Exercise scores as well as Zoloft for major depression
Another outcome study to add to the massive body of evidence that the psychopharmaceutical model for treating depression is seriously flawed was published in the journal Psychosomatic Medicine. The authors pitted sertraline (Zoloft, an SSRI) against exercise and placebo as they set out to...
"...assess whether patients receiving aerobic exercise training performed either at home or in a supervised group setting achieve reductions in depression comparable to standard antidepressant medication (sertraline) and greater reductions in depression compared to placebo controls."
They randomly assigned 202 adults diagnosed with major depression were to either supervised exercise in a group setting; home-based exercise; antidepressant medication (sertraline, 50–200 mg daily); or placebo pill for 16 weeks. This was followed by a structured clinical interview for depression and completed the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM-D). Typically, the data showed little difference between the placebo and Zoloft, and virtually no difference between the medication and exercise:
"After 4 months of treatment, 41% of the participants achieved remission, defined as no longer meeting the criteria for major depressive disorder (MDD) and a HAM-D score of <8. Patients receiving active treatments tended to have higher remission rates than the placebo controls: supervised exercise = 45%; home-based exercise = 40%; medication = 47%; placebo = 31%. All treatment groups had lower HAM-D scores after treatment; scores for the active treatment groups were not significantly different from the placebo group."
There is an enormous amount of science showing that this class of medications profoundly perturbs the brain in such a way that attempting to stop taking them after 6 weeks or continuing them long-term can result in the dismal trap of a brain sensitized to depression. This study would have been even more striking had they compared the unmedicated exercise group to those who were medicated after attempting to stop. As it is, the authors conclude:
"The efficacy of exercise in patients seems generally comparable with patients receiving antidepressant medication and both tend to be better than the placebo in patients with MDD. Placebo response rates were high, suggesting that a considerable portion of the therapeutic response is determined by patient expectations, ongoing symptom monitoring, attention, and other nonspecific factors."
Historically, before the age of psychopharmaceuticals most cases of major depression tended to be self-limiting. For an objective, meticulous, articulate and gripping scientific and historical narrative on how anti-depressants, tranquilizers and anti-psychotic medications have promoted the skyrocketing levels of mental disability, I suggest Anatomy of an Epidemic by Robert Whitaker. Anyone considering taking or prescribing these medications should be aware of the science reviewed comprehensively in this text.