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- <text id=93TT0356>
- <title>
- Oct. 11, 1993: The Personality Pill
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Oct. 11, 1993 How Life Began
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BEHAVIOR, Page 61
- The Personality Pill
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A best seller warns that the popularity of Prozac may herald
- an age of cosmetic psychology
- </p>
- <p>By ANASTASIA TOUFEXIS--Reported by Deborah Edler Brown/Los Angeles and Sharon E. Epperson/New
- York
- </p>
- <p> Susan Smith has everything going for her. A self-described
- workaholic, she runs a Cambridge, Massachusetts, real estate
- consulting company with her husband Charles and still finds
- time to cuddle and nurture their two young kids, David, 7, and
- Stacey, 6. What few people know is that Susan, 44, needs a little
- chemical help to be a supermom: she has been taking the antidepressant
- Prozac for five years.
- </p>
- <p> Smith never had manic depression or any other severe form of
- mental illness. But before Prozac, she suffered from sharp mood
- swings, usually coinciding with her menstrual periods. "I would
- become highly emotional and sometimes very angry, and I really
- wasn't sure why I was angry," she recalls. Charles will never
- forget the time she threw her wedding band at him during a spat.
- Now, says Susan, "the lows aren't as low as they were. I'm more
- comfortable with myself." And she has no qualms about her long-term
- relationship with a psychoactive pill: "If there's a drug that
- makes you feel better, you use it."
- </p>
- <p> Millions agree, making Prozac the hottest psychiatric drug in
- history. Since its introduction five years ago, 5 million Americans--and 10 million people worldwide--have used it. The drug
- is much more than a fad: it is a medical breakthrough that has
- brought unprecedented relief to many patients with severe depressions,
- phobias, obsessions and compulsions. But it is also increasingly
- used by people with milder problems, and its immense popularity
- is raising some unsettling questions. When should Prozac be
- prescribed? How does a doctor draw the line between illness
- and normal behavior? If you feel better after taking Prozac,
- were you ill before? When does drug therapy become drug abuse?
- Will Prozac become the medically approved feel-good drug, a
- cocaine substitute without the dangerous highs and lows?
- </p>
- <p> At medical meetings or dinner parties, the talk turns more and
- more often to Prozac, and what frequently sets off the discussion
- is a provocative book about the drug--Listening to Prozac:
- A Psychiatrist Explores Antidepressant Drugs and the Remaking
- of the Self by Dr. Peter Kramer of Brown University. Having
- quickly become a must-read, the book has perched near the top
- of the best-seller lists for three months.
- </p>
- <p> The author, who uses Prozac in his private practice, is both
- impressed by the drug and uneasy about what its widespread use
- may portend for human society. In case after case, he contends,
- Prozac does more than treat disease; it has the power to transform
- personality, instill self-confidence and enhance a person's
- performance at work and play. One of the patients profiled in
- the book, an architect named Sam, claims that the drug made
- him "better than well." His depression lifted, and he became
- more poised and thoughtful, with keener concentration and a
- more reliable memory than ever before. Prozac, writes Kramer,
- seems "to give social confidence to the habitually timid, to
- make the sensitive brash, to lend the introvert the social skills
- of a salesman."
- </p>
- <p> The psychiatrist maintains that the power of Prozac challenges
- basic assumptions about the origins and uniqueness of individual
- personalities. They may be less the result of experiences and
- more a matter of brain chemistry. If temperament lies in a tablet,
- is there an essential, immutable Self? Ultimately, Kramer muses,
- society could enter a new era of "cosmetic psychopharmacology,"
- in which changing personality traits may be as simple as shampooing
- in a new hair color. "Since you only live once, why not do it
- as a blond?" he asks, and "why not as a peppy blond?" Already,
- pharmaceutical houses are churning out a whole new class of
- similar drugs, including Paxil and Zoloft, that mimic the effects
- of Prozac.
- </p>
- <p> When Eli Lilly unveiled the drug in the U.S. in 1988, it didn't
- take long for word to spread that Prozac was special. Within
- two years, TV and magazines touted it as a wonder drug, and
- doctors could hardly write prescriptions fast enough. Soon after,
- a backlash set in, as reports surfaced that in very rare cases
- people on Prozac grew violent or intent on suicide. But the
- Prozac critics haven't been able to prove that the problems
- are caused by the drug rather than the patients' mental illness.
- Though the adverse publicity may have scared off some patients
- and doctors for a time, sales are now as strong as ever. In
- the U.S. an estimated 900,000 to 950,000 prescriptions are filled
- each month.
