Search Our Site

Too Quiet? Music Player at the Bottom of Every Page

WMR Editors' Blogs

WMR's Copyright Use

Unless specified as Creative Commons the images and posts of Cassandra Tribe, Brightfire Woman and Felicia Peterson are All Rights Reserved and any usage requires their permission. ( Contact)

We also post works that are Public Domain in The U.S. and Copyrighted low resolution images and content, under the U.S. Copyright law of Fair Use for the purposes of commentary, criticism, news reporting, teaching, and scholarship; such usage is not an infringement of the holder's rights.

 Public Domain Works

New Art Work Coming This Fall

For Canvas and Fine Prints by Brightfire Woman Visit her Imagekind Store  

For t-shirts, cards and gifts visit:   

U.S.A. * CANADA * United Kingdom * Germany * France * Spain * Portugal *Australia 

*NewZealand * Japan * Brazil

Copy the banner code below: 

 

<p><span class="ssNonEditable full-image-block"><span><a href="http://www.justabowlofcherries.com/" target="_blank"><img style="width: 250px;" src="http://www.womansmojorisings.com/storage/JBCforbannersstep%20III.png?__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION=1323238242082" alt="" /></a></span></span></p>

 

 

Bi-polar

 

(g) Leanings

 

 

Bi-polar (g)Leanings is a website creative journal, posted by Brightfire Woman, which focuses on the public domain works of artists and writers that have historically been known as working with mental illness; her own art, poetry, and her perceptions of living and creating with it and the occassional post concerning medication, treatment and theories.

Nobody tells this to people who are beginners.  I wish someone had told me.  All of us who do creative work, we get into it because we have good taste.  But there is this gap.  For the first couple years you make stuff, it's just not that good.  It's trying to be good, it has potential, but it's not.  But your taste, the thing that got you into the game, is still killer.  And your taste is why your work disappoints you.  Alot of people never get past this phase; they quit.  Most people I know who do interesting, creative work went through years of this. We know our work doesn't have this special thing that we want it to have.  We all go through this.  And if you are just starting out,  or you are still in this phase, you gotta know that it's normal and the most important thing you can do is do a lot of work.  Put yourself on a deadline so that every week you finish one piece.  It's only by going through a volume of work that you will close that gap, and your work will be as good as your ambitions. And I took longer to do this than anyone I've ever met. It's gonna take awhile.  It's normal to take awhile.  You just gotta fight your way through.

 

Ira Glass

 

Entries in antidepressants (1)

Sunday
Mar072010

2006 New England Journal Reported Antidepressant Studies Withheld

 

The makers of antidepressants like Prozac and Paxil never published the results of about a third of the drug trials that they conducted to win government approval, misleading doctors and consumers about the drugs’ true effectiveness, a new analysis has found.

In published trials, about 60 percent of people taking the drugs report significant relief from depression, compared with roughly 40 percent of those on placebo pills. But when the less positive, unpublished trials are included, the advantage shrinks: the drugs outperform placebos, but by a modest margin, concludes the new report, which appears Thursday in The New England Journal of Medicine.

Previous research had found a similar bias toward reporting positive results for a variety of medications; and many researchers have questioned the reported effectiveness of antidepressants. But the new analysis, reviewing data from 74 trials involving 12 drugs, is the most thorough to date. And it documents a large difference: while 94 percent of the positive studies found their way into print, just 14 percent of those with disappointing or uncertain results did. 

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/17/health/17depress.html?_r=1&ex=1358226000&en=b9becee3f0d749dd&ei=5088&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss

The researchers obtained unpublished data on the more recently approved drugs from the F.D.A.’s Web site. For older drugs, they tracked down hard copies of unpublished studies through colleagues, or using the Freedom of Information Act. They checked all of these studies against databases of published research, and also wrote to the companies that conducted the studies to ask if specific trials had been published.

They found that 37 of 38 trials that the F.D.A. viewed as having positive results were published in journals. The agency viewed as failed or unconvincing 36 other trials, of which 14 made it into journals.

But 11 of those 14 journal articles “conveyed a positive outcome” that was not justified by the underlying F.D.A. review, said the new study’s lead author, Dr. Erick H. Turner, a psychiatrist and former F.D.A. reviewer who now works at Oregon Health and Sciences University and the Portland Veterans Affairs Medical Center. His co-authors included researchers at Kent State University and the University of California, Riverside.

 



Copyright © 2009-2012, Woman's Mojo Risings/Brightfire Woman. All rights reserved.