Science
A Powerful H.I.V. Drug Lands in Zambia. But Will It Reach Those Who Need It?
Dozens of students freshly trained as recruiters streamed into the dormitories on the sprawling green campus of the University of Zambia on a muggy morning in March. They wended their way past piles of papers, laundry and instant noodle packages, pouncing on any classmate who slowed long enough to listen to their pitch:
“Come with me, right now, and get an injection! It will protect you from H.I.V. infection for the next six months. It will take two minutes! And it’s free!”
It was an early experiment in delivering the most scientifically advanced weapon that exists in the fight against H.I.V. targeted to the people who need it most: young African women who, statistically speaking, are at greater risk of infection with the virus than anyone else on earth.
A line soon formed, and students filed one after another into a small room, pulled up their T-shirts and received two injections, on either side of their navels, of a drug that prevents infection in people exposed to H.I.V.
For the researchers, clinicians and health officials who gathered on the sidelines to watch, it was a hopeful moment, at a time when Zambia’s H.I.V. response has been badly damaged by the Trump administration’s overhaul of foreign aid.
In clinical trial results published in 2024, the drug, called lenacapavir, showed an astonishing 100 percent protection from infection in patients who received injections every six months. Ever since, there has been a concerted push to get the medication to sub-Saharan Africa.
When the Trump administration made deep cuts to foreign aid last year, there were fears that it would renege on a Biden administration commitment to help get lenacapavir to developing countries. But the State Department has not only honored that commitment, it has also recently increased the investment. The department said it would work with an international health organization to help fund the purchase of enough of the drug to reach three million people by the end of 2028.
“This is a really exciting opportunity to actually bend the curve of the epidemic,” Jeremy Lewin, the top official for foreign aid at the State Department said in announcing the expanded commitment last month. He added, “Lenacapavir is one of the best ways to actually have a chance at ending it.”
Still, whether the distribution of the drug can achieve its full promise of eventually ending the H.I.V. epidemic here is far from clear. The Trump administration’s other aid cuts have left the country’s health system so fragile that it may not have the infrastructure — to do tests, to deliver the drug, to keep records — necessary to get the drug to all those who need it. And it’s not clear whether Zambia will receive enough donated doses — or be able to buy enough — to have a meaningful impact on rates of H.I.V. transmission.
Gilead Sciences, which developed lenacapavir, sells the drug for more than $25,000 per patient per year in the United States. But Gilead has also licensed several generic drug companies to produce it, and they are expected to start supplying it for about $40 per person per year in 2027. In the meantime, Gilead is making the drug at a no-profit price (estimated to be about $100 per person per year). The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria and the United States’ H.I.V. program are supplying it in eight developing countries so far with plans to reach 24 countries by the end of this year.
Zambia was one of the first two countries in Africa to receive lenacapavir, and in December it started offering it to women in a maternal health clinic at the national teaching hospital in Lusaka.
On a March morning, harried nurses at the clinic were weighing patients, checking blood pressure, listening for fetal heartbeats, examining newborns and testing for H.I.V. And they were explaining lenacapavir.
Many women are eager to try it, said Dr. Suilanji Sivile, the technical director of the national H.I.V. program. But the clinic give it to just a few each week because they are not sure how much of the drug Zambia will receive, and when it will arrive. The upheaval in the aid relationship with the United States has clouded planning and the delivery timeline.
“You cannot start someone without knowing you will be able to give them their next dose when they return in six months’ time,” Dr. Sivile said.
Mavis Mwanza, 19, was one of the women who made the cut in March. Four months into her first pregnancy, she had heard about lenacapavir on social media and thought it seemed like a good idea. She lives far from the hospital, she said, so H.I.V. prevention she could get once, at this appointment, and then not think about again for months, would be a relief.
Ms. Mwanza got her first dose of lenacapavir (actually two injections plus two tablets that a patient takes the first time they receive the drug) from a midwife, in a clinic room so small the door could not open all the way.
Glenda Malyangu, the nurse who oversees the H.I.V. program in the clinic, peered over the top of her glasses at benches packed with women, many holding new babies bundled in blankets.
