Much attention in recent years has focused on the extent to which the risk of metabolic disturbances, and most fundamentally of glucose and insulin, are prevalent among those treated for depressive and other mood disorders (Osimo et al., 2021; Scott et al., 2019; Tickell et al., 2022). Public concern has also focused on the increased rates of premature mortality in those with chronic depression and other major mental disorders, with a significant proportion of that risk being due to early-onset cardiovascular disease (particularly among women). A common assumption is that much of this risk is a consequence of medical treatments for depression, and their possible adverse effects such as increased risk of diabetes, presumably mediated by long-term weight gain.
Question
What is the true nature of the relationship between metabolic disturbance, specifically of glucose and insulin metabolism, and depressive and other mood disorders?
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- 11 October 2023, e2
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Will new brain circuit focused methods (EEG, fMRI etc) lead to more personalized care options?
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- 11 October 2023, e12
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What childhood and related developmental factors are relevant to the risk of onset and course of depression and other mood disorders?
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- 11 October 2023, e5
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Does declining social connection, and increased reported loneliness, explain the apparent increase in depressive and other mood disorders, particularly among younger people?
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- 11 October 2023, e6
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Are depressive and other mood disorders best conceptualized as disorders of energy, and related motor activity, rather than mood?
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- 11 October 2023, e4
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To what extent are depressive or other mood disorders a consequence of earlier traumatic experiences?
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- 12 October 2023, e7
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What are the likely impacts of climate change on rates of depression and other mood disorders? What actions can be taken by individuals, communities or nations to reduce those impacts?
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- 11 October 2023, e3
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Repurposing of recreational drugs: will these new ‘medicines’ (e.g., psychedelics, psilocybin, cannabinoids, LSD, MDMA, ketamine) deliver short- or longer-term benefits for those with depressive or other mood disorders?
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- 13 October 2023, e8
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Does altering your diet reduce your risk of depression and are any dietary manipulations an effective treatment for depression?
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- 11 October 2023, e9
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Will new brain stimulation techniques precipitate a new wave of therapies?
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- 11 October 2023, e10
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Is immune activation simply a non-specific marker of depression severity or chronicity or does it indicate an underlying pathophysiological path to depressive or other mood disorders?
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- 09 November 2023, e15
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How can genetic factors be best leveraged to explain individual differences in risk to onset, course of illness and response to treatment in depression and other mood disorders?
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- 11 October 2023, e11
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How are the relationships between childhood temperament, personality development and interpersonal function, and risk to depressive and other mood disorders, best conceptualised? What are the implications for preventive or treatment research?
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- 11 October 2023, e13
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Are new digital technologies and social media causing the spike in anxiety and depression in young people?
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- 06 November 2023, e14
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Is the concept of clinical staging a useful way of matching levels of intervention to the needs of young people with depressive or other mood disorders?
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- 04 December 2023, e16
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What is the place of universal, selective, and indicated prevention strategies for depression and other mood disorders?
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- 14 December 2023, e17
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Are sleep and circadian rhythm disturbances the cause or simply the consequence of depression or other mood disorder sub-types?
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- 12 October 2023, e1
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What are the best strategies for stratification of clinical cohorts with depression and other mood disorders?
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- 08 February 2024, e18
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Is it time to abandon the concept of treatment-resistant depression?
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- 21 February 2024, e19
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Impact Paper
A perspective about the potential use of nanotechnology to monitor immune correlates of the clinical course of major mood disorders
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- 24 September 2024, e20
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