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Did Antidepressants Depress Japan?
August 22, 2004
By KATHRYN SCHULZ
If you had lived in Japan for the last five years, you would know by now
that your kokoro is at risk of coming down with a cold. Your kokoro is not
part of your respiratory system. It is not a member of your family. Its
treatment lies well beyond the bailiwick of your average
ear, nose and throat doctor. Your kokoro is your soul, and the notion that
it can catch cold (kokoro no kaze) was introduced to Japan by the pharmaceutical
industry to explain mild depression to a country that almost never discussed
it.
Talking about depression in Japanese has always been a fundamentally different
undertaking than talking about it in English. In our language, the word
for depression is remarkably versatile. It can describe dips in landscapes,
economies or moods. It can refer to a devastating psychiatric condition
or a fleeting response to the Cubs losing the pennant. It can be subdivided
almost endlessly: major, minor, agitated, anxious, bipolar, unipolar, postpartum,
premenstrual.
But in Japanese, the word for depression (utsubyo) traditionally referred
only to major or manic depressive disorders and was seldom heard outside
psychiatric circles. To talk about feelings, people relied on the word ki
or ''vital energy.'' A literal translation of Japanese
synonyms for sorrow reads, to Westerners, like the kind of emotional troubles
that might befall a kitchen sink: ki ga fusagu, sadness because your ki
is blocked; ki ga omoi,
sadness because your ki is sluggish; ki ga meiru, sadness because your ki
is leaking.
Inside every neologism lies a compact history of cultural change -- think
McJobs, metrosexuals, the blogosphere. In Japan, the coining of kokoro no
kaze marked a sea change in people's thinking about depression. That transformation
was triggered by the pharmaceutical industry's other contribution to Japan
in 1999: along with providing a
catchy slogan for mild depression, the industry provided a cure: modern
antidepressants. More than a decade ago, Peter Kramer chronicled the capacity
of those drugs to reshape
the cultural landscape in ''Listening to Prozac.'' But back then the culture
they reshaped was the culture that had shaped them. Now, a huge campaign
by the pharmaceutical industry is publicizing mild depression, which most
Japanese didn't realize existed until recently. Japan has become a proving
ground for what we stand to gain and lose by the global expansion of Western
psychopharmacology.
Certainly, Japan is a compelling candidate for a mental health makeover.
Serious mental illness has long been inadequately addressed there. The suicide
rate is more than twice that of the United States. The average hospitalization
for mental illness lasts 390 days, compared
with the American average of less than 10. Until recently, depression was
regarded in much the same light as schizophrenia, and treatment was available
almost exclusively in institutions. There was no such thing as ''mild''
depression. Talk therapy was rare (and remains so), and quasi-official policy
dissuaded open discussion. ''The Ministry of Health considered 'depression'
a bad word,'' Yukio Saito, who helped found Japan's national
mental health hotline in 1971, said. For decades, Saito's requests to post
hotline ads in public places were routinely denied.
Last year, in a volte-face that reflects the shifting cultural tides of
the last five years, the Ministry of Health launched a committee to help
educate the public about depression. The actress Nana Kinomi talked publicly
about her postmenopausal depression in 2000. Other
celebrities followed suit. And last month, the Imperial Household Agency
acknowledged that Crown Princess Masako is on antidepressants and in counseling
for depression and an
''adjustment disorder.''
Over the past five years, according to the Japanese Bookstore Association,
177 books about depression have been published, compared with a mere 27
from 1990 to 1995. Earlier this month, the country's most popular online
bulletin board, Channel 2, carried 713 conversation threads about depression
-- more than music (582) or food (691) and almost as many as romance (716).
Depression has gone from bad word to buzzword. ''The media mention depression
almost every week,'' said Yutaka Ono, a psychiatrist and professor at Keio
University and one of
Japan's leading depression experts. People have even come to his office
with newspaper in hand, he said, and asked if what they have is depression.
