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Depression sucks. It's a debilitating illness that affects the mind and the body -- and chances are that you or someone you love will battle depression at some point in your lifetime. This Is Depression is your guide through the darkness.A widely respected authority on the diagnosis and treatment of mood and anxiety disorders, psychiatrist Dr. Diane McIntosh provides all the information you need to understand and combat this serious and isolating disorder. Written in an accessible format with compassion and humor, Dr. McIntosh takes an evidence-based approach as she outlines the causes, impact, and treatment of depression and along the way provides encouragement that it can be overcome.This Is Depression reveals: how life experience, genetics, and hormones factor into depression, and explores the common overlap between depression and other mental and physical illnesses how all areas of life can be impacted by depression -- home, school, work, and relationships how to communicate about mental illness, whether with your doctor or your boss, a rude friend or nosy co-worker, or loved ones critical information about every available depression treatment -- and those that are on the horizon -- describing how antidepressants work, which treatments are worth taking, and which are useless.



About the Author

Diane McIntosh

Dr. Diane McIntosh graduated from Dalhousie University, where she completed an undergraduate degree in pharmacy before completing medical school and residency training in psychiatry. She is a clinical assistant professor at the University of British Columbia and has a community psychiatry practice, with a particular interest in the neurobiology of mood and anxiety disorders and ADHD. She is extensively involved in continuing medical education programs to colleagues nationally and internationally, including her own educational program, PsychedUp CME. She is the co-founder of SwitchRx (switchrx.ca) , the online psychiatric medication switching tool. Most recently, she co-founded wedomatter.org, which advocates for more compassionate care for psychiatric patients and their families.



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