She wants to put every woman who tests negative for H.I.V. on pre-exposure prophylaxis, or PrEP, a medication to prevent them, and their babies, from getting infected. And she has been frustrated by the lack of options. For a decade there has been a daily pill she can offer, but that method is impractical and unpopular with young women, the group she most urgently needs to protect.
“But this lenacapavir, it is popular,” she said. It works for the women she sees because it is discreet — no need even to mention it to a partner — and does not require a pill every day. They can stop thinking about H.I.V. risk for a full six months.
But explaining how it works and giving the shot is more work for her team than handing over a bottle of pills. “It would have been easier if we were many,” she said. The clinic staff was cut by two-thirds last year, when many positions funded by the United States were eliminated.
This has meant that lenacapavir is being introduced into Zambia’s health system when it is already under new strain. More than 1.4 million Zambians live with H.I.V. The country was receiving close to $400 million a year through the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, or PEPFAR, program, to provide treatment, testing and prevention, before President Trump took office. The H.I.V. program has been significantly scaled back, while the government negotiates a contentious new health funding agreement that the State Department has tied to giving American companies more access to Zambian mineral resources.
Under that agreement, Zambia, one of the world’s poorest countries, would receive about half the money it used to, tapering to zero over five years.
While a major challenge in delivering lenacapavir is lack of personnel, Ms. Malyangu said, there is another that is more basic: water. The country’s major maternal health center lacks reliable clean water to give patients so they can swallow the pills that accompany for their initial injection.
To adjust to the reduced budget, Zambia has scaled back its H.I.V. testing and prevention programs. Dr. Lloyd Mulenga, the head of the program, said he hoped that rolling out lenacapavir could cut new infections enough to make up for much of what has been lost.
But that will require health workers to do education and build demand for the new injection; testing to see who is H.I.V. negative and eligible to receive it; and a records system to track when people need to return for their next dose and make sure they show up to get it. To slow the epidemic, lenacapavir will have to reach every corner of the country.
“We will need new partnerships, new funding, new resources,” Dr. Mulenga said.
And lenacapavir will have to be delivered outside of medical facilities — PrEP, he noted, is for healthy people, and healthy people do not go to hospitals.
That is what sent the recruiters into the university dormitories for a first experiment in March, shepherding interested students into the campus clinic, while a team from the Ministry of Health carted in boxes of lenacapavir. Esther Banda, a second-year arts student, joined the line.
College is expensive, she said, and she and her friends cannot get by on what their families can afford to give them. So, she said: “You find someone like a boyfriend and he pays you something, it might be one time or you see him a few times.” One of those meet-ups might leave a young woman with $25 in her pocket at the end of the night — money that, Ms. Banda said, pays for food and cellphone airtime and manicures.
The students — many young men turned up, too — cycled in and out of the injection room, a five-minute appointment that protected them for the next six months.
But the university event had the support of five internationally funded agencies whose continuing presence in Zambia is in question. Even with all the extra support, the rollout began hours late: Someone on the campus clinic staff had been supposed to leave an on-paper authorization for the health ministry, but did not turn up, so a half-dozen health care workers sat around for hours, and students brought in by the recruiters drifted away.
The names and phone numbers of students who eventually got the injection were recorded in a variety of paper files, stacked in the leftover boxes; there was no electronic record, making it harder to track the students down for their next injections.
Ms. Banda’s hurried appointment concluded without her receiving any information about what she should do to get a crucial follow-up dose six months later. A half-dozen other appointments a New York Times reporter observed ended the same way.
“I think this could be very good for me,” said Ms. Banda, 22, who came from the dorm to get lenacapavir still in her pink pajamas. “I hope that I can find it again in six months. I hope it’s still free.”
Science
One-and-Done Heart Disease Prevention? Scientists Show It May Be Possible.
In a small, preliminary study, an experimental gene-editing treatment dramatically lowered cholesterol levels, perhaps permanently, after just one infusion, scientists reported on Monday.
If confirmed in larger studies, researchers hope the findings may lead to a one-and-done way to prevent heart disease in large numbers of people. Most gene therapies target rare diseases, but cardiovascular disease kills nearly 800,000 Americans a year.
