Video

VIDEO: New NIMH director talks ethics, optogenetics, novel treatments for depression


 

– Will it ever be possible to trace the neuronal pathways of specific mental states as they speed through our brains? Hear Joshua A. Gordon, MD, PhD, the National Institute of Mental Health’s new director, share his thoughts on just such a technology in an interview recorded just days before he assumed his new role at the world’s largest mental health research organization.

In the interview, Dr. Gordon also addresses whether the use of “optogenetics” – a novel therapy developed by neuroscientists that, if it works, promises to track mental disorders such as anxiety or depression – creates ethical dilemmas when deciding whether these disorders should be turned “on” or “off.”

“When I treat patients, I treat them because they are overwhelmed with depression, or because they’re hearing voices that are scary or ruining their lives, or because they have intractable anxiety,” Dr. Gordon said. “To relieve those symptoms, there is no ethical dilemma in my mind.”

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel.

On Twitter @whitneymcknight

Recommended Reading

No increased suicide risk from atomoxetine in youths with ADHD
MDedge Pediatrics
Study of LGBQ youth highlights behavioral health differences in each group
MDedge Pediatrics
New suicide data: Reason to panic or ponder?
MDedge Pediatrics
Study finds most antidepressants ineffective or harmful in children, adolescents
MDedge Pediatrics
Distress or depression in a 12-year-old girl?
MDedge Pediatrics
FDA updates warning label for systemic fluoroquinolones
MDedge Pediatrics
Psychiatric disorders often impair antiretroviral adherence in perinatally HIV-infected teens
MDedge Pediatrics
It does get better ... with your help: Preventing suicide
MDedge Pediatrics
Collaborative depression care for teens: Cost effective over time
MDedge Pediatrics
NIH workshop yields youth suicide prevention road map
MDedge Pediatrics