Ono has been practicing for
25 years, but, he said, the number of patients who have consulted him about
mild depression has surged in the last 4 or 5. Most Japanese epidemiological
data doesn't
differentiate between degrees of depression, but the Ministry of Mental
Health and the leading psychiatrists with whom I spoke agree that mild depression
accounts for
the vast majority of new cases -- of which there are a staggering number.
According to IMS Health, a company that tracks global health care and pharmaceutical
information,
depression-related doctor vists in Japan increased 46 percent from 1999
to 2003.
Disease rates typically increase because more people get sick or because
diagnosis and reporting improve. But neither explanation fully accounts
for the rise in mild
depression in Japan. ''There's no question in my mind that severe clinical
depression is a real disease,'' said Arthur Kleinman, a psychiatry professor,
chairman of Harvard's
anthropology department and co-editor of the definitive work ''Culture and
Depression.'' ''I could take you all over the world, and you would have
no difficulty recognizing severely depressed people in completely different
settings. But mild depression is a totally
different kettle of fish. It allows us to relabel as depression an enormous
number of things.''
As the idea of mild depression has gained traction in Japan, it may be that
more people haven't gotten sick; they have simply come to define what's
ailing them as a disease.
Mild depression is not contagious, but it can be considered, in the root
sense of the word, communicable -- and for the last five years, the pharmaceutical
industry and the media have communicated one consistent message: your suffering
might be a sickness. Your leaky vital
energy, like your runny nose, might respond to drugs.
Looking back, Naoya Mitake thinks he might have first experienced depression
while in college. ''I was about to graduate, and my friends had all been
hired by Japanese
companies,'' he recalled. ''I couldn't imagine doing that, but I didn't
know what else to do.'' He felt incompetent and worthless, unable to make
decisions about his future. He might have been depressed back then, but,
he said, ''the word never came to mind.''
Mitake, now 39, steered clear of corporate Japan and instead became an associate
professor of comparative politics at Komazawa University. In 2001, he consulted
a
doctor about his longstanding battles with insomnia and fatigue. The doctor
prescribed antidepressants -- a common treatment for insomnia -- but Mitake's
sleep didn't
improve. (People on antidepressants frequently have to try different pills
and dosages before finding an effective treatment.) Meanwhile, Mitake became
increasingly anxious,
frightened and sad. He stopped taking the first set of antidepressants,
and his problems persisted. This time, he said, he knew he was ''extremely
depressed.''
Mitake is handsome, warm and articulate. He talked about his experiences
with an appealing blend of curiosity and tranquillity, although the emotions
he described were far from tranquil. ''I'd wake up in the middle of the
night with this strange, strong anxiety,'' he remembered. ''I
couldn't be alone. I felt too afraid. I couldn't teach my classes anymore.''
Three months after his mood plummeted, he turned to antidepressants again
and felt considerably better but not perfect. For almost two years, he cycled
through various pills, with his melancholy waxing and waning. It wasn't
until the summer of 2003, when he accidentally discovered a nonmedical treatment
of his own, that his depression lifted.
In the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual -- the American Psychiatric Association's
compendium of mental disorders -- depression is divided into discrete categories.
In reality,
though, there is no discernible line where moodiness crosses over into mild
depression, or mild depression into severe. Moreover, mild depression does
not feel mild to those who experience it. When I asked Mitake if his soul
had a cold, he laughed, then paused and said he shouldn't have laughed.
''The phrase did some good. It changed people's perception and made depression
easier to talk about.''
In a country famous for its reticence, that is no small achievement -- especially
since talking about depression is one effective way to treat it. But counseling
is still rare in Japan; in books and speeches, Yutaka Ono has tried to encourage
people to discuss their depression with a professional, but, he said, psychotherapy
has been far slower to catch on than medication. The current idiom also
has its limits: Mitake, for one, said he never uses the
expression kokoro no kaze. ''Maybe for some people depression is like a
cold,'' he said. ''If so, their colds are a lot worse than mine. Or my depression
is a lot worse than theirs.''
