Signs of clinical depression are varied, as are ways to treat it

EDITOR’S NOTE — See related story today, “Peninsula Behavioral Health medical director: Depression among top cause of workplace absences” — https://www.peninsuladailynews.com/article/20150908/NEWS/309089986

UNLIKE ORDINARY TIMES of feeling blue, which usually last a couple of days, episodes of major depression, sometimes called clinical depression, can linger for weeks — or much longer.

Symptoms include persistent sadness, apathy, inattention, fatigue, despair and proneness to accidents or errors.

Happiness becomes a rare or wholly absent emotion.

Other signs:

■   Persistent anxious or “empty” feelings.

■   Feelings of guilt, worthlessness, or helplessness.

■   Irritability, restlessness.

■   Loss of interest in activities or hobbies once pleasurable, including sex.

■   Difficulty concentrating, remembering details and making decisions.

■   Insomnia, early morning wakefulness or excessive sleeping.

■   Overeating or appetite loss.

■   Aches or pains, headaches, cramps or digestive problems that do not ease even with treatment.

■   Thoughts of suicide, suicide attempts.

The average age of onset is 32 years, although depression has been diagnosed in children as young as 3 years old, and more than 3 percent of teenagers experience seriously debilitating depressive disorders.

In elders, it can lead people to stop caring for themselves, with life-threatening consequences.

Nearly 7 percent of adults in the U.S. experience a depressive disorder, with women 70 percent likelier to exhibit it than men, although men, especially elders, show a higher risk of suicide.

Variants include postpartum depression among new mothers and seasonal affective disorder (SAD), with onset during winter months, when there is less natural light. Depression also may follow traumatic events, including loss of loved ones.

Cognitive behavioral therapy can be effective in reframing negative thought patterns. A number of prescription medications can restore chemical imbalances in the brain.

Dr. Josh Jones, medical director of Peninsula Behavioral Health, said so-called talk therapy helps transfer thoughts from the side of the brain that feels emotions to the analytical side that can deal with them.

Electroconvulsive therapy, far shorter and subtler than the old so-called “shock therapy,” also may relieve depression when other therapies are ineffective, he said.

And people with depression can fight the disability — by making themselves moving targets.

“You have to push yourself,” he said.

“You’re not going to want to get up and exercise. You’re going to have to push yourself.

“You have to, have to, have to.”

Resources describing depression and its treatments abound online. One is the National Institutes of Mental Health at http://tinyurl.com/depression-pdn.

— Source: National Institutes of Mental Health, HelpGuide.org

More in News

Highway 112 partially reopens to single-lane traffic

Maintenance crews have reopened state Highway 112 between Sekiu… Continue reading

Laken Folsom, a Winter Ice Village employee, tries to remove leaves that blew in from this week’s wind storm before they freeze into the surface of the rink on Thursday. The Winter Ice Village, operated by the Port Angeles Chamber of Commerce in the 100 block of West Front Street, opens today and runs through Jan. 5. Hours are from noon to 9 p.m. daily. New this year is camera showing the current ice village conditions at www.skatecam.org. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Ice village opens in Port Angeles

Laken Folsom, a Winter Ice Village employee, tries to remove leaves that… Continue reading

Fort PDA receiver protecting assets

Principal: New revenue streams needed

Ella Biss, 4, sits next to her adoptive mother, Alexis Biss, as they wait in Clallam County Family Court on Thursday for the commencement of the ceremony that will formalize the adoption of Ella and her 9-year-old brother John. (Emma Maple/Peninsula Daily News)
Adoption ceremony highlights need for Peninsula foster families

State department says there’s a lack of foster homes for older children, babies

Legislature to decide fate of miscalculation

Peninsula College may have to repay $339K

The Sequim Valley Lions Club donated $5,000 the Sequim Unit of the Boys Girls Clubs of the Olympic Peninsula.
Mary Budke, on left, and Norma Turner, on right, received the donation on behalf of the Boys Girls Clubs.
Lions donation

The Sequim Valley Lions Club donated $5,000 the Sequim Unit of the… Continue reading

Jae McGinley
Jae McGinley selected for fellowship, scholarship

Jae McGinley has been selected for the Next Generation… Continue reading

A street sweeper on I Street in Port Angeles cleans up the street along the curbs of all the debris that blew down during Tuesday evening’s storm. Thousands were without power at the peak of the storm. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Storm causes power outages, road closures

Smaller weather system may hit Friday

Port Angeles funds lodging tax requests

Sixteen applications to undergo review

Port Townsend’s Water Street sewer project gets funds

City council authorizes contracts; construction to start in January

Port of Port Angeles commissioners approve 2025 budget

Board OKs project that would treat seawater to make it less acidic