| The
Chemistry of Happiness Seroxat
rivals Prozac as the world's favourite anti-depressant. But not everyone is smiling.
The Observer, April 2002
For some unfathomable reason, the key episodes
often occur in supermarkets. Two years ago,
Jenny Stanaway returned home from her work
as a cleaner and went for her big weekly shop
in Swindon. Not long in the busy aisles, she
was struck by a panic attack and an urgent
desire to flee. She abandoned her shopping
but the attacks persisted. After three or four,
she went to her doctor and was told that for
a woman of her age, in the midst of her menopause,
such events were not unheard of. She was prescribed
a drug called Seroxat. 'That was the beginning
of the end,' she says. 'If I'd have known what
it was, there is no way I would have taken
it.'
Ian Allen was in a supermarket in Gloucester
when he decided to buy 150 tablets of paracetamol.
The sales assistant told him, quite properly,
that he was not allowed to sell him anything
like that amount. 'But I live miles away,' Allen
explained.
'I can't come running here every few days.'
Eventually Allen, who is an eloquent 38-year-old
wildlife photographer, persuaded the assistant
that he should sell him as much as he wanted.
'Don't tell anyone,' the employee said. 'And
don't do anything stupid with them.'
'This was rather ironic,' Allen says now. 'Because
that was exactly what I was about to do.'
The brain remains the great unconquered organ
of scientific and medical knowledge. Ian Allen
is fond of saying that if we knew as little about
the workings of the heart as we do about the
brain, then nobody would dare to perform open-heart
surgery. When the brain malfunctions we are often
at a loss to detect why, and we are still groping
towards effective treatments. Paracetamol is
a blunt tool most often used in the masking of
headaches, but Allen's intended use was for suicide.
He believes that this was a side effect of his
doctor prescribing him a drug known as an SSRI
- selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitor - a
family of medications once recognised only by
the tradename of Prozac, but now also marketed
as Seroxat, Cipramil, Lustral, Efexor, Dutonin
and Faverin. They are most commonly prescribed
as treatments for depression, but each year new
applications are being found for them. The molecular
shape of the drugs is designed to be highly specific,
but they are often prescribed for the most unspecific
of symptoms: anxiety, insomnia, shyness, natural
sadness following bereavement. The drugs are
now so widely used that it is difficult to find
any community or large organisation without members
who are taking them.
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