“We have these debates and new guidelines that we should be treating people earlier,” said Dr. John H. P. Alexander, a cardiologist at Duke University who was not involved with the study. “A curative therapy would change the game.”
The study, published in The New England Journal of Medicine, was an interim analysis of 35 patients in a trial that will involve as many as 85 participants. All have genetically high levels of LDL cholesterol — the bad kind — or heart disease.
In the 35 patients, a single infusion of the highest dose of the treatment reduced LDL cholesterol levels by as much as 62 percent. The change has been sustained in a subgroup whose members were treated 18 months ago.
It will be followed by a larger study of 200 patients.
It is unusual for The New England Journal of Medicine to publish such a preliminary result. But “it looks like it works pretty well,” said Dr. Eric Rubin, the editor in chief. Moreover, he noted, the trial is an ambitious attempt to apply cutting-edge gene therapy to the leading cause of death in the United States.
Still, “we need much more safety data,” said Dr. J. Michael Gaziano, the director of preventive cardiology at the Boston V.A. health care system, who was not involved in the new study. The Food and Drug Administration requires that all patients in gene therapy studies be followed for 15 years.
Patients in the trial received an infusion containing a gene editing “machine,” or a tiny molecular factory wrapped in a cloak of fat. The fat-coated particles travel through the blood directly to the liver, where they are taken up by cells that remove the fatty wrapper.
The editing machine then crawls along the liver cell’s DNA until it finds its target, a gene called PCSK9. It stops there and erases one DNA letter in the gene, replacing it with another.
That simple change disables the PCSK9 gene and prevents cells from making the PCSK9 protein. Without it, the liver pulls more LDL cholesterol out of the bloodstream, keeping the levels lower.
The study was led by Dr. Sekar Kathiresan, the chief executive at Verve Therapeutics, now a subsidiary of Eli Lilly. Dr. Kathiresan, a cardiologist, said he was motivated by personal history.
His grandmother, father, uncle and brother all had heart attacks. His brother died of cardiac arrest at age 42, just after returning from a run.
Gene therapies for rare diseases carry multimillion-dollar price tags. But Dr. Daniel Skovronsky, chief scientist at Eli Lilly, said that would not be the case if this treatment were eventually approved.
“That’s not what we’re going for here,” he said. “We’re going for a medicine that someday could be part of primary care.”
High LDL levels are eminently treatable with an array of medicines, including the old standbys, daily statin pills. More recent advances include injected drugs that block the protein made by the PCSK9 gene, creating the same effect as gene editing.
But too many people cannot or will not take the drugs. Between one third and a half of patients stop taking cholesterol-lowering medications within a year of starting them, even people who have had heart attacks.
Kristy Faulkner, 45, who lives in Guilford, Conn., is among those who need treatment but are reluctant to take a powerful drug. Heart disease runs in her family, and she had a heart attack when she was 42.
“There’s some sort of internal denial, like I can’t be on these meds every day of my life,” she said.
“I understand the importance,” she added, “and I feel ashamed.”
Her cardiologist, Dr. Erica Spatz, at Yale University, is hoping Ms. Faulkner’s insurance will pay for a PCSK9 inhibitor that only has to be administered every six months. Her medical history means there is “no margin for error,” Dr. Spatz said.
But a gene-editing treatment that is administered just once?
“This kind of therapeutic breakthrough could be a game changer for people like her,” Dr. Spatz said.
Alice Thomas, 64, of Lexington, N.C., would love to take cholesterol-lowering drugs but can’t get them. Her sole source of income is Social Security, and while statins are cheap, she was unable to tolerate them.
Her insurance did not approve the injectable drugs that might have helped. She has had two strokes, and a few months ago, her LDL cholesterol level was dangerously high at 190.
“I didn’t have anything,” Ms. Thomas said. “Then I found out about this study.”
She received the infusion in Dr. Kathiresan’s trial on March 30. Two weeks later, her cholesterol level was 50.
“This is great,” she said. “One time and it’s over.”
