What is Giving Compass?
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Giving Compass' Take:
• Research is showing that doctors are prescribing antidepressants based off of minimal leads and misdiagnosis which is resulting in patients experiencing harmful effects of long term prescriptions.
• How can we ensure that people with depression are offered the best treatments and can avoid negative effects?
• Here's another example on learning about depression
Half of all those taking antidepressants experience withdrawal problems when they try to give them up and for millions of people in England, these are severe, according to a new review of the evidence commissioned by MPs.
Guidance from the National Institute of Health and Care Excellence (Nice), which says withdrawal symptoms “are usually mild and self-limiting over about one week” urgently needs to be changed, say the review authors.
Dr James Davies from the University of Roehampton and Prof John Read from the University of East London say the high rate of withdrawal symptoms may be part of the reason people are staying on the pills for longer. They cannot cope, so carry on taking the drugs, or their doctors assume they have relapsed and write another prescription.
The review was commissioned by the all-party parliamentary group for prescribed drug dependence and follows a long debate about the Nice guidance, which critics say is out of date.
Read the full article on the effects of antidepressants by Sarah Boseley at The Guardian