Literature DB >> 30786241

History of Psychopharmacology.

Joel T Braslow1,2, Stephen R Marder1,3.   

Abstract

We live in an age of psychopharmacology. One in six persons currently takes a psychotropic drug. These drugs have profoundly shaped our scientific and cultural understanding of psychiatric disease. By way of a historical review, we try to make sense of psychiatry's dependency on psychiatric drugs in the care of patients. Modern psychopharmacology began in 1950 with the synthesis of chlorpromazine. Over the course of the next 50 years, the psychiatric understanding and treatment of mental illness radically changed. Psychotropic drugs played a major part in these changes as state hospitals closed and psychotherapy gave way to drug prescriptions. Our review suggests that the success of psychopharmacology was not the consequence of increasingly more effective drugs for discrete psychiatric diseases. Instead, a complex mix of political economic realities, pharmaceutical marketing, basic science advances, and changes in the mental health-care system have led to our current infatuation with psychopharmacology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  antidepressants; antipsychotics; history; mental illness; psychopharmacology; treatment

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 30786241     DOI: 10.1146/annurev-clinpsy-050718-095514

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Annu Rev Clin Psychol        ISSN: 1548-5943            Impact factor:   18.561


  5 in total

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Journal:  Diabetologia       Date:  2021-11-29       Impact factor: 10.122

2.  How Pharmaceuticals Mask Health and Social Inequity.

Authors:  Enrico G Castillo; Joel Tupper Braslow
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3.  Psychosis Without Meaning: Creating Modern Clinical Psychiatry, 1950 to 1980.

Authors:  Joel T Braslow
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2021-08-18

Review 4.  Putting the "mental" back in "mental disorders": a perspective from research on fear and anxiety.

Authors:  Vincent Taschereau-Dumouchel; Matthias Michel; Hakwan Lau; Stefan G Hofmann; Joseph E LeDoux
Journal:  Mol Psychiatry       Date:  2022-01-26       Impact factor: 13.437

Review 5.  History of the dopamine hypothesis of antipsychotic action.

Authors:  Mary V Seeman
Journal:  World J Psychiatry       Date:  2021-07-19
  5 in total

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