IndiaVision RSS Feed    Browse IndiaVision on Mobile    Subscribe to me on FriendFeed    Follow us on Twitter    Follow us on Facebook
News | Videos | Mobile | Jobs | Blog | Yellow Pages | Games | Jokes | Chat | e-Cards | Astrology | Articles | Recipes | Send Gifts
IndiaVision - An Informative Site on India
IndiaVision NEWS
Today : Friday - May 25, 2012, 11:58pm (GMT+5.5)
All News  
Top News
National News
International News
Business News
Sports News
   » Cricket
   » Football
Entertainment News
Sci - Tech
Politics News
Health & Fitness
Education
Travel
Lifestyle
Gulf News
Featured
 
::| Latest News
News in Pictures

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez is in Cuba again for more radiation therapy after he was operated on in February for a new cancerous tumour.

Health & Fitness
 

Calls for melancholia to be listed as 'mental illness'

Thursday - Mar 18, 2010, 09:01pm (GMT+5.5)
[+] Text [-]
London, March 18 (ANI): Psychiatrists are urging authorities to list melancholia as a distinct disease of the mind in the 2013 edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.

Gordon Parker, a professor of psychiatry at the University of NSW and director of the Black Dog Institute in Sydney, is calling on fellow experts from across the globe to help restore the ancient condition to the list after it was scrapped from the psychiatrists' diagnostic manual for mental illness in 1980.

Parker warned against the treatment of melancholic patients with psychotherapy or counselling, which, he said, could fall short of deliverance and also led to higher rates of suicide.

"We believe that melancholia is a separate diagnosis, a separate condition that requires quite different treatment to most of the other depressive conditions that are able to be diagnosed," The Telegraph quoted him as telling the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

He added: "At the moment we feel that many treatments are just being given in a universal, non-specific way. We need a more rational model. What that will actually do to the sales of antidepressants is, I think, predictable, but not likely to be an expansion."

But the move has left critics less than impressed, with some citing lack of enough evidence as a major issue with the idea.

Ian Hickie, the executive director of the Brain and Mind Institute, told the ABC: "It's an old idea that at the end of the day hasn't really stood up against other biological markers to show us different causes of depression and the ability of providing different treatments." (ANI)



|

Rating (Votes: )   

blog comments powered by Disqus

Other Articles:
Apollo plans 32 new hospitals in two years (18th Mar, 2010)
Women with gum disease likely to have premature babies (18th Mar, 2010)
Selenium may help fight diabetes in men (18th Mar, 2010)
Diabetics who have difficulty reaching out to others face early death risk (18th Mar, 2010)
Hypnotherapy effective for easing irritable bowel syndrome symptoms (18th Mar, 2010)
Loneliness linked to high BP in elderly (18th Mar, 2010)
Private hospitals disqualified from birth scheme in Madhya Pradesh (18th Mar, 2010)
Ice ball therapy offers hope of breast cancer cure (18th Mar, 2010)
Hair loss reduces prostate cancer risk in men (18th Mar, 2010)
Common cold symptoms may not end after nose spray (18th Mar, 2010)
Older non-smokers gain most from smoking bans (18th Mar, 2010)
Smokers who kick the butt gradually or cold turkey have similar success (18th Mar, 2010)
Brain damage associated with prenatal meth exposure (17th Mar, 2010)
Stomach wraps more effective approach to treat severe acid reflux (17th Mar, 2010)
Heart abnormalities diagnosed in World Trade Center workers (17th Mar, 2010)
Anti-obesity drugs unlikely to provide lasting health benefits (17th Mar, 2010)
Increased intake of leafy greens, nuts 'can cut colon cancer risk in men' (17th Mar, 2010)
Women prefer 'manly' men when poor health is their country's norm (17th Mar, 2010)
New nicotine replacement products offer hope to smokers (17th Mar, 2010)
Childhood abuse 'accelerates body's ageing process' (17th Mar, 2010)
Thin smokers at increased lung cancer risk (17th Mar, 2010)
Advance emergency contraception doesn't reduce pregnancy rates (17th Mar, 2010)
Obesity, passive smoking cut supply of oxygen to unborn child (17th Mar, 2010)
Integrated care 'cuts chronic back pain work disability' (17th Mar, 2010)
For depressed physically ill patients, antidepressants can prove beneficial (17th Mar, 2010)





Visit IndiaVision On Your Mobile
Buy Domain Names Online
Get Free Mail
Free Mail
Login | Sign Up
Download IndiaVision Free Toolbar
FireFox Safari Internet Explorer
 
Contact Us | Advertise with Us | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | Terms of Use
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...