Depression

Overview

Depression is a medical condition that negatively affects how a person thinks, feels, and functions. It could be likened to a lead weight that makes every action in life more challenging. Formally diagnosed as major depressive disorder, this persistent feeling of sadness often also includes anhedonia—the inability to feel pleasure in things that once fueled joy. A paradox of depression is that it often robs patients of the energy and motivation to take actions that might make them feel better, including exercising or going out to see friends.

1440 Findings

Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.

  • Watch what depression does to the brain

    This video explores the neurobiology of depression and why unraveling the complexities of this disease and its etiology will potentially improve treatments. Effective depression treatment, as this video highlights, can eventually make a depressed brain look like a healthy one on brain scans.

  • These areas of the brain are hard-hit in depression—but the changes are reversible

    Depressed brains can have certain characteristic changes, including an overactive amygdala, reduced hippocampus size, and changes to the thalamus and neuromodulating chemicals in the brain.

  • US depression rates at historic high among adults

    More than 18% of US adults reported that they currently have or are being treated for depression in both 2024 and 2025. In the 2025 survey, more than 11,000 adults were surveyed. The numbers have ticked upward since 2015—by about 8 percentage points—with most of the increase occurring from the 2020 pandemic onward.

  • Watch actress Kristen Bell discuss her challenges with depression and anxiety

    Bell describes how depression can make it difficult to celebrate good news, and how decision fatigue can make simple decisions feel Herculean. She reveals how she wishes she'd discussed these struggles publicly earlier in her career.

  • See how antidepressants were discovered

    The decadeslong journey to the three major types of antidepressants began with medications designed to treat other maladies. Watch to learn more about how attempts to treat tuberculosis and blood pressure disorders led to new insights about neural chemistry and mood.

  • Explore this deep dive into how SSRIs work

    This 101-style explainer on selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors explains how they work in the brain—complete with classroom-style whiteboard drawings. It covers common SSRIs, why someone might try this medication, and a deeper discussion about potential side effects.

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