 vaccine?
4 votes -
Fire in the Blood (2013 documentary)
3 votes -
Medication for depression
Hello my lovelies, I struggle with a moderate amount of anxiety and obsession with self-image, which tend to amalgamate as some kind of depression or other over time. At least I think they do....
Hello my lovelies,
I struggle with a moderate amount of anxiety and obsession with self-image, which tend to amalgamate as some kind of depression or other over time. At least I think they do. I've never really been sure if what I experience is actually depression, or if I'm just a Mopey Idiot, or if I have a more acute cognitive issue that I'm not aware of.
I keep very precise semi-quantitative logs of my mood and behavior every day, and they suggest to me that some of my stress is related to being a little overloaded. I'm working on cutting back on some of that responsibility. But it's also extremely obvious to me that, for quite some time—I think since about early October 2019—I've lacked the physical energy that typically allows me to be consistently happy. There was no one, singular "proximate cause" two years ago, certainly it was none of my actual obligations (at that time I had very little work to speak of). However, I nevertheless very distinctly remember that my energy was suddenly just sapped, and has not come back to the level it was at before. The best theory I have is that it might've been a mini-existential crisis triggered immediately by some books I'd been reading, with a background of relatively more social isolation than usual. There have been specific circumstances since then in which I can be high-energy (and I mean be, not just act like I am), but they are fleeting and rare. The overall background energy of my life has been different.
In short, I do not really have a solid anchor per se, even as I have many little mini-anchors. I have been floating around for a while as a result.
At least that has been my working theory for a little while. The persistence of my condition has led me to question whether that theory is useful, or whether there is something fundamentally wrong with my brain. I am Young and Naive so I simply do not know how to tell. The pandemic has made it much more challenging to figure out the root cause of my problems, because I cannot tell if they are just because I can't do the fun activities I like doing in the social environments I like doing them in, or something presumably biochemical.
Things that each help a little:
- Getting more sleep
- Getting more exercise
- Being good about meditating, or when my therapist is useful (rarely)
- Being successful (I have a job for the summer and a likely career after I graduate. Knock on wood)
- Being hot as fuck (I'm not that attractive, but I feel pretty after I exercise, or when I dress nice, or when people compliment my body)
Things that each help a lot:
- Having extremely attentive and caring friends
- Not being around people who constantly drain me
- Consuming certain substances
Specifically, the most non-low-energy I've felt in a long time was when I ate some funky little mushrooms with my friend this year. Specifically, after I snapped back to reality (mom's spaghetti). I was just more alert and more able to function properly. My brain operated at its normal capacity; words flowed freely from my mouth in a gorgeous array of sentences; positive banter was at an all-time high; I was positive and optimistic; and so on. You know how you can sort of visualize the ideas popping around and the gears turning when you're sober but just really on top of your social life? Well that's what it was. Unfortunately my ability to be a normal person only lasted like 1 or 2 days from there, and then it was back to the same old.
This has made me ask the question: might it be prudent to look into some sort of legal medical prescription that would have a similar effect? That is, anti-depressants or like whatever. I'm also open to alternative treatments but I am mainly asking about prescription meds. I just don't know anything about the whole world of medication. I almost never take meds for anything ever, even physical injuries, and I'm afraid that if I start doing medication I'll never be able to stop. The concept of always being medicated is a little scary to me. Like even if it helps, I'm still worried. But I kind of feel like nothing I've done so far has been able to permanently work, so I kind of need to do something.
I appreciate any thoughts that you can give!!!
xoxoxo
beezselzak18 votes -
Robotic ‘Third Thumb’ use can alter brain representation of the hand
5 votes