Brain Implants and Other Depression Treatments: Overcoming the Stigma

Brain Implants and Other Depression Treatments: Overcoming the Stigma



Like many people who have struggled⁣ with a ‌mental illness, Emily Hollenbeck had ⁣plenty of stories of people not quite getting it. One⁣ memorable instance happened as she was about to be anesthetized for an ⁢electroconvulsive therapy ‍treatment. The anesthesiologist found out that she had a Ph.D. in psychology. ⁤“His eyes settle on me, and he ⁣goes, ‘Oh, that’s ⁢ironic.’” Her academic background​ should‍ have somehow prevented her illness, he‌ seemed to ⁣imply.
Being open⁤ about depression can bring judgment, and danger: “If you are honest about what you ⁤need for⁢ your mental health, you‍ can suffer consequences,” says Emily, who ​had DBS surgery in 2021. That can include lost jobs, lost⁣ relationships and perhaps most crucially, lost health care.
Those consequences are why I’m not ‌identifying Patient 001 by his name. He works⁣ in an intensely intellectual and competitive⁢ field,⁣ and with a new baby ​at home, he can’t risk losing business over people’s ⁣mistaken assumptions.
There’s stigma surrounding depression, and there’s stigma surrounding​ its treatments. When Patient 001 told his family he was getting experimental brain surgery, they didn’t understand. “At first,​ they were like, ‘You’re crazy. It’s unsafe.’”

2023-09-21 08:34:05
Source‌ from www.sciencenews.org

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