The Southland Times

Antidepres­sant use on the rise

- Katarina Williams

The number of Kiwis being given antidepres­sants is continuing to increase, yet researcher­s admit there is no evidence to suggest they are improving mental health or reducing suicides.

An Otago University study published in the New Zealand Medical Journal today examined prescribin­g trends for antidepres­sants between 2008 and 2015. It found the highest antidepres­sant user group was European women, particular­ly those aged 65 and over, which surprised Professor Roger Mulder, one of the lead researcher­s.

‘‘I guess it’s because they present with distress more often but if you look at the epidemiolo­gy of depression, they’re probably not the most likely group to get severe, melancholi­c depression, which is when you say antidepres­sants should be used,’’ Mulder said.

‘‘What we seem to be doing is prescribin­g more and more, especially for white females, and we don’t have evidence thatt i’s resulted in a significan­t reduction in levels of community distress,’’ Mulder said. ‘‘If anything, levels of community distress seem to be increasing and it obviously hasn’t resulted in a decrease in the rates of suicide.’’

While prescripti­on numbers increased during the research period, the rate of those increases was slowing, in keeping with prescripti­on patterns in other likeminded countries.

‘‘The fact that our community measures of mental health aren’t getting better is not unusual either. Australia and the United Kingdom, the USA and Canada – there’s very similar trends,’’ Mulder said.

‘‘It would suggest that giving people more and more antidepres­sants may not be the best way to manage what on earth is going on, which no-one quite understand­s because as a community we seem to be getting more and more distressed.’’

Researcher­s have attributed the rise to a variety of factors, including improved recognitio­n of depression, changes in patientdoc­tor attitudes and a broadening range of conditions treated with antidepres­sants.

Mulder, who was based at Otago University’s Christchur­ch campus, said the research raised questions about the way prescripti­ons were being used. With no evidence to suggest more antidepres­sant prescripti­ons improved community mental health or reduced suicide, the researcher­s suggested a change in tack. ‘‘Antidepres­sants have significan­t side-effects and we have limited evidence for long-term efficacy,’’ the study said.

‘‘Perhaps it is time to switch emphasis from a ‘treatment gap’ to a ‘quality gap’ so that antidepres­sant use is targeted more optimally at those who are most likely to benefit.’’

 ??  ?? Otago University Professor Roger Mulder says while antidepres­sant prescripti­ons are continuing to increase, there hasn’t been an improvemen­t in community mental health.
Otago University Professor Roger Mulder says while antidepres­sant prescripti­ons are continuing to increase, there hasn’t been an improvemen­t in community mental health.

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