We use cookies to enhance your experience on our website. By continuing to use our website, you are agreeing to our use of cookies. You can change your cookie settings at any time. Find out more

Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide.

Print Price: $33.95

Format:
Hardback
336 pp.
236 mm x 160 mm

ISBN-13:
9780195368741

Publication date:
November 2008

Imprint: OUP US


Before Prozac

The Troubled History of Mood Disorders in Psychiatry

Edward Shorter

Psychiatry today is a barren tundra, writes medical historian Edward Shorter, where drugs that don't work are used to treat diseases that don't exist. In this provocative volume, Shorter illuminates this dismal landscape, in a revealing account of why psychiatry is "losing ground" in the struggle to treat depression.

Naturally, the book looks at such culprits as the pharmaceutical industry, which is not inclined to market drugs once the patent expires, leading to the endless introduction of new - but not necessarily better - drugs. But the heart of the book focuses on an unexpected villain: the FDA, the very agency charged with ensuring drug safety and effectiveness. Shorter describes how the FDA permits companies to test new products only against placebo. If you can beat sugar pills, you get your drug licensed, whether or not it is actually better than (or even as good as) current medications, thus sweeping from the shelves drugs that may be superior but have lost patent protection. The book also examines the FDA's early power struggles against the drug industry, an influence-grab that had little to do with science, and which left barbiturates, opiates, and amphetamines all underprescribed, despite the fact that under careful supervision they are better at treating depression, with fewer side effects, than the newer drugs in the Prozac family. Shorter also castigates academia, showing how two forms of depression, melancholia and nonmelancholia - "as different from each other as chalk and cheese" - became squeezed into one dubious classification, major depression, which was essentially a political artifact born of academic infighting.

An astonishing and troubling look at modern psychiatry, Losing Ground is a book that is sure to spark controversy for years to come.

There is no Table of Contents available at this time.
There are no Instructor/Student Resources available at this time.

Edward Shorter is Hannah Chair in the History of Medicine and Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Toronto.

There are no related titles available at this time.

Special Features

  • An unsettling look at modern psychiatry, revealing how greed, lax regulation, and academic infighting have set the field back fifty years.