“Depression is the number one reason in the world for disability,” says Audrey Gruss, Founder of Hopefragrances.com and Hopefordepression.org. “Thirty-five percent of people don’t respond to the meds out there.” Gruss, who began her career as the assistant to the Medical Director at the Revlon Research Center, says that since 1985, every medication has been a spinoff of Prozac, which doesn’t work for everyone. One of those who Prozac failed was her mother, Hope, who had struggled with depression since her thirties. “It was called a nervous breakdown,” Gruss says. “It had stigma.” When visiting her mother at the hospital Gruss would ask why there was no cure and why the top companies in the brain science business were not doing research. The answer she got: research “was too expensive and it was too lucrative to simply repurpose drugs.” After her mother passed away in 2005, Gruss, who had spent the majority of her career in the beauty sector working for name brands like Elizabeth Arden and creating the Doral Saturnia Spa in Miami, launched Hope Fragrances to fund her research foundation, Hope For Depression. “We put together a group of leaders in each discipline of neuroscience and cellular biology,” she says. “They are collaborating and sharing research. We are in clinical trials at Columbia University Medical Center and Mount Sinai with a brand new category of medications for people who don’t respond to Prozac.”
FREE GIFT! Don’t start your reinvention without downloading CoveyClub’s starter guide called “31 Badass Tips for Launching Your Reinvention Without Fear!”
#66: Putting her thought-leader network to work for health research (Carolee)
#65: Shattering stereotypes of women in the army (Jessica Scott)
#64: Control is an illusion (Lydia Slaby)
#63: Personal Branding 101 (Joanne Tombrakos)
#62: Reinventing through fear (Ruth Soukup)
#61: Creating a platform that allows you to make meaningful connections (Gina Bianchini)
#60: From music industry artist to cannabis entrepreneur (Aliza Sherman)
#59: “Even at 63 years old, I can’t imagine sitting by the pool; I’m not done” (Susan Feldman)
#58: Reinventing after a diagnosis of Bipolar Disorder II (Shaillee Chopra)
#57: Always be in the mode of reinventing (Adrienne Garland)
#56: Reinventing because of life’s randomness (Lisa Lori)
#55: Take back your life by reinventing your relationship with your phone (Tim Kendall)
#54: Reinventing after losing yourself in motherhood (Nicole Jennings)
#53: Helping lawyers reinvent (Julie Anna Alvarez)
#52: Failure was not on her menu (Evelyn Isaia)
#51: Reinventing after burnout (Debra Boulanger)
#50: When she couldn’t find great career advice, she invented it herself (Kathryn Minshew)
#49: Reinventing because you no longer believe (Tova Mirvis)
#48: When disruption forces you to reinvent (Bonnie Levison)
#47: Resetting to slow life down (Rachel Lightfoot)
Join Podbean Ads Marketplace and connect with engaged listeners.
Advertise Today
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Commercial Edge: Unleash the Power of People
The emPOWERed Half Hour
Reaching your Goals
Insights@work
The Ken Coleman Show
Business Dad
The Cardone Zone