As US health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has drawn a lot of attention for promoting pseudoscience and disproven theories, especially on vaccines. He is using that playbook on another major public health issue: gun violence, which remains the leading cause of death for kids in America. When it comes to school shootings and other mass shootings, here’s what RFK Jr. wants you to believe: It’s not the guns, he argues, it’s the pills.

The fringe theory that antidepressants can cause people to turn violent has been around for decades, focused primarily on selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or SSRIs, which are the most common class of these drugs. But extensive research by mental health and violence prevention experts has found no credible evidence that antidepressants cause or contribute to mass shootings.

The generalized claim that SSRIs can make people violent—and that they supposedly gave rise to the shootings epidemic—traces in part to an unscientific anti-Prozac campaign in the 1990s from the Church of Scientology and gained some traction in online forums after the Columbine High School massacre in 1999. Disgraced conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, who helped create a miasma of lies claiming that the 2012 mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School was faked, has also peddled the theory.

Proponents of the SSRI theory use anecdotal, often unconfirmed details about shooters’ health histories to argue causation. But multiple studies from experts in psychiatry, law enforcement, and public health show that the theory has no merit. Data on shooters spanning more than a decade from the FBI’s Behavioral Analysis Unit has been used specifically to examine the claim that psychiatric drugs are at the root of school shootings; independent researchers concluded from the FBI data that “most school shooters were not previously treated with psychotropic medications—and even when they were, no direct or causal association was found.”

  • hector@lemmy.today
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    15 hours ago

    The thing you have to realize about antidepressants, they don’t work.

    They beat a placebo by 1%, and you can be sure researchers doing the trial for the company pulled it there for them, and any subsequent trials.

    Now placebo effects are real, for some people it actually even releases the body’s endogenous drugs if you think you got the drugs. The Power of Nothing, an article in the New Yorker over ten years back told of studies showing different color placebos were more effective for different conditions, but also that when recipients got a placebo opiate painkiller, and double blindly gave the naloxone, that antagonist, it reversed the effect. Rather proving they tricked their body to release it’s own endorphines.

    So it will help some people to get those anti-depressants, not because of them though. I don’t know what rfk is talking about and he’s constitutionally full of shit, a manipulator of people for personal benefit. But anti depressants are fake medicine.