Antidepressants Side-Effects Higher Than Previously Thought

In the US one in ten are prescribed antidepressants each year, but are they told about ALL the side-effects?

Antidepressants side-effects

Antidepressants side-effects: in the US one in ten are prescribed antidepressants each year, but are they told about ALL the side-effects?

A new survey of antidepressants side-effects has found higher than expected levels of emotional numbness, sexual problems and even suicidal thoughts associated with the medication (Read et al., 2014).

The study, published in the journal Psychiatry Research, found that as many as half the people they surveyed had psychological problems due to their medication.

The authors again question whether antidepressants are being over-prescribed.

The paper’s lead author, Professor John Read, said:

“The medicalization of sadness and distress has reached bizarre levels. One in ten people in some countries are now prescribed antidepressants each year.

“While the biological side-effects of antidepressants, such as weight gain and nausea, are well documented, the psychological and interpersonal effects have been largely ignored or denied. They appear to be alarmingly common.”

The study gathered data from 1,829 people from New Zealand who had all taken antidepressants in the last five years.

The questionnaire asked about how they had felt while they were taking their medication.

Of the 20 adverse effects that people were questioned about:

  • 62% said they had ‘sexual difficulties’,
  • 52% said they ‘didn’t feel like themselves’,
  • 42% noticed a ‘reduction in positive feelings’,
  • 39% found themselves ‘caring less about others’,
  • and 55% reported ‘withdrawal effects’.

Set against these findings, though, 82% said that the drugs had been useful in tackling their depression.

The results took into account the fact that people had varying levels of depression.

Professor John Read commented on the results:

“Effects such as feeling emotionally numb and caring less about other people are of major concern. Our study also found that people are not being told about this when prescribed the drugs.

“Our finding that over a third of respondents reported suicidality ‘as a result of taking the antidepressants’ suggests that earlier studies may have underestimated the problem.”

Antidepressants side-effects

These findings come on top of a new review of studies examining patients’ experiences of taking antidepressants (Gibson et al., 2014).

Across the studies reviewed, people consistently reported a…

“…reduction of positive and negative emotions, emotional detachment, a belief that ADs prevent natural sadness, personality changes, harmful effects on relationships, fear of addiction, and suicidality.” (Read et al., 2014; referring to Gibson et al., 2014).

Given these frequently reported antidepressants side-effects, it is incredible how few people are told about them:

“Very few, it seems, are told about the more subtle, but pervasive and potentially demoralizing, effects on one’s ability to feel positive emotions, or to feel anything at all, or about the potential effects on their relationships with other people. The ethical principle of informed choice suggests that this needs to change.” (Read et al., 2014).

Image credit: ep_jhu


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Author: Jeremy Dean

Psychologist, Jeremy Dean, PhD is the founder and author of PsyBlog. He holds a doctorate in psychology from University College London and two other advanced degrees in psychology. He has been writing about scientific research on PsyBlog since 2004. He is also the author of the book "Making Habits, Breaking Habits" (Da Capo, 2013) and several ebooks.