Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Depression Antidepressants Somatoform Conditions. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page paper that responds to two questions. The first discusses depression and antidepressants and reports that less than half of patients with depression are relieved of all symptoms with one antidepressant. The second discusses whether Somatoform disorder should be included in the DSM-V. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: ME12_PG699346.doc
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
severity and it is becoming a major health concern (Faris, 2012). There are different kinds of depression and the 10 percent statistic includes all types. Most people are treated with
antidepressant drugs. Nemeroff and Owens (2002) commented that depression causes morbidity and while some patients are relieved with medications, other are not. In fact, these authors stated that "less than
half of all patients attain complete remission after therapy with a single antidepressant" (Nemeroff & Owens, 2002, p. 1068). They also said that "others exhibit partial, refractory or intolerant responses
to treatment" (Nemeroff & Owens, 2002, p. 1068). This is a very telling statement because if less than half experience complete remission taking only one antidepressant, it mans that
more than half do NOT experience complete remission. This is why so many people experiencing depression take more than one medication to control the symptoms. Nemeroff and Owens (2002)
were arguing for the advancement and discovery of new drugs to treat this condition. This is a valuable argument. People who have depression should be able to be relieved of
major symptoms by taking only one medication, not a combination of two or more, which many now do. In 2010, writing for Harvard Health, MacDonald reported that only
one-third of patients with major depression experience remission using the first medication prescribed. This leads the doctor will switch to another medication or add one to the first. It takes
time and a lot of trials but after using different medications and using different combinations, 70 percent of patient with major depression will find a treatment that works for them
(MacDonald, 2010). That means 30 percent of patients with major depression will likely never find a treatment option that works for them. Experts continue to work to find something
...