8.05.2009

Antidepressant Usage Doubles for Americans

The number of Americans using antidepressants doubled in only a decade, while the number seeing psychiatrists continued to fall, a study shows.

About 10% of Americans — or 27 million people — were taking antidepressants in 2005, the last year for which data were available at the time the study was written. That's about twice the number in 1996, according to the study of nearly 50,000 children and adults in today's Archives of General Psychiatry. Yet the majority weren't being treated for depression. Half of those taking antidepressants used them for back pain, nerve pain, fatigue, sleep difficulties or other problems, the study says.

In 2004, the Food and Drug Administration issued a "black box" warning that the medications could increase the risk of suicidal thoughts in children. Use of antidepressants by children fell nearly 10% the next year, according to Olfson's 2008 study of the subject. Antidepressant use had been rising so quickly in the years before the warning, however, that the rate of use in 2005 was still higher than in 1996.

To aid this increase, spending on direct-to-consumer antidepressant ads increased from $32 million to $122 million.

Antidepressants do not cure depression they simply mask the symptoms. If you are on antidepressants I encourage you to seek counseling, find the root of the problem, try to fix it, and talk to your doctor about going off the medication.

USA Today