Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeNewsSunshine Coast leads a new era in depression treatment

Sunshine Coast leads a new era in depression treatment

The Sunshine Coast is leading a new era in brain treatment, offering one of Australia’s most advanced treatments for severe depression.

For decades, electro-convulsive therapy (ECT), or ‘shock therapy’, was considered the last resort for severe depression.

Brain & Mind Hub in Maroochydore is the first clinic in Queensland to offer an intensive, neuronavigated form of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) – a non-invasive, drug-free treatment achieving remission rates of up to 90 per cent in patients with treatment-resistant depression.

Brain & Mind Hub director and chief executive officer Dr Jim Lagopoulos PhD, one of Australia’s most respected experts in mental health and neuroscience, said while standard TMS protocols have been available for years, they typically deliver only moderate results, with around a 50 per cent improvement in symptoms.

“TMS is a first-line treatment for depression in Europe and other countries, and while it is approved in Australia, it hasn’t yet been widely adopted in its most advanced form,” Dr Lagopoulos said.

“Brain & Mind Hub is leading the way with our use of MRI-guided neuronavigation combined with an intensive protocol that delivers treatment faster and with greater precision. Through our three-tiered treatment model – Standard, Accelerated and Intensive – we’re able to achieve results in just days to weeks, rather than months.”

Dr Lagopoulos said TMS is often misunderstood due to outdated perceptions of ‘shock therapy’ portrayed in movies.

Popular culture has painted a grim picture of brain treatments, think One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest or Requiem for a Dream, which depict electro-shock therapy as brutal and dehumanising.

“As crude as it was, shock therapy could yield impressive outcomes, but it came at a cost – requiring anaesthetic, full-brain stimulation and carrying significant risk of memory loss,” Dr Lagopoulos said.

“With TMS, we activate the same neural circuits with surgical precision, but without anaesthetic or invasive procedures. We use the same mapping techniques seen in brain surgery to accurately target the brain regions involved in mood regulation, but with gentle magnetic pulses. The difference in patient experience and outcomes is like night and day.”

Dr Jim Lagopoulos explains that in the intensive treatment, the brain is stimulated 10 times in one day, every day for a week.

“Most patients notice a difference after just 10 to 15 sessions, with minimal side effects. Clinical trials conducted at Stanford University have shown remarkable results – up to a 90 per cent improvement – particularly for those with long-standing or hard-to-treat depression.”

Backed by international research and approved by Australia’s Therapeutic Goods Administration, this innovative approach addresses an urgent need for better mental health solutions.

“In a country where one in seven adults takes antidepressants, yet only around 30 per cent respond effectively, many are left with limited options and a prolonged struggle for relief,” Dr Lagopoulos said.

“On the Sunshine Coast, we’re seeing a significant rise in mental health cases, and it’s clear that traditional antidepressants alone are not enough to address this growing crisis – both here and across the country.

“Our TMS protocol is a powerful, evidence-based alternative – faster, more effective, and well tolerated. For many, it’s a genuine breakthrough – and a path back to feeling like themselves again.”

This pioneering treatment is now available at Brain & Mind Hub’s integrated clinic in Maroochydore. To learn more, visit: www.brainandmindhub.org.au

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Filling up with Unitywater

Thirsty locals and visitors have filled the equivalent of 70,000 reusable water bottles with fresh, healthy drinking water at Unitywater’s Drink Tap van over...

Community update

More News

Summer swim in Noosa

The Noosa Summer Swim Festival being held this weekend has grown into one of Australia’s most iconic open water swimming events. Each year, more...

Caloundra hosts Community Cabinet

The Crisafulli Government is taking the first Community Cabinet of 2026 to Caloundra on Sunday 8 March. Premier David Crisafulli and Ministers will meet with...

Community update

From singing and bush care to service clubs and art, there is a wide variety of groups in Noosa. RED CROSS: The meeting of the Tewantin-Noosa...

Man charged on assault and theft

Police charged a 52-year-old man charged with multiple offences following the theft of Egyptian artefacts at a Caboolture museum and an assault in Hastings...

Proudly looking after the Mary

A native fish that has been faced with extinction is set to play a role in a much-wider effort to save the health of...

Menopause can mask ovarian cancer

Mater doctors are warning women that the onset of menopause and perimenopause can sometimes mask life-threatening cases of ovarian cancer. Around 1900 Australian women...

Weekend car crashes

Four people have been hospitalised following car crashes in the Noosa region this weekend. A woman in her 30s with minor injuries was transported to...

Flash flooding Fraser Coast

Police are reminding all drivers not to drive through flood waters with a number of roads closed across the Fraser Coast and North Burnett...

Local authors feathered fantasy

Magic can be found right here on the Sunshine Coast - just ask local children’s author Jayne McIntyre, who has secured a three-book deal...

Project Manta revealed

Professor Kathy Townsend of the University of the Sunshine Coast is a leading marine biologist known for her pioneering research on manta rays. As...