Science
Potential crack found on Garden Grove chemical tank, reducing explosion risk
With evacuation shelters reaching capacity as more than 40,000 people were asked to leave their homes, officials laboring to prevent an explosion at a crippled chemical tank in Garden Grove reported tentative progress Sunday in ending the crisis.
TJ McGovern, interim fire chief for the Orange County Fire Authority, said firefighters had discovered what appeared to be a potential crack on the tank’s surface that could be alleviating some of the pressure resulting from the chemical reaction inside.
If they are right, it would make a catastrophic explosion or an uncontrollable leak less likely.
“With this new information, it could change our trajectory and our strategy to this event,” McGovern said. “This was a step in a right direction, and there’s going to be a lot more coming shortly.”
Enzo Soriano, 7, left, Vitto Soriano, 11, center, and Santiago Soriano, 16, right, look at their phones while camping outside the Freedom Hall shelter on Sunday in Garden Grove.
(Kayla Bartkowski/Los Angeles Times)
Lee Zeldin, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency administrator, said the new development was promising.
“I’m being told this morning that the most likely scenario is one of a low volume release, where the local authorities are going to be able to monitor, neutralize and contain the threat,” he said during a Sunday morning appearance on CNN‘s “State of the Union.”
McGovern gave no indication as to when the 40,000 people who had been forced from their homes — many into shelters — due to evacuation orders would be allowed to return.
“We know you’re out of your homes. We want to get you back,” he said. “But we cannot do that until it’s deemed safe.”
The positive note was a welcome development in a situation that has left much of Orange County on edge since Thursday.
The crisis began when the Orange County Fire Authority responded to reports of a hazardous materials incident at GKN Aerospace on Western Avenue in Garden Grove. Officials found a tank containing 7,000 gallons of a toxic chemical called methyl methacrylate, or MMA, stored in liquid form that was in danger of exploding due to a buildup of pressure from a potential runaway chemical reaction.
Methyl methacrylate is used to make plastics. While the polymer itself isn’t toxic, its liquid MMA predecessor is. If it gets into the air, it can harm people at high concentrations and through chronic or extended exposure.
The primary solution would have been to pump a neutralizing agent into the problem tank, quenching it and making it no longer explosive, but the necessary valve clogged, leaving no way to get the neutralizing agent into the tank.
Officials feared that there were only two possible outcomes: a devastating explosion or a devastating leak.
A crack in a tank containing a toxic chemical may not sound like a cause for hope, but Elias Picazo, an assistant professor of chemistry at USC, said it might be the best-case scenario.
“If the tank is going to fail, you want it to fail through a crack rather than fail through an explosion,” he said. “With a controlled leak, you can route liquid or gas out of the tank, relieving pressure and buying more time.”
He explained that as material leaks out of the tank, the pressure inside increases more slowly, potentially reaching a safe equilibrium. The leak also depletes the source for a chemical reaction, which is generating heat that, in turn, accelerates the reaction in a process called “thermal runaway.”
An aerial view shows water being sprayed on large storage tanks at the GKN Aerospace facility on Sunday in Garden Grove.
(Kayla Bartkowski/Los Angeles Times)
But the situation remains uncertain, he said. Depending on the size of the crack and the speed of the chemical reaction, it’s possible that the growing pressure within the tank will exceed what can be released through the crack, leading the tank to explode.
“It’s a positive step, but it’s not over,” he said of the new development.
If the failing chemical tank in Orange County does explode, the aerospace plant where it sits and dozens of homes surrounding it could suffer severe damage, according to a map released by authorities Saturday.
Areas within roughly 1,100 feet of the tank would suffer the most severe damage; and beyond that, areas within about 0.3 miles, moderate damage; and beyond that, areas within about 0.4 miles, light damage, from the blast.
The severe blast zone represents “areas where we can expect severe structural damage and significant harm,” said Nick Freeman, an Orange County Fire Authority division chief. There are dozens of homes in that area in a neighborhood of the city of Stanton, including along Santa Rosalia Street, south of Laurelton Avenue and north of Lampson Avenue.
In the moderate blast zone, “we would expect again structural damage and harm to those within that zone,” Freeman said.
