The aim of this blog is to highlight persons in the media who tout the chemical imbalance theory as a fact. It's highly unprofessional and misleading to do so and this blog demands that any statements relating to the 'chemical imbalance' myth should either be backed up with supporting evidence or retracted.
Where possible, each person featured on this blog has been contacted via Twitter, email, and/or Facebook and asked to retract their statements or provide supporting evidence.
Once supporting evidence has been shown they will be removed from this blog. Moreover, if they retract their original statements they will also be removed from this blog.
As you will see from these lists, many of the authors are household names and influence those who follow them. This has to stop. The chemical imbalance line was created by the pharmaceutical industry, moreover, Eli Lilly, who launched the first of the SSRIs, Prozac.
Those featured on this list need to do their research.
Bob Fiddaman (Author of the Fiddaman Blog)
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Where possible, each person featured on this blog has been contacted via Twitter, email, and/or Facebook and asked to retract their statements or provide supporting evidence.
Once supporting evidence has been shown they will be removed from this blog. Moreover, if they retract their original statements they will also be removed from this blog.
As you will see from these lists, many of the authors are household names and influence those who follow them. This has to stop. The chemical imbalance line was created by the pharmaceutical industry, moreover, Eli Lilly, who launched the first of the SSRIs, Prozac.
Those featured on this list need to do their research.
Bob Fiddaman (Author of the Fiddaman Blog)
--
Devrupa Rakshit
Devrupa Rakshit is a journalist and Associate Editor at The Swaddle
Quote: "Owing to the absence of a medical recognition of the condition, Maladaptive Daydreaming (MD ) is often treated as a neural biochemical imbalance rather than an addictive symptom stemming from trauma, or a void in the individual’s life. In terms of medication, one study had found that fluvoxamine, a drug commonly used to treat OCD, can help control MD as well."
Publication ~ The Swaddle
Read what the experts say HERE
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