glanceblamm, I would disagree with your post only in this. All the people currently being treated by psychs or meds would not have been thrown in a padded room years ago. In fact, many if not most of them would have eventually been fine with the stronger support structures and social systems that existed. Mental health issues do not exist in a vacuum, otherwise mental hardening would be impossible, and we are able to do it all the time in military practice. In fact we're sinking more time and energy into prev/hardening because its proven to reduce need to treat later.
No, the problem today is not the fault of the meds, or the companies, or the "professionals." I spoke with 3 men today alone who's wives have cheated on them ... a strong shoulder to lean on, someone they respect to talk to and seek advice, a parental figure (which is oh so lacking in society today) who will speak straight, respectfully to them, tell them they're not a victim and remind them to take control where they can and accept when they can't. Yep, works all day everyday, and I'll get up tomorrow and do it again because that's how we survive. I've seen lots of folks who aren't just coping, but have left the depression, anxiety behind them, without meds. How liberating is that? To not feel shackled to a hopeless label, and go in each week to reexamine how messed up you are.
The problem is we have a weak society, a permissive society, that doesn't reinforce the innate need for all of us to have stability and security in our lives. Grow up smacked around by your Mom's boyfriend, or raped if you're a girl. See how that equips you for life. How about being passed back and forth through divorce like a valuable commodity, and not a person. Might mess with your self image. Work your butt off in school, or don't at all, and get the same grades ... what sort of ethic does that instill. No gents, meds don't fix those things. For many, effexor is as useful as crystal-meth: a distraction, but not a solution, and a cruel mistress.
Physical pain is a different thing; we don't often grow out of that over time. But trial after trial after trial demonstrates that those given a placebo have similar and sometimes better recovery than those given an anti-depressant.