To Paxil, with love
In 1994, Penguin Books published what would become a national bestseller titled, Listening to Prozac written by Dr. Peter Kramer, a Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at Brown University at the time. Throughout the book, he debates the ethics of “cosmetic pharmacology” a term associated with the transformation of personality traits through medication. Kramer describes several patients as becoming “better than well” on Prozac — more socially adept, less inhibited, and …

![Clinicians are failing at value-based care because no one taught them the system [PODCAST]](https://kevinmd.com/wp-content/uploads/bd31ce43-6fb7-4665-a30e-ee0a6b592f4c-190x100.jpeg)



![Silence isn't neutrality: Why medical students can't wait to find their voice [PODCAST]](https://kevinmd.com/wp-content/uploads/unnamed-28-190x100.png)






![I have cerebral palsy and I’m a doctor. Here’s what policy cuts mean for patients like me. [PODCAST]](https://kevinmd.com/wp-content/uploads/Gemini_Generated_Image_u26efdu26efdu26e-190x100.png)




