Perhaps we need to look for another theory to explain the alleged connection between E and depression...
Over the past few decades, we have been subjected to a relentless medicalisation of everyday life by people who want to sell us sciencey solutions. Quacks from the $56bn (£28.26bn) international food supplement industry want you to believe that intelligence needs fish oil, and that obesity is just your body's way of crying out for their chromium pills ("to help balance sugar metabolism").
Similarly, quacks from the $600bn pharma industry sell the idea that depression is caused by low serotonin levels in the brain, and so you need drugs which raise the serotonin levels in your brain: you need SSRI antidepressants, which are "selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors".
That's the serotonin hypothesis. It was always shaky, and the evidence now is hugely contradictory. I'm not giving that lecture here, but as a brief illustration, there is a drug called tianeptine - a selective serotonin reuptake enhancer, not an inhibitor - and yet research shows this drug is a pretty effective treatment for depression too.
Meanwhile, in popular culture the depression/serotonin theory is proven and absolute, because it was never about research, or theory, it was about marketing, and journalists who pride themselves on never pushing pills or the hegemony will still blindly push the model until the cows come home.
The serotonin hypothesis will always be a winner in popular culture, even when it has flailed in academia, because it speaks to us of a simple, abrogating explanation, and plays into our notions of a crudely dualistic world where there can only be weak people, or uncontrollable, external, molecular pressures.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/jan/26/badscience
Over the past few decades, we have been subjected to a relentless medicalisation of everyday life by people who want to sell us sciencey solutions. Quacks from the $56bn (£28.26bn) international food supplement industry want you to believe that intelligence needs fish oil, and that obesity is just your body's way of crying out for their chromium pills ("to help balance sugar metabolism").
Similarly, quacks from the $600bn pharma industry sell the idea that depression is caused by low serotonin levels in the brain, and so you need drugs which raise the serotonin levels in your brain: you need SSRI antidepressants, which are "selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors".
That's the serotonin hypothesis. It was always shaky, and the evidence now is hugely contradictory. I'm not giving that lecture here, but as a brief illustration, there is a drug called tianeptine - a selective serotonin reuptake enhancer, not an inhibitor - and yet research shows this drug is a pretty effective treatment for depression too.
Meanwhile, in popular culture the depression/serotonin theory is proven and absolute, because it was never about research, or theory, it was about marketing, and journalists who pride themselves on never pushing pills or the hegemony will still blindly push the model until the cows come home.
The serotonin hypothesis will always be a winner in popular culture, even when it has flailed in academia, because it speaks to us of a simple, abrogating explanation, and plays into our notions of a crudely dualistic world where there can only be weak people, or uncontrollable, external, molecular pressures.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/jan/26/badscience