Teen Vogue Talks Teen Depression
Posted on 16/02/2009 | 0 Comments
Came across this good article about stigma and teen depression by Leigh Belz over at Teen Vogue. Check it out!
It all started in the sixth grade," says Jenny,* a seventeen-year-old from Sacramento, California. "I was heavier than a lot of the other girls in my class, and that made me feel self-conscious. My mom and dad were having problems at the time, too, and I kept it all to myself. That's how my depression began. And it got worse as I got older--I became more anxious and withdrawn, and it became something I couldn't control. You never would have known it, though. I always had a smile on my face." By eighth grade, Jenny says her depression was something she could no longer hide. "That year, when I was fourteen, I tried to commit suicide," she reveals. "Afterward, I was so ashamed of myself. But I didn't know how to deal with it. I didn't want to talk to anyone." According to Harvard Medical School, about 8 percent of teens will experience depression before they reach adulthood. In addition, the U.S. Surgeon General reports that between 10 and 15 percent of teenagers have some symptoms of depression at any given time. What separates depression from regular, everyday sadness? "Time," says Richard E. Nelson, Ph.D., author of The Power to Prevent Suicide (Free Spirit Publishing). "Depression is something that lasts at least ten days," he says. "Many students may get to school by 8:00 in the morning and feel sad, then are happy by 10:30, and then get sad again at 1:30. That's normal." Depression, he says, is more of a constant. According to experts, many teens experience mood swings simply as a result of surging hormone levels. But the condition of depression is also often characterized by behavioral changes like low energy levels, oversleeping (or, conversely, trouble falling asleep), irritability, changes in appetite, and isolation. "Teens don't show symptoms of depression the same way adults do. Generally, I break teen depression into three categories," Nelson explains. "Ten percent is clinical, 10 percent is chemical, and the largest category in young people is what I call situational--related to something happening in their lives. For this reason, depression can manifest itself in different ways and intensities." Being depressed doesn't just mean you're crying all the time--instead, you also may not want to hang out with your friends or you may have constant stomachaches that land you in the nurse's office.
Read the full article here.
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This is a great set of comments and rings very true.
I totally agree that scientists (just like everyone else) have their biases and foibles. After all, scientists are human beings too! But science is different than scientists.
The scientific method is the most objective frame that we have by which to evaluate and predict. Science is not about finding truth. It is only about being less wrong most of the time. The scientific method (experimental design and mathematics) gives us the ability to test what we believe. The scientific method is not used to prove something is correct, on the contrary, the scientific method is designed to prove that something is not correct! It is designed to test what is called the “null hypothesis”. It takes ideas that come out of left field (or wherever else they come from) and puts those ideas to an independent test.
t does not drive our beliefs. It does however challenge our beliefs. In that way it is self-correcting. Of course scientific inquiry and understanding lives within a wider social context. That is one of the great features of science.
But gravity is gravity, social context notwithstanding. And thus it is nasty, brutish and long. As Brecht said, (something like this) - the purpose of science is to save us from everlasting error.
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