The light-damage zone includes Wakeham Elementary School and a Home Depot on the corner of Chapman Avenue and Beach Boulevard. “There, we might see some structural damage, but it would be a little bit more limited,” Freeman said.
Officials have also warned that in the event of an explosion, there could be fire or flash fire in some areas, as well as areas where the chemical cloud would be immediately dangerous to life and health, and a much larger area where the chemical would be smelled, but at nontoxic levels.
Evacuations around the failing tank in Garden Grove include tens of thousands of residents in six Orange County cities: Garden Grove, Cypress, Stanton, Anaheim, Buena Park and Westminster. Four of the five shelters that the county set up are full. As of Sunday afternoon, only Los Amigos High School in Fountain Valley still had space.
On Saturday, three days into the crisis, a South Pasadena law firm filed a lawsuit on behalf of two people residing in the evacuation zone. The X-Law Group and Presidio Law Firm are seeking class-action status.
The lawsuit says that residents were subjected to “evacuation orders, shelter-in-place directives, exposure concerns, noxious chemical odors, fear of contamination, interference with the use and enjoyment of their homes and properties, and other damages.”
The suit seeks unspecified monetary damages, alleging that GKN Aerospace did not protect the community from the crisis.
The lawsuit is also asking for “accountability for residents facing evacuation orders, property disruption, potential health risks, loss of use of their homes, related expenses, and diminished property values.”
A man walks past the Freedom Hall shelter on Sunday in Garden Grove.
(Kayla Bartkowski/Los Angeles Times)
“Clients are naturally very concerned,” said Carlos X. Colorado, an attorney at the X-Law Group. “It’s a scary situation, especially for those in the vicinity, and in addition to that. For a large number of people, it’s an inconvenience.”
GKN Aerospace didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
In a nod to the seriousness of the situation, three federal lawmakers representing California have appealed to the Trump administration to issue a disaster declaration over the incident.
U.S. Rep. Derek Tran (D-Orange) co-signed a letter with Sens. Adam Schiff and Alex Padilla requesting that the federal government provide additional resources in response to the event. Tran posted a copy of the letter on X.
“The severity of this disaster requires additional coordination and federal support. Therefore, we urge you to expeditiously approve California’s request for an Emergency Declaration and to provide emergency protective measures and direct federal assistance under the public assistance program for Orange County,” says the letter, dated May 24. “The safety and security, and well-being of evacuated residents and the surrounding communities remain our absolute highest priority.”
Gov. Gavin Newsom made a similar appeal to the president. The White House did not respond to a request from The Times.
In the meantime, officials have stressed that they are trying to keep the chemical inside the damaged tank at the aerospace facility as cool as possible. They said they have received help from experts nationally to come up with alternative plans. Nothing specific, however, has been mentioned.
Continuing to pour cool water on the tank could allow the liquid chemical inside to cure at a slower rate — becoming a solid at a slower speed — and reduce the buildup of pressure inside the tank, said Craig Covey, an Orange County Fire Authority division chief.
“Like an ice cube that freezes from the outside in — this stuff cures, it heats up and cures from the outside in,” he said. “While it’s doing that process, it’s building that pressure.”
The tank has some capacity to hold some pressure. There is a gap between the MMA chemical surface and the tank ceiling.
“We’re hoping that that space can absorb a slower cure rate and not over-pressure and blow up,” Covey said.
Science
RFK Jr.’s Push to Curb Antidepressants Has Shaken Psychiatry
Most years, when thousands of psychiatrists gather for the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association, they walk past a scattering of protesters. There are Scientologists with megaphones; Falun Gong groups doing their exercises; and, often, former patients, saying they have been harmed by medications or electroconvulsive therapy.
This year, though, the profession is facing criticism from the highest levels of the federal government. The American Psychiatric Association gathered just 10 days after Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced a set of policies to encourage doctors to deprescribe, or assist patients in stopping, the most widely prescribed class of antidepressants.
