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Talking Back to Prozac: What Doctors Aren’t Telling You About Today’s Most Controversial Drug by Peter R. Breggin, M.D., and Ginger Ross Breggin. (New York: St. Martin’s Paperbacks, 1995)
The 1993 best-seller, Listening to Prozac by psychiatrist Peter Kramer, M.D., did much to heighten interest in and increase the sales of this popular anti-depressant drug. Now another psychiatrist, Peter R. Breggin, who is a long-time critic of pharmaceutical industry-driven mental health care, has co-authored a new book to tell the other side of the Prozac story.
Until the science of genetics exploded with clues and explanations of brain functioning and the mind’s vagaries, mental health practitioners had few options in dealing with depression and other mental disorders. Either psychoanalysis or tranquilizers were the treatment of choice. Most psychiatrists preferred the latter, some employed both.
As mind-altering drugs multiplied, with pioneers such as meprobamate (Miltown) and chlordiazepoxide (Librium) practically bypassed, particular chemicals in the brain were discovered that responded in varying ways to these medications. Psychiatrists were given a weapon with which to fight the mental dragons.
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