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Mike Isaac's avatar

Outstandingly clear and helpful - thank you! It’s only anecdotal, but I’ve never observed craving for the discontinued antidepressant, whereas craving is a hallmark - just about pathognomonic - of discontinuation, ‘true’ withdrawal, of alcohol, tobacco or opiates. For what it’s worth, I think this is a meaningful difference between discontinuation phenomena and withdrawal, which describe distinct symptoms or states. Rapid reinstatement after abstinence is also something I haven’t met with antidepressants. And tolerance isn’t the same either. All of this argues that discontinuation/withdrawal is more than a semantic discussion.

Scott's avatar

There might be too many cooks in the kitchen right now with "withdrawal studies", but if the skeptics push hard enough against the concept, they might get more than what they bargained for.

It can happen qualitatively, amongst new categories, or quantitatively, by way of severity. In the short term I'm generally in favor of qualitative creep, because multiple realizability remains a fact in cognitive science. It is the quantitative kind that I get suspicious of. I agree both are taking place here.

However, when the charge of concept creep was applied to the trauma field over the last decade, it actually resulted in that field refining and adopting some rather strict, theory-driven / mechanistic definitions. Those definitions are now stricter than both DSM-4 & 5. Contrary to pop-psychology, they are not equivalent to "I feel wronged by X-event, therefore, Criterion A is fulfilled". They instead require simultaneous triadic processes, loading on phenomenological, neurological, and interpersonal domains ontop of event-causation. Hence, multiple realizability. (E.g., see complex trauma operationalizations by APA Div. 56 after 2019).

Who remembers the late 90s & early 2000s, when it was held that the function of pharmacology was to suppress signs of child abuse? A generation of pre-adolescents were misdiagnosed with bipolar disorder in the early 2000s, given, child abuse & neglect is widely known to cause dissociative processes that, to a psychiatrist unfamiliar with Munchausen syndrome by proxy, would likely label it "bipolar disorder". Today, textbooks in history of psychology are terrified of publishing it, but it is widely known in the public record.

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