A current of anxiety ran through the meeting, held here this week. Many physicians in the crowd said they worried that Mr. Kennedy’s statements would prompt people to refuse medications, or to quit them and relapse. The plenary session erupted in applause when Dr. Marketa Wills, the organization’s chief executive, declared, “We will never support governmental interference in the practice of medicine.”
“We are standing tall for evidence-based care,” she continued. “We are standing tall against stigma, oversimplification, and anything that would move patients further away from the care that they need.”
But there were also signs that the field’s leaders are engaging, albeit cautiously, with Mr. Kennedy’s effort to curb overprescribing. Numerous sessions offered training in helping patients taper off medications. In July, the association’s president will take part in a panel convened by the Department of Health and Human Services to develop clinical guidance on tapering antidepressants.
In an interview, Dr. Wills said she had been “encouraged” by the invitation to participate in the panel, and she credited the administration with “putting mental health front and center.”
“It feels like the beginning of a conversation, one that we welcome,” Dr. Wills said. She added, “It would be odd to have that conversation without psychiatrists at the table.”
Outside in the corridors, some rank-and-file attendees were less diplomatic.
Many providers took issue with Mr. Kennedy’s negative characterization of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or S.S.R.I. s, the most widely prescribed class of psychiatric medications. Clinical trials have found that most patients’ depressive symptoms improved with S.S.R.I.s, and they are considered safe enough to be prescribed by general practitioners.
A 2026 study found that 16.6 percent of U.S. adults, or roughly one in six, reported currently taking an antidepressant.
“He just doesn’t like S.S.R.I.s,” said Dr. Sung Hyon, a psychiatrist from Pasadena, referring to Mr. Kennedy. Dr. Hyon said S.S.R.I.s had been “foundational” in his practice — “boring drugs that are well established, have good safety evidence and have zero chance to cause addiction.” He called them “God’s gift to psychiatry.”
And patients know it, he added. “So many millions” of Americans already take S.S.R.I.s, he said, and the vast majority are fully aware of their downside, like sexual side effects and withdrawal symptoms.
“And they say, ‘You know what? It’s worth it,’” Dr. Hyon said. “Because there are so many of them, it would be a pretty big political firestorm if he really tried to restrict access. And there is very, very little medical evidence to do so.”
Mr. Kennedy has long signaled that curbing the use of psychiatric drugs was a goal of his. Earlier this month he began taking steps in that direction, announcing guidelines and regulatory changes meant to provide an incentive for clinicians to help patients taper off psychiatric medications. The steps would not affect patients’ access to antidepressants.
Andrew Nixon, a spokesman for the Department of Health and Human Services, said the agency had had no discussions about banning S.S.R.I.s., “and any claims suggesting otherwise are false.” The aim of the new initiative, he said, is to “promote appropriate psychiatric prescribing and drive deprescribing when clinically indicated.”
Some psychiatrists said they worried that Mr. Kennedy’s deprescribing initiative was the beginning of a wider effort that might, in later stages, discredit psychiatry more broadly and restrict access to care.
“I think it is actually putting more questions in people’s minds about whether psychiatric treatment is safe or effective,” said Dr. Eric Rafla-Yuan, who chairs the A.P.A.’s caucus on the social determinants of health. “The data has not changed on S.S.R.I.s. It’s the narrative that has changed.”
He said the A.P.A. should be pushing back forcefully against Mr. Kennedy’s claims about psychiatric treatments, and should steer clear of seeming to endorse any part of the initiative.
“It’s a fine line between having a seat at the table and being used as a tool to legitimize their agenda,” he said.
‘Much Too Medicated’
At the same time, deprescribing seemed, at the meeting, to be on everyone’s lips. A new book, “Stahl’s Deprescriber’s Guide,” was selling like hot cakes in the exhibition hall. There were panels titled, “Deprescribing Antipsychotics,” “The Much Too Medicated Patient” and “Stimulants for A.D.H.D.: Did We Get It Wrong?”
Dr. Chris Aiken, who delivered an address about multidrug cocktails, said a generational change is moving through the psychiatric association, as a younger cohort of physicians, in their 30s and 40s, take a more prominent role.
