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On February 12, 2010 WNYC’s Leonard Lopate interviews psychotherapist and author Gary Greenberg.  Greenberg is covered by Harpers, The New Yorker, NPR, so he has established himself as a voice people listen to.

More and more people have begun to ask themselves if they are happy, and if their unhappiness is a disease that can—and should—be treated by medication. Gary Greenberg discusses depression, drawing on medical scholarship, his 25 years as a psychotherapist, and his own experience with depression to show how it has been marketed as a widespread chronic disease, packaged by scientists, doctors, and marketing experts. In Manufacturing Depression: The Secret History of a Modern Disease Greenberg asks what we gain and lose with this approach.

I had to grit my teeth for the first 20 minutes of this interview, until Lopate and Greenberg got past their soundbite Q&A to the more nuanced discussion. By the end, I thought this was a useful podcast, but if I had stopped too soon I would been left stewing in my own reinforced biases and opinions. Here are my cryptic notes from their conversation as it unfolded:

  • Depression is a manufactured medical condition, a manufactured disease, not a real one.
  • This has been motivated by big-pharma greed for profits.  About 20 years ago, the FDA changed their rules and drug companies had to not only show their drugs were safe, but they also had to say which disease they were fixing.  so big pharma needed a disease in order to sell their anti-depressants.
  • Often times people are just unhappy, experiencing sorrow, and it is caused by their environment (death, loss of job, divorce…).  As a talk therapist, Greenberg wants to make sure that these external causes are not masked by drugs but dealt with in therapy, so the person then adjusts their environment and feels better.
  • The bio-chemical, molecular causes of depression have not been scientifically identified or proven (so it is not a disease).  This point really irritated me, because we are constantly treating (and saving or at least improving lives) medical conditions which are not completely understood at the molecular level.
  • Greenberg then acknowledges that in some cases there may be real bio-chemical causes to depression (not just an external event making us feel sad).
  • And then the discussion goes to: some people get stuck feeling sad, and don’t get better, and that “getting stuck” also might have bio-chemical causes that we don’t yet understand.
  • Greenberg says his own research methodology in defense of the book is historical, and not scientific.  He traces the development over the last 100 years of the drugs, the treatments, the governmental and industrial policies, and draws conclusions.  He, as the author, is a historian not a scientist.
  • Greenberg himself suffers from depression.  He participated in a trial for omega-3 fatty acid.  He was on the placebo, but the doctors concluded he was on the drug, because he got better.
  • Greenberg does refer his patients, who are depressed, and who he thinks warrant medication, to psychiatrists.


Greenberg is not totally against anti-depressants.  His main point is that he wants people to realize why they are taking them.  These drugs which effect emotions, consciousness, personalities … their effectiveness is often influenced by the point of view of the patient.  So that if the patient thinks they have a disease called depression, that belief itself changes the way the drugs work and the way the patient feels.  Greenberg would rather the patient think they are not sick, but are taking the anti-depressant to “lift and stabilize their mood.”  Greenberg also implies (or says directly) that if the patient takes this latter position, that they will be in a better position to tackle the other external, environmental issues that cause depression … exercise, eat well, find gainful employment, repair or get into a new relationship.  He also mentioned that he couldn’t believe (or he was amazed, astonished, or amused) that depressed people would trade diminished sex drive for feeling better taking a drug–I guess implying that sex is the better drug.

If you do listen to the podcast, and draw different conclusions, please comment and correct my notes.

I agree with Greenberg that it is important for the patient to not view the anti-depressant as a silver bullet which will “cure” everything.  Talk therapy is helpful (necessary) in identifying adjustments to your environment (and the way you approach your environment) that reduce depression.

The March 1 New Yorker has a book review of Manufacturing Depression, which I will read shortly.

While Greenberg was writing his book, he published an article in Harpers, which I read at the time.  He was interviewed then by NPR’s Jane Clayson on On Point.

The broadcast motivated 68 comments by listeners, so that’s a good sign that the content was controversial and provocative.

I like this comment the best.  Mike said, better than I:

What difference does it make if depression is environmental in cause? A gunshot wound is environmental in cause. Does this mean it should not be treated?

Another useful comment from k:

i take issue with the statement that “anti depressants don’t work’ – the study showed that anti depressants do not work for those who are not truly depressed and do not need them . Anti depressants DO WORK for those who are truly in need of them.

On Friday, December 4th, NPR’s Science Friday podcasts a debate about a new accreditation system for talk therapists.

On the surface I can’t help but agree with the premise that practitioners need to use the best science available, but this debate revealed there was a lot of subjectivity involved in whether a new accreditation system would motivate that. First the accreditation system wasn’t for the practitioners, it was for the trainers or “leaders” of practitioners, not the therapists themselves.  Second the debate seemed to be all about PhD versus PsiD or Doctor of Psychology programs.  The PhD program seems to be designed for researchers and professors, and PsiD for clinical psychologists.  (If I think of the therapists that I have used, I think most have been PhDs, but you know I’m not really sure.  So this debate is useful this way.)

The tone of the debate reminded me of the tone of economists. It seems like the field produces people that are told to sound certain of their positions, and not let any doubt creep in. This seems to be a symptom of the soft sciences. If you listen to a physicist talk they always seem to be filled with more unanswered questions than answers.

I can easily imagine that the approach to teaching practitioners is different that the approach to teaching researchers and fellow academics (did I reveal my bias?).

How solid is the science behind clinical psychology? A group of practitioners suggests a new accreditation system for clinical psychological research training programs may be necessary to help ensure that the methods used by clinical psychologists are up-to-date and backed by scientific research. Not everyone agrees that approach is warranted, however.

Panel interviewed: Richard McFall (Indiana U), Bruce Wampold (U of Wisc), Diane Chambless (U of Penn).

Listen to the podcast. There is a listen arrow in the upper right corner of the Science Friday page.

Related Posts:
Do Psychologists Reject Science?

Another from Dr. Becker-Phelps Psychology Today Making Change blog. Science and Psychology!!! Love this topic. Here’s a good quote from Leslie:

Cumulative psychological literature shows that when competing forms of therapy are compared, the outcomes almost always come out about the same. The quality of the therapist-patient alliance is the best predictor of outcome (see Let’s Face Facts article). This means that people who need help will benefit most from finding a qualified therapist with whom they connect and who expresses views that fit with how they think.

https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/making-change/200910/psychologists-reject-science-false-and-misleading-article

Leslie’s post has a lot of links to Newsweek, Psychology Today, Sciencedaily.com, and others. Good reading.  Don’t want to spoil you with the answer to the question.