For 1,500 years of Japanese history, Buddhism has encouraged the acceptance
of sadness and discouraged the pursuit of happiness -- a fundamental distinction
between Western and Eastern attitudes. The first of Buddhism's four central
precepts is: suffering exists. Because sickness and death are inevitable,
resisting them brings more misery, not less. ''Nature shows us that life
is sadness, that everything dies or ends,'' Hayao Kawai, a clinical
psychologist who is now Japan's commissioner of cultural affairs, said.
''Our mythology repeats that; we do not have stories where anyone lives
happily ever after.'' Happiness
is nearly always fleeting in Japanese art and literature. That bittersweet
aesthetic, known as aware, prizes melancholy as a sign of sensitivity.
This traditional way of thinking about suffering helps to explain why mild
depression was never considered a disease. ''Melancholia, sensitivity, fragility
-- these are not negative things in a Japanese context,'' Tooru Takahashi,
a psychiatrist who worked for Japan's National Institute of Mental Health
for 30 years, explained. ''It never occurred to us that we should try to
remove them, because it never occurred to us that they were bad.''
The medical model of depression, by contrast, sees suffering as pathological
and prescribes a pill in response. That outlook is partly pragmatic: call
depression a disease and health insurance covers its treatment.
Patient advocates also argue that reclassifying depression as a disease
helps to diminish its stigma. But probably most important, the pharmaceutical
industry has the financial incentive to recast moods as medical problems,
creating what Kleinman calls ''a pharmacology of remorse and regret.'' It
is, Kleinman said, ''one of the most powerful aspects of globalization,
and Japan is at its leading edge.''
In the late 1980's, Eli Lilly decided against selling Prozac in Japan after
market research there revealed virtually no demand for antidepressants.
Throughout the 90's, when Prozac and other selective serotonin reuptake
inhibitors, or S.S.R.I.'s, were traveling the strange road from chemical
compound to cultural phenomenon in the West, the drugs and the disease alike
remained virtually unknown in Japan.
Then, in 1999, a Japanese company, Meiji Seika Kaisha, began selling the
S.S.R.I. Depromel. Meiji was among the first users of the phrase kokoro
no kaze. The next year,
GlaxoSmithKline -- maker of the antidepressant Paxil -- followed Meiji into
the market. Koji Nakagawa, GlaxoSmithKline's product manager for Paxil,
explained: ''When other pharmaceutical companies were giving up on developing
antidepressants in Japan, we went ahead for a very simple reason: the successful
marketing in the United States and Europe.''
Direct-to-consumer drug advertising is illegal in Japan, so the company
relied on educational campaigns targeting mild depression. As Nakagawa put
it: ''People didn't know they were suffering from a disease. We felt it
was important to reach out to them.'' So the company formulated a tripartite
message: ''Depression is a disease that anyone can get. It can be cured
by medicine. Early detection is important.''
Like the Bush administration, GlaxoSmithKline has spent the last four years
staying relentlessly on-message. Its 1,350 Paxil-promoting medical representatives
visit selected
doctors an average of twice a week. Awareness campaigns teach general practitioners
and the public to recognize the following symptoms of depression (the translation
is the
company's): ''head feels heavy, cannot sleep, stiff shoulders, backache,
tired and lazy, no appetite, not intrigued, feel depressed.''
The psychiatrist Yutaka Ono advocates raising awareness about depression,
but GlaxoSmithKline's marketing made him uncomfortable: ''They ran a very
intense campaign about mild depression where a beautiful young lady comes
out all smiles and says, 'I went to a doctor and now I'm happy.' You know,
depression is not that easy. And if it is that easy, it might not be depression.''
Whatever misgivings Ono and other doctors may have about the medicalization
of mild depression, it has been a resounding financial success. As one psychiatrist,
Kenji Kitanishi, noted wryly, ''Japanese psychiatry is in the |
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