Child depression medication is not meant to act as a panacea for treating young children that have developed depression at a very young age. That being said, child depression medications can nevertheless still provide very useful service in controlling the child’s depression problem though at the same time wanton use of drugs to cure or treat child depression has many associated dangers that need to be addressed with great care. At the very least, you have to first take your depressed child to see a psychiatrist who will diagnose the condition and then recommend suitable treatment that can in some cases mean having to use child depression medications.
Health Canada has approved the use of fluoxetine (such as Prozac) in children and teens with depression. If the child is prescribed child depression medications it is then up to the parents and the child to ensure that they always stick to the prescribed dose and not deviate even an iota from the dosage. It is of course a good idea for the parents to first ask the psychiatrist to recommend therapy and only if the condition is severe enough and beyond the capability of therapy treatment should the psychiatrist recommend child depression medication.
It is also recommended that the child be shown to a psychologist and even social workers that with the help of parents must try and help alleviate the condition through therapy as a first line of action and failing that or to buttress the therapy, child depression medication can then be used.
Unfortunately, in the recent decade beginning from the year 1995 and through till the year 2004 the number of child depression cases doubled in the US and at the same time use of child depression medication such as antidepressants also increased in an alarming manner. What’s worse is the fact that during this period fewer children were being counseled or advised by psychotherapists.
Another alarming trend that has taken place over the last few years is that the numbers of children being prescribed wrong child depression medications increased even in spite of guidelines in place to advice caregivers to give appropriate mental health counseling and even to try and combine, whenever possible, use of child depression medications with counseling.
It is safe to conclude that counseling should be the first option and only if this method fails should child depression medication be prescribed.
In regard to new depression medications one thing that does not seem to change and that is the depression condition. Being unchanging and serious it must be treated with the most effective medications that however, up till now, have failed to live up to expectations. With side effects another headache it is really a risk thing trusting in the current crop of depression medication.