Antidepressants are safe to use (for 1-5 years)
Prediction market on manifold. According to a new preprint: "A substantial discordance exists between the typical 8-week duration of clinical trials and the median 5-year real-world use of antidepressants" Background A recent preprint published on medRxiv highlights a significant discrepancy between how antidepressants are tested and how they're actually used: Clinical trials for antidepressants typically last around 8 weeks (median duration) In real-world practice, patients take these medications for a median of 5 years (approximately 260 weeks) 88.5% of clinical trials last 12 weeks or less, with none extending beyond 52 weeks The study also found that few clinical trials monitor for withdrawal symptoms (3.8%), include tapering protocols (18.9%), or report post-treatment outcomes (1.9%). This raises the question of whether antidepressants are safe to use for the length they are prescribed and used. Resolution Criteria This market will resolve NO if by 2040 either: there is significant scientific evidence (as judged by me or AI) that long-term use of anti-depressants (1-5 years) is unsafe, such that the median length of use appears detrimental US national health organizations impose restrictions or publish recommendations against using or prescribing anti-depressants for lengths of 1-5 years Resolves YES otherwise. Update 2025-03-02 (PST) (AI summary of creator comment): Overprescription Threshold Clarification: The market will resolve NO if evidence shows that 50% or more of individuals currently taking antidepressants are, in effect, overprescribed (i.e., should not be taking them). This threshold is intended to capture a risk–benefit analysis where the actual benefit may not justify the level of prescription. Note: This additional criterion complements the existing resolution criteria by providing a quantitative threshold for assessing safety based on overprescription.
Liquidity: $100. Resolves: 3/1/2040.