Daily Mail

Antidepres­sants plea

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TODAY, a group of medical profession­als, researcher­s, patient representa­tives and politician­s calls for the Government to reverse the rate of prescribin­g of antidepres­sants.

in the past decade, antidepres­sant prescripti­ons have almost doubled in England, from 47.3 million in 2011 to 85.6 million in 2022. more than 8.6 million adults in England are prescribed them annually, with prescripti­ons set to rise in the next decade.

the average time a person spends on an antidepres­sant has doubled between the mid-2000s and 2017, with around half of patients now classed as long-term users.

rising long-term use is associated with effects including weight gain, poorer long-term outcomes for some, sexual dysfunctio­n, bleeding and falls. Withdrawal effects are experience­d by about half of patients, with up to half of those describing their symptoms as severe; and many experienci­ng them for weeks, months or longer.

rising prescripti­on rates have not led to improvemen­t in mental health outcomes at the population level, which, according to some measures, have worsened.

Large- scale analyses have shown antidepres­sants to have no clinically meaningful benefit beyond placebo for all but the most severely depressed patients, yet rates of prescribin­g to patients with mild and moderate depression remain high.

For sufferers of chronic pain, the efficacy of antidepres­sants is very low; and there is evidence of disproport­ionate prescribin­g to women, older people and those living in deprived areas. and as well as the human costs, there are economic costs being incurred by the nhs in England of up to £58 million annually.

We believe a reversal can be achieved by: 1) stopping the prescribin­g of antidepres­sants for mild conditions; 2) adhering to niCE guidance on safe prescribin­g and withdrawal management; 3) Funding and delivering local withdrawal services; 4) including the reduction of antidepres­sant prescribin­g in the nhs Quality and Outcomes Framework; and 5) Funding and delivering a national 24-hour prescribed drug withdrawal helpline and website.

Lord (NIGeL) CrISP (Co-Chair, Beyond Pills All Party Parliament­ary

Group); Professor Sir SAM everINGTON (vice President BMA, Deputy Chair, College of Medicine); Baroness Professor SHeILA HOLLINS (Professor of Psychiatry, St George’s,

University of London); Professor JOANNA MONCrIeFF (Professor of Critical and Social Psychiatry,

University College London); Dr JAMeS DAvIeS (Associate Professor of Medical Anthropolo­gy

and Psychology, University of roehampton, London); and another 17 signatorie­s. (A full version of this letter, with all signatorie­s, can be

viewed at dailymail.co.uk.)

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