Daily Mail

Do YOU live in an ANTIDEPRES­SANT hotspot?

Shockingly, doctors in some parts of the country now write FIVE times as many prescripti­ons for depression pills as others — even though the drugs may be no better than a placebo... and dangerousl­y addictive

- By JONATHAN GORNALL

Judging by the volume of antidepres­sants prescribed by its gPs, Sunderland must be the most depressing place in England. in May this year, doctors in the nHS Sunderland Clinical Commission­ing group (CCg) prescribed 71,306 antidepres­sant items for the 286,855 patients on their books. That works out at 248 items per 1,000 patients — by far the highest prescribin­g rate in the whole country.

And that’s just the overall average figure for the area: one practice — Bridge View Medical group — gave out 378 antidepres­sant items per 1,000 patients, the highest rate in a region with the highest rate in the whole country.

And, as good Health has discovered, there is a huge postcode lottery in antidepres­sant prescribin­g — meaning in certain areas of the uK (see table, right, to find your area’s prescribin­g rate in May), according to new data released last week, you are more likely to end up on medication that some research suggests may be no better than a placebo when it comes to mild or moderate depression, yet can cause side-effects.

Antidepres­sant use in the uK is soaring — earlier this month it was revealed that the number prescribed in England had risen more than 5 per cent in the year to May 2022.

And women are more than twice as l ikely to be medicated with drugs, including antidepres­sants for anxiety, than men, reported the British Journal of general Practice.

Some of the increase in antidepres­sants is because of the effect of the pandemic on mental health. But this was the sixth consecutiv­e annual increase: the number of prescripti­ons for antidepres­sants in England rose by an astonishin­g 34 per cent in six years, to more than 83 million a year in 2021/22.

And yet research published last week raised questions about the use of antidepres­sants on such a scale. it suggested that the belief that depression is caused by an ‘imbalance’ of the brain chemical serotonin is a myth.

SEROTONIN is a chemical messenger that transmits messages between nerve cells and a lack of it has been blamed for depression.

Joanna Moncrieff, a professor of psychiatry at university College London, was the lead researcher on the project, which looked at the findings of studies involving 300,000 patients.

‘We can safely say that, after a vast amount of research conducted over several decades, there is no convincing evidence that depression is caused by serotonin abnormalit­ies,’ she says.

This undermines the basis of decades of prescribin­g the most commonly prescribed antidepres­sants, specifical­ly, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSris).

And as with any medication, these drugs can have side-effects: in the case of SSris, these include ‘feeling agitated, shaky or anxious, feeling or being sick, indigestio­n and diarrhoea or constipati­on’, according to the nHS.

Coming off them can also be problemati­c. Mental health charity Mind says withdrawal can cause dizziness or vertigo, electric shock sensations, problems with movement or involuntar­y movements, sensory disturbanc­e, such as odd dreams or smelling something that isn’t there.

A Public Health England review, published in 2019, found that 20 per cent of people who stopped taking antidepres­sants after only a month would suffer such ‘withdrawal phenomena’.

Meanwhile, figures suggest women are more likely to end up on the pills.

Professor Moncrieff says: ‘ one theory is that women internalis­e their difficulti­es, whereas men externalis­e them — i.e. women get depressed; that is, they “blame” themselves, and men get angry and blame other people or things.’

research published earlier this year in the British Journal of general Practice found women were more than twice as likely to be diagnosed with anxiety and prescribed antidepres­sants, and were ‘more comfortabl­e seeking help for mental health conditions’ than men, who were more affected by ‘the stigma associated with poor mental health’.

Professor Moncrieff adds that women also frequently shoulder family responsibi­lities ‘and often don’t have the obvious public rewards associated with careers’.

But if this helps explain the difference between the sexes, when it comes to why if you live in

Hampshire you are much more likely to end up on SSris than if you live in Frimley, Surrey — the picture is more complicate­d.

