Article  RFK Jr. plans to curb antidepressants

#1
C C Offline
RFK Jr. plans to curb antidepressants, which he falsely compares to heroin
https://arstechnica.com/health/2026/05/r...to-heroin/

INTRO: In a brief appearance at a Make America Healthy Again Institute event Monday, anti-vaccine Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced new federal initiatives to curb prescribing of antidepressants, which he has long attacked with false and dangerous claims. Mental health experts have previously condemned his rhetoric and are already pushing back on his new efforts.

The MAHA event was focused on “overmedicalization,” with participants broadly alleging—without evidence—that too many Americans, particularly youths, are overprescribed antidepressants in the class of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or SSRIs. This class includes common medications such as Zoloft, Prozac, Paxil, and Lexapro, which are used to treat depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress disorder, among other conditions. Event participants focused on claims that the drugs are prescribed without informed consent, are harmful, and can be difficult to stop taking.
False claims

The topics closely echo Kennedy’s claims. Among his many dangerous, evidence-free statements, he has suggested that too many people, including children, are put on SSRIs and that they make people violent. He has even suggested that they are the cause of mass shootings, including school shootings. In a podcast last year, he made the heinous claim that “every Black kid is now just standard put on Adderall, SSRIs, benzos, which are known to induce violence.” His suggested solution is for black children to be “reparented” and work on farms.

Kennedy has also repeatedly made the false claim that quitting antidepressants is extremely difficult, harder to quit than heroin. But experts have debunked the claim—there is no research to back the suggestion... (MORE - details)
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#2
Syne Offline

Psychiatric medication use among youth has increased significantly, with nearly 1 in 4 young people taking psychotropic drug combinations by 2020, leading to concerns about overprescribing and high-risk interactions. While some studies suggest prescriptions often treat known conditions, others show that rising mental health demands, especially with limited therapy access, may contribute to overmedication.
- Gemini

Likely also medical doctors who prescribe without the full diagnostic testing that a psychiatrist would perform.
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#3
Magical Realist Online
I once attended a film put on by some anti-medication alarmist group. The guy narrating the story said he went off his meds for bi-polar disorder and ended up in the psych ward for a few weeks. Same old story repeated thousands of times, except with going off anti-depressants if they don't catch you and admit you in time you just commit suicide. I am a long time success story when it comes to SSRI's. And I am not so arrogant to think that taking meds is somehow a sign of weakness or an admission of some drug dependency. I wonder how many youth suicides RFK jr will end up causing. 1 and a half years folks..1 and a half years.

Oh..and as for going off anti-depressants, all mental health professionals know how to taper patients off gradually so as to minimize any side effects. I've done it many times. Going off cold turkey too, which does suck and causes "brain zaps" or electrical spasms to your whole body for a few days. But it eventually goes away.
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#4
Syne Offline
It is literally dependence, admitted or not.
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#5
Magical Realist Online
Breathing air and drinking water can be called a chemical dependency too.
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#6
Syne Offline
If you have to play word games with basic survival and medicinal dependency, you have no real argument. That's called coping.
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#7
Magical Realist Online
Medicinal dependency? As in insulin for diabetes or blood thinners for the heart or migraine pain relievers? So who gets to decide when dependency is morally wrong or at all inappropriate for a human being? You? RFK jr?
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#8
Syne Offline
(May 6, 2026 10:56 PM)Magical Realist Wrote: Medicinal dependency? As in insulin for diabetes or blood thinners for the heart or migraine pain relievers? So who gets to decide when dependency is morally wrong or at all inappropriate for a human being? You? RFK jr?

Where do you imagine you read anything was "morally wrong"? How did you get there from any of my posts in this thread?

Yes, insulin, blood thinners, etc. are also medicinal dependency.
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#9
Magical Realist Online
Quote:Where do you imagine you read anything was "morally wrong"? How did you get there from any of my posts in this thread?

Great! So there's nothing wrong with needing to take meds. Glad we could confirm this.
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#10
Syne Offline
The difference is that insulin, blood thinners, etc. are prescribed for objective physiological problems. They are prescribed by medical doctors who are fully trained to do the complete diagnostic tests to determine these physiological problems.

The difference is that medical doctors do not do the complete diagnostic tests that psychiatrists do, yet they are just as free to prescribe psychiatric medications. And most medical doctors nowadays are very lazy, even with doing due diligence and informed consent for physiological issues.

The gap between 4 years of training and a single 1-3 month residency rotation is significant.
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