Antidepressant Withdrawal Is Common and Debilitating

Those using antidepressants long-term were more likely to experience withdrawal and to have severe withdrawal symptoms.

0
166

A new study found that antidepressant withdrawal is common and debilitating. Those using antidepressants for more than two years were more likely to experience withdrawal and to have severe withdrawal symptoms.

The researchers found that 79% of those who tried to stop taking antidepressants experienced withdrawal, with 49% experiencing severe or moderately severe symptoms. Over a third (38%) were unable to stop taking the drug because of this.

“Antidepressant withdrawal effects are common, and can be severe and long-lasting,” the researchers write.
“Short-term users experience mostly brief and mild effects,” they add, while “long-term users (>24 months) experienced common, often severe and longer-lasting effects.”

The researchers were led by Mark Horowitz at University College London, and also included prominent researchers James Davies and Joanna Moncrieff. The study was published in Psychiatry Research.

Vector of a sick sad patient man in depression drowning in medications sitting inside a bottle.

You've landed on a MIA journalism article that is funded by MIA supporters. To read the full article, sign up as a MIA Supporter. All active donors get full access to all MIA content, and free passes to all Mad in America events.

Current MIA supporters can log in below.(If you can't afford to support MIA in this way, email us at [email protected] and we will provide you with access to all donor-supported content.)

Donate

Previous articleThe Roots of Emotional Illness: Emotional Conditioning
Peter Simons
Peter Simons was an academic researcher in psychology. Now, as a science writer, he tries to provide the layperson with a view into the sometimes inscrutable world of psychiatric research. As an editor for blogs and personal stories at Mad in America, he prizes the accounts of those with lived experience of the psychiatric system and shares alternatives to the biomedical model.

LEAVE A REPLY