- </p>
- <p> So what makes Prozac any different from all the other popular
- mood-altering potions down through history, from alcohol, opium
- and marijuana to widely prescribed "mother's little helpers"
- such as Librium and Valium? Unlike the typical street drug,
- which sends people soaring and then crashing, Prozac has an
- effect that is even and sustained. And it seems safer and has
- fewer bothersome side effects than previous medicines prescribed
- to lift people out of depression. Prozac is what scientists
- call a "clean" drug. Instead of playing havoc with much of the
- brain's chemistry, the medication has a very specific effect:
- it regulates the level of serotonin, a crucial compound that
- carries messages between nerve cells. "Prozac makes people feel
- different without making them feel drugged," notes Kramer.
- </p>
- <p> Patients don't all react the same way, of course; some don't
- feel a bit better. And many psychiatrists and patients don't
- agree with Kramer about the drug's transformative powers. "I
- have my ability to not snap at people back, my energy back,
- notes a rabbi who recently started taking Prozac for mild depression.
- But, he adds, "I don't feel like Superman, and I still can't
- stand parties."
- </p>
- <p> "There's a lot less than meets the eye with Prozac," says Dr.
- Daniel Auerbach of the Veterans Health Administration in Sepulveda,
- California. "Nothing changes personality. What gets changed
- is symptoms of a disease." In other words, Prozac enables a
- person's true personality, often imprisoned by illness, to come
- out. Contends Dr. Hyla Cass, a psychiatrist in Santa Monica,
- California: "I don't think Prozac is manipulating people, turning
- them into feel-goods. It is correcting an imbalance, allowing
- people to be who they can be."
- </p>
- <p> But, counters Kramer, doesn't that broaden the boundaries of
- mental illness to include any condition that responds to Prozac?
- If a person responds to an antidepressant, does that necessarily
- mean that he or she is suffering from depression? Kramer questions
- whether the "imbalances" cured by the drug are always bad; maybe
- they are just frowned upon by current society. Are the vivacity
- and blithe spirits often produced by Prozac superior to shyness
- and a touch of melancholy? Do decisiveness and vigor have more
- merit than reticence and calmness? Should a business executive
- who lacks aggressiveness feel compelled to take a pill? Just
- as ticklish is the question of when a doctor should stop prescribing
- Prozac. Satisfied customers don't want to abandon the drug even
- when their illness seems gone. Kramer's book tells the story
- of Tess, a businesswoman who became more assertive and outgoing
- after starting to take Prozac for depression. When Kramer took
- her off the drug, she complained that "I'm not myself." The
- psychiatrist renewed her prescription, but not without qualms.
- "You could say you're giving Prozac to her to prevent recurrence
- of depression," he observes, "but you could also say you're
- giving it to her to maintain her new personality."
- </p>
- <p> Some patients have mixed feelings about their altered state
- of mind. Elizabeth Wurtzel, a 26-year-old writer in New York
- City, began suffering severe bouts of depression when she was
- 11, and has been on Prozac for five years. Though the medication
- has raised her spirits, she also finds that it has erased some
- character wrinkles. "I kind of miss the person I used to be,"
- she says. "I'm much more content with less. The person I used
- to be was outraged in a way that I'm not anymore."
- </p>
- <p> Wurtzel thinks the drug is becoming too fashionable: "Now I
- go to parties and everyone says, `I'm on Prozac too.' You can
- just walk into a doctor's office and say, `I think I'm depressed,'
- and he writes you a Prozac prescription. This should not be
- a drug for people who sort of feel bad. If they feel bad, they
- should figure out what's wrong with them." Dr. Herbert Pardes,
- who heads the psychiatry department at Columbia University,
- agrees: "I'm reluctant to have people taking drugs just to feel
- better. People have ups and downs of all sorts--that's the
- way life is."
- </p>
- <p> Most psychiatrists argue that while Prozac may be abused, it
- is still a long way from being overused. A study by the National
- Institute of Mental Health shows that 40% to 50% of people with
- major depression are not receiving any kind of therapy.
- </p>
- <p> With so many still going untreated, Kramer's book may do a service
- by alerting some of them to Prozac's potential benefits. But
- Kramer may also be raising expectations too high. Says Dr. Glen
- Gabbard, director of the Menninger Memorial Hospital in Topeka,
- Kansas: "We should not send patients rushing to their corner
- pharmacy in hopes of getting a magic chemical that will solve
- all their problems." For most people, happiness does not come
- packaged in a pill.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-