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http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/health_medical/article358011.ece

3.5 million are on anti-depressants. Now ministers want to put Britain on the

couch

By Francis Elliott and Sophie Goodchild

Published: 16 April 2006

Britain is in the grip of a damaging dependence on anti-depressant drugs such as

Prozac, prompting calls from mental health experts for a radical rethink in the

treatment of the 3.5 million people affected.

 

The prescription of so-called " happy pills " has risen by more than 120 percent

in the past decade amid soaring levels of depression and anxiety, an Independent

on Sunday investigation reveals today.

 

Faced with growing concern from doctors who say they are forced to prescribe

drugs as a " second best " treatment, the Government is to promote alternative

methods of dealing with the nation's dependency on drugs.

 

Patricia Hewitt, the Secretary of State for Health, is to unveil a major

expansion next month of " talking therapies " as an alternative to drugs such as

Prozac, which cost the National Health Service more than £400m a year.

 

Ms Hewitt believes millions of people with mild or moderate depression could

eventually be helped to lead happier, fuller lives without relying exclusively

on medication.

 

In a major speech on mental health, Ms Hewitt is expected to unveil two pilot

areas - believed to be Doncaster in South Yorkshire and Newham in London - where

these claims will be properly tested.

 

The areas have been chosen partly because of the high proportion of people

claiming incapacity benefit, a third of whom are thought to be suffering from

depression.

 

Patients will be offered a range of talking therapies, from marriage counselling

to jobs advice.

 

Health officials admit that access to NHS therapists varies widely, with waiting

lists in some areas stretching up to two years.

 

A recent survey of GPs found that nine out of 10 had prescribed anti-depressants

as a " second-best " treatment because of the long waits. Voluntary organisations

such as Mind, the mental health charity, will provide counsellors to expand the

capacity available to GPs in the pilot areas.

 

But the programme falls far short of official recommendations for 10,000 new

therapists.

 

Anti-depressants are often a vital element in the treatment of depression, but

most experts believe the drugs are heavily over-prescribed. The official

guidance from the National Institute for Clinical Excellence (Nice) is that

recognised talking therapies are at least as effective in the short term and

more effective over a long period.

 

Some patients suffering from moderate depression and anxiety will receive

intensive cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) programmes based on pioneering

treatments developed to help victims of the August 1998 Omagh and 7 July London

bombings.

 

Ms Hewitt told the IoS she wants to see " much better support for people with

anxiety, depression and moderate mental illness " .

 

" I really feel that not enough attention is paid to it because of the stigma

attached and that the range of therapies is far too limited. The typical

response, people feel, is for GPs to prescribe Prozac or something of the kind

and really not do much else. What people are saying is that they want someone to

listen, someone to talk to. "

 

The expansion of therapy is based on official recommendations made by the

Government's so-called " happiness tsar " , Professor Lord Richard Layard. The

economist has helped to persuade Whitehall to take therapy seriously, arguing

that it has profound economic benefits. " Therapy is a form of empowerment in the

way that drugs are not. It should be a choice for all who need it, " he said.

 

It was Lord Layard who called for 10,000 new therapists last year. He said that

the costs to the economy of depression were huge, with around £10bn a year spent

on incapacity benefit.

 

Professor David Clark, a trauma expert who has worked with Lord Layard, said

that two-year waiting times for therapy were " quite inappropriate " . " Mental

illness is Britain's great social inequality, and the cost to society of not

treating it is enormous, " he said.

 

Britain is in the grip of a damaging dependence on anti-depressant drugs such as

Prozac, prompting calls from mental health experts for a radical rethink in the

treatment of the 3.5 million people affected.

 

The prescription of so-called " happy pills " has risen by more than 120 percent

in the past decade amid soaring levels of depression and anxiety, an Independent

on Sunday investigation reveals today.

 

Faced with growing concern from doctors who say they are forced to prescribe

drugs as a " second best " treatment, the Government is to promote alternative

methods of dealing with the nation's dependency on drugs.

 

Patricia Hewitt, the Secretary of State for Health, is to unveil a major

expansion next month of " talking therapies " as an alternative to drugs such as

Prozac, which cost the National Health Service more than £400m a year.

 

Ms Hewitt believes millions of people with mild or moderate depression could

eventually be helped to lead happier, fuller lives without relying exclusively

on medication.

 

In a major speech on mental health, Ms Hewitt is expected to unveil two pilot

areas - believed to be Doncaster in South Yorkshire and Newham in London - where

these claims will be properly tested.

 

The areas have been chosen partly because of the high proportion of people

claiming incapacity benefit, a third of whom are thought to be suffering from

depression.

 

Patients will be offered a range of talking therapies, from marriage counselling

to jobs advice.

 

Health officials admit that access to NHS therapists varies widely, with waiting

lists in some areas stretching up to two years.

 

A recent survey of GPs found that nine out of 10 had prescribed anti-depressants

as a " second-best " treatment because of the long waits. Voluntary organisations

such as Mind, the mental health charity, will provide counsellors to expand the

capacity available to GPs in the pilot areas.

 

But the programme falls far short of official recommendations for 10,000 new

therapists.

 

Anti-depressants are often a vital element in the treatment of depression, but

most experts believe the drugs are heavily over-prescribed. The official

guidance from the National Institute for Clinical Excellence (Nice) is that

recognised talking therapies are at least as effective in the short term and

more effective over a long period.

 

Some patients suffering from moderate depression and anxiety will receive

intensive cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) programmes based on pioneering

treatments developed to help victims of the August 1998 Omagh and 7 July London

bombings.

 

Ms Hewitt told the IoS she wants to see " much better support for people with

anxiety, depression and moderate mental illness " .

 

" I really feel that not enough attention is paid to it because of the stigma

attached and that the range of therapies is far too limited. The typical

response, people feel, is for GPs to prescribe Prozac or something of the kind

and really not do much else. What people are saying is that they want someone to

listen, someone to talk to. "

 

The expansion of therapy is based on official recommendations made by the

Government's so-called " happiness tsar " , Professor Lord Richard Layard. The

economist has helped to persuade Whitehall to take therapy seriously, arguing

that it has profound economic benefits. " Therapy is a form of empowerment in the

way that drugs are not. It should be a choice for all who need it, " he said.

 

It was Lord Layard who called for 10,000 new therapists last year. He said that

the costs to the economy of depression were huge, with around £10bn a year spent

on incapacity benefit.

 

Professor David Clark, a trauma expert who has worked with Lord Layard, said

that two-year waiting times for therapy were " quite inappropriate " . " Mental

illness is Britain's great social inequality, and the cost to society of not

treating it is enormous, " he said.

 

 

 

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