Millennials were part of the first generation to be prescribed stimulants and antidepressants as children and teens, he said, and physicians in that group are more conscious of poor outcomes years later. “Meds are not the answer, and they have seen this in their own lives,” he said.
Some senior physicians had a similar message.
“If I have any regrets about my recommendations as a physician, it’s about the medications that I did not withdraw sooner,” said Dr. Ronald Winchel, an assistant clinical professor of psychiatry at Columbia University’s medical school, at one panel.
He said a number of concerns had prevented him from doing so: Sometimes, patients were taking multiple medications and it was difficult to say which was effective. Sometimes, patients were doing well, and he was afraid of setting them back. And there was a dearth of research on how patients do after they quit medications.
“The fear of withdrawing medications has really complicated our work,” he said.
Dr. Winchel compared this year’s churning discussion to a watershed moment in the A.P.A.’s history: In 1973, sustained pressure from protesters caused the organization to reverse its century-old position and declare that homosexuality was not a mental disorder.
“Instead of getting into a defensive crouch, they looked at themselves and they made progress,” Dr. Winchel said. The same kind of advancement, he added, could result from a rigorous discussion about prescribing practices. “If some of this agitation is coming from outside,” he said, “what is wrong with that?”
In his presentation, Dr. Aiken urged colleagues not to dismiss the stories Mr. Kennedy has highlighted of patients who have encountered serious difficulties quitting antidepressants.
“I don’t really know how common it is, but I do know that when it does happen, it can be quite severe,” he said. “It may be rare, but let’s take it seriously, because it can really burn people when it happens.”
Others said working with Mr. Kennedy around mental health policies was a matter of simple pragmatism.
“There’s definitely a need for us to be talking to the people who are making decisions,” said Dr. Hammad Khan of Sacramento. “We can’t let Joe Rogan decide what the F.D.A. approves or doesn’t approve.”
An Inflection Point
Dr. Awais Aftab, the author of “Psychiatry at the Margins,” a popular mental health Substack, said he expects the H.H.S. effort to focus on raising awareness about tapering off medications. There are few pathways for the government to reduce the prescription of drugs like S.S.R.I.s, which have gone through F.D.A.-approval pathways and are widely used by the public, he said.
He described “a sense of alarm” among psychiatrists at the virulent critique of the field coming from Mr. Kennedy’s circle. Psychiatry, he said, has been late to acknowledge the complaints of patients like Laura Delano, an author and activist, who say they were overmedicated as children or teenagers and got little support from doctors when they wanted to reduce or stop the drugs.
“The mainstream psychiatric community has been fairly insulated, and suddenly they are hearing now about this issue,” said Dr. Aftab, a psychiatrist at Case Western Reserve University.
He added that he believes that the use of antidepressants in the United States may have reached a natural limit. “The demand is going to, at some point, go into an equilibrium with the reality of the lack of effectiveness and the reality of the tolerability issue,” he said.
But the experience of some other countries suggests that the demand for antidepressants may continue to rise, even amid warnings about overprescribing.
In 2017, Britain commissioned a major report on overprescribing and then followed up with a series of reforms, including updating clinical guidelines to require regular prescribing reviews and instituting a national audit program to monitor drug use.
But a study of prescribing in Britain found that the use of antidepressants continued its steady rise through 2023, the last year for which data was available. In contrast, recent years have seen a decline in the use of anxiety medications and hypnotics, which were also the subject of updated clinical guidelines.
The study’s authors said the rise was most likely driven by patient demand, reductions in stigma and the lower cost of antidepressant medications available in generic form.
Many psychiatrists at the conference in San Francisco said that they routinely urge patients to try therapy as an alternative or a complement to medications, but that many patients have no access to that care, because their insurance will not pay for it.
Dr. Michael Bostwick, a suicide researcher and professor of psychiatry at Mayo Medical School, in Rochester. Minn., said it remained unclear what alternative treatments Mr. Kennedy is recommending to patients who quit antidepressants.
“Toward what end?” he said. “Is he going to put more resources toward therapists? Is he going to tell us to eat more red meat, or work out more, or take psychedelics, like the president has advocated? There is no alternative plan.”
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