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Are Antidepressants Keeping Your Sex Life Down?

by Sheri Wallace

Sex lifeEver wonder what would happen if an alien's impression of earthlings was shaped solely by TV soap operas? He'd come away with three notions: earthlings change their clothes at least five times a day, the ice cubes in the bucket never melt, and everyone has sex—all the time.

When it comes to sex, our culture is so sexualized that we would believe that everyone in suburbia has sex at least every day, but this couldn't be farther from the truth.

"Most of my patients would be shocked if they knew what happened in other people's bedrooms," says Peter S. Kanaris, PhD, a psychologist and sex therapist with more than 20 years experience. "It comes as a shock to realize that about one-third of the population suffers from sexual dysfunction—and that doesn't include people who are depressed or take antidepressant medications."

Jack Modell, MD, professor of psychiatry at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, says that 25% of women suffer from sexual dysfunction, and 15% of men experience problems—again, discounting those who suffer from depression and take antidepressants.

"That number jumps much higher to about one-half of the population if you start talking about people who have been diagnosed with depression," says Kanaris.

In an ironic twist of fate, the very medications that treat depression and give hope back to millions of depressed patients—the popular group of antidepressants known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs)—are thought to cause sexual side effects in 40–80% of people taking them.

"This is a staggering number of people, when you think about how many Americans take SSRIs," says Modell.