Coming of Age on Zoloft: How Antidepressants Cheered Us Up, Let Us Down, and Changed Who We Are

Overview

When Katherine Sharpe arrived at her college health center with an age-old complaint, a bad case of homesickness, she received a thoroughly modern response: a twenty-minute appointment and a prescription for Zoloft—a drug she would take for the next ten years. This outcome, once unlikely, is now alarmingly common. Twenty-five years after Prozac entered the marketplace, 10 percent of Americans over the age of six use an SSRI antidepressant.

In Coming of Age on Zoloft, Sharpe ...

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Coming of Age on Zoloft: How Antidepressants Cheered Us Up, Let Us Down, and Changed Who We Are

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Overview

When Katherine Sharpe arrived at her college health center with an age-old complaint, a bad case of homesickness, she received a thoroughly modern response: a twenty-minute appointment and a prescription for Zoloft—a drug she would take for the next ten years. This outcome, once unlikely, is now alarmingly common. Twenty-five years after Prozac entered the marketplace, 10 percent of Americans over the age of six use an SSRI antidepressant.

In Coming of Age on Zoloft, Sharpe blends deeply personal writing, thoughtful interviews, and historical context to achieve an unprecedented portrait of the antidepressant generation. She explores questions of identity that arise for people who start medication before they have an adult sense of self. She asks why some individuals find a diagnosis of depression reassuring, while others are threatened by it. She presents, in young people's own words, their intimate and complicated relationships with their medication. And she weighs the cultural implications of America's biomedical approach to moods.

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Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly
Drawing on 40 interviews with individuals aged 18–40 and an extensive reading of professional and popular articles, former Seed magazine editor Sharpe takes a close look at members of her generation who came of age with new antidepressants such as Prozac and Zoloft. Sharpe herself used such drugs after a mini-breakdown in college and says they made her feel “dull and flattened in one way... revoltingly attuned in another.” Sharpe is excellent at detailing the positives and negatives of these drugs: they can relieve depression, and patients can learn to turn the drug from a crutch into a “tool,” controlling it rather than letting it control them. But the drugs can also promote “a kind of emotional illiteracy, “prevent me from asking or noticing the reasons I felt bad....” She is also good on the importance of exercise, sleep, and diet on alleviating depression. But she is best at probing broader societal issues. In an age so focused on mental health, psychologist David Ramirez tells Sharpe, “there’s almost not a language of normal distress.” This is a fine book that nicely weaves together personal, sociological, and philosophical perspectives for a thoughtful view of how antidepressants are shaping many people’s lives. Agent: Eva Talmadge, Emma Sweeney Agency. (June)
Elle
"Intuitive and investigative, personal and historical, narrative-rich and fact-packed….Part of what makes this book riveting is the way Sharpe sets her own story within the larger context of cultural, social, and psychiatric changes that moved depression (along with other mental illnesses) into the medical spotlight."
Doctor - David Healy
"Beautifully written. . . . This is a book for anyone taking or thinking about taking antidepressants, anyone who prescribes them, anyone who wonders about their suitability-or anyone who wants a mirror held up to our time."
Emily Gould
"A fascinating look at how drugs and trends have shaped the identities of individuals and of a generation-provocative without being sensationalistic, skillfully written, and totally necessary."
Library Journal
This first book by Sharpe, previously the editor of Seed magazine's ScienceBlogs.com and the online editor of ReadyMade, is part memoir, part historical inquiry, and wholly a philosophical discussion on the widespread use of antidepressants among young people in the United States. Sharpe begins with an introduction covering the increasing popularity of antidepressants over the last few decades and, throughout the text, proposes that both medical practitioners and their clients should more carefully scrutinize the use, and distribution, of antidepressants. Sharpe mostly succeeds in balancing scientific data from reputable sources with personal narration, even if at times her prose—especially when discussing identity and youth—can stray into sounding overly ponderous. VERDICT Especially appropriate for Generation Y and millennial readers, this accessible and generally well-written work addresses important medical and psychological issues. It would make an excellent supplemental text for college-level courses in sociology, psychology, human development, and medical anthropology; the deeply personal story adds a human dimension to a controversial topic.—Rebecca Marrall, Western Washington Univ. Libs., Bellingham
Kirkus Reviews
A knowing account of what it is like to grow up on psychiatric medications. After a 20-minute session with a counselor during college, former scienceblogs.com editor Sharpe was prescribed Zoloft, and for most of the next 10 years she continued on antidepressants. That experience was not unusual in her generation, nor is it among young people today. The author questions the effect of such medication on adolescents who have not yet fully developed a sense of self. Antidepressants, she writes, got her moving, but they failed to give her the sense of direction that talk therapy later provided; she deplores the decline in access to talk therapy, a powerful complement to drug therapy. Sharpe interviewed or corresponded with dozens of other people about their experiences growing up on antidepressants, and their stories reveal a range of reactions. For some, the judgment that they had a chemical imbalance in the brain came as a relief, freeing them from a feeling of blame; for others, it made them feel like freaks. Besides her personal story and those of her interviewees, Sharpe provides a history of antidepressants, a revealing look at the politics behind the evolution of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders and an account of the rise of the biomedical model of mental illness, which holds that disorders like depression have biological causes and can be managed with pharmaceuticals. She also analyzes the effects of direct-to-consumer advertising by drug companies on the demand for antidepressants and the role of health insurance in determining patients' access to therapy modalities. Balanced and informative—an education for any parent considering psychiatric medication for a troubled adolescent.
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Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780062059734
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
  • Publication date: 6/5/2012
  • Series: P.S. Series
  • Pages: 336
  • Sales rank: 620,634
  • Product dimensions: 5.40 (w) x 7.82 (h) x 0.85 (d)

Meet the Author

KATHERINE SHARPE's writing has appeared in n+1, GOOD, and Washington Post Magazine, among many other publications. She lives in Brooklyn, New York.

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