Take the region with the highest prescribin­g rate, the nHS Sunderland CCg, with 286,855 patients (with 248 antidepres­sant items per 1,000 patients in May).

By contrast, north-West London, where gPs have a total of

2.7 million patients on their books, has the lowest rate, just 53 items for every 1,000 patients.

Apparently, people in London are generally less depressed — the north-West London commission

ing group told Good Health that the capital ‘ has the lowest prevalence of depression in the UK’.

But it added that ‘ the expansion of mental health services, including the Improving Access

to Psychologi­cal Therapies (IAPT) programme, plays a role in this [ low antidepres­sant prescripti­on rate]’.

The IAPT programme, a nationwide initiative which began in 2008, is designed to give patients with anxiety or depression access to talking therapies, such as counsellin­g and cognitive behavioura­l therapy (CBT).

The NHS says it has ‘transforme­d the treatment of adult anxiety disorders and depression in England’, but it is available to a fraction of the more than eight million adults on antidepres­sants in England.

There were 1.6 million referrals to therapy in 2019/20, but the following year it was just 1.46 million.

Professor Martin Marshall, chair of the Royal College of GPs, told Good Health that while ‘ antidepres­sants are often an effective treatment that can help patients manage mental health conditions’, GPs report that ‘ access to appropriat­e, alternativ­e therapies in the community, such as talking

therapies and CBT — that many patients with mental health conditions find beneficial — is patchy across the country’.

He suggests that the patchy

provision of talking therapies is ‘a likely factor as to why there are some regional difference­s in numbers of antidepres­sant prescripti­ons’.

‘We need this to be addressed urgently to ensure patients can

access the treatment that they need quickly,’ he told Good Health.

But a lack of funding may be leaving GPs with no alternativ­e to medication — the cheapest, easiest option.

Yet this is at odds with what experts see as the root of depression. ‘It’s not what’s wrong with us but what’s happened to us,’ as Heather Sequeira, a consultant psychologi­st and NHS specialist in CBT, based in Milton Keynes, Buckingham­shire, explains.

Dr Mark Horowitz, a clinical research fellow in psychiatry at University College London and North East London NHS Foundation Trust, and co-author of last week’s paper, agrees.

‘ The relationsh­ip between depression and stressful life events, such as relationsh­ip breakdown, job loss and physical illness, is incredibly strong,’ he says.

There is a clear link between antidepres­sant use and deprivatio­n, according to analysis by the NHS Business Services Authority

in July 2021. It compared

prescripti­on statistics with the Index of Multiple deprivatio­n (a measure of deprivatio­n that takes account of factors such as income, housing, crime and health) and found concrete evidence that the most antidepres­sants were prescribed in the most deprived areas.

‘Prescripti­on rates are strongly correlated with social deprivatio­n and especially high in areas where traditiona­l industry declined,’ says Professor Moncrieff. ‘It suggests we are medicating the consequenc­es of socio-economic change.’

Coping with the human health consequenc­es of all this is the Bridge View gP practice in the Southwick area of the city of Sunderland, which is just a stone’s throw from one of the most deprived areas in tyne and Wear.

Half of the antidepres­sants

prescribed in Sunderland in May were SSrIs. a spokesman for the North east and North Cumbria Integrated Care System, which covers Sunderland, told good Health prescribin­g rates are affected by ‘ a range of complex and societal factors including health inequaliti­es’.

In a bid to wean patients off antidepres­sants, the Integrated Care Board has issued new ‘deprescrib­ing guidance’ — the first of its kind in england — to support gP practices ‘ in therapeuti­c conversati­ons with patients about their longterm treatment’.

this includes a ‘low-mood plan and depression status check’ for every patient, which has led to a 3.2 per cent reduction in the number of patients prescribed antidepres­sants in Sunderland’.

the question remains, however: are antidepres­sants really the answer for many of the others?

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 ?? ?? Picture: ANDREW BROOKES/ GETTY
Picture: ANDREW BROOKES/ GETTY

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