Monthly Archives: August 2010

“…uncontrollable depression and suicide.”

An Australian Senate candidate for the conservative Family First Party, Wendy Francis, tweeted some comments on Sunday that appalled me, including this one:

“Gay marriage = kids with no mothers or no fathers, parentless generation; uncontrollable depression and suicide. Is that the Aust we want?”

Wait up Wendy – parents are not responsible for the depression or suicide of their children. Single parents are not responsible for the depression or suicide of their children. They are not.

Is there any evidence to support a causal link between the sexual orientation of your parents and your depression? I think not. Why is same sex marriage linked to depression and suicide by Wendy Francis? It makes no sense to me, or to the Australian electorate I hope.

I am truly dismayed that depression can be so misunderstood, misrepresented.
…and, for the record, I do want an Australia that understands and accepts same sex marriages.

I thought more conversation about depression and suicide was needed, now I am convinced. I mean, I am even more convinced this dialogue is necessary.

Blogging on…

Tough Choice: Smoke and die v. Quit and die

I have admitted to the guilty pleasure of being a sometimes smoker, although I happily identify as a non-smoker. I am well aware of the negative consequences of smoking and I choose not to indulge.

I’m not an addictive or automatic smoker, fortunately for me I can take ‘em or leave ‘em. Even so I struggle to watch an episode of Mad Men, where even the doctors have ashtrays on their desks, without longing for a cigarette.

Whatever additive tendencies I may have, smoking is not one of them. I enjoy every cigarette and contentedly go without a puff for years at a time. It’s not the same for others. Many, who know the risks and health affects of smoking and including some who disapprove of it, are also dependent on being able to light up another cigarette. Addicted.

There is a wonder drug, Champix, that blocks nicotine receptors in the brain and supports even the most addicted smokers to ‘give up’. Most will understand giving up to mean the cessation of smoking, and for some taking the drug giving up is more sinister, as some will die by suicide.

Now an argument rages about the greater harm cigarettes, which 16,000 deaths a year in Australia are attributed to, or Champix (the nicotine inhibiting wonder drug) the use of which was linked to 55 deaths by suicide in a week, in the US last November.

The US Food and Drug Administration now requires warnings on the medication “…highlighting the risk of serious neuropsychiatric symptoms in patients using these products. These symptoms include changes in behavior, hostility, agitation, depressed mood, suicidal thoughts and behavior, and attempted suicide. The added warnings are based on the continued review of postmarketing adverse event reports for varenicline and bupropion received by the FDA. These reports included those with a temporal relationship between the use of varenicline or bupropion and suicidal events and the occurrence of suicidal ideation and suicidal behavior in patients with no history of psychiatric disease.”
http://www.fda.gov/Safety/MedWatch/SafetyInformation/SafetyAlertsforHumanMedicalProducts/ucm170090.htm 1 July 2009

Apparently Pfizer, who market Chapix, have said a causal link between the drug and suicidal ideation has yet to be established. Now they sound a bit a tobacco company…

Established causal link or not I wanted to mention that Champix has been linked to insomnia, aggression, depression, suicide and quitting cigarettes.

Hope and resilience in photographs

The Black Dog Institute is a not-for-profit, educational, research, clinical and community-oriented facility offering specialist expertise in depression and bipolar disorder.

The entries have been judged for Snapping the Black Dog: A Photographic Competition about Hope and Resilience in the Fight against Depression.

Wonderful poignant images that capture the essence of both hope and resilience. Apart from the photography competition the site provides information, explanations and links to support resources.

Its a fabulous resource where more can be learned about depression and bi-polar disorder, including fact and information sheets that can be downloaded.