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An independent NICE guideline committee has developed the first guideline for 12 years to identify, treat and manage depression in adults.
It has looked at the evidence on the treatment of new depressive episodes,chronic depression, preventing relapse,patient choice,and the organisation of,and access to,mental health services.
The committee has created a menu of treatment options to allow patients to pick the one which is right for them,in a shared decision-making discussion between them and their healthcare practitioner.
Patients with less severe depression could choose from the menu as a first-line treatment option from, for example,cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT), exercise, counselling or psychotherapy.
A similar range of psychological interventions,along with the option of antidepressant medication,is available to those choosing a first-line treatment for more severe depression.
Dr Paul Chrisp,director of the centre for guidelines at NICE, said: āPeople with depression deserve and expect the best treatment from the NHS which is why this guideline is urgently required.
āThe COVID-19 pandemic has shown us the impact depression has had on the nationās mental health. People with depression need these evidence-based guideline recommendations available to the NHS, without delay.ā
According to the Office of National Statistics, around one in six (17%) adults aged 16 years and over in Great Britain experienced some form of depression in summer 2021. The rate remains higher than those observed before the coronavirus pandemic (July 2019 to March 2020),where 10% of adults experienced some form of depression.
The guideline also contains new recommendations for those stopping antidepressant medication.
Public Health Englandās 2019 evidence review, āDependence and withdrawal associated with some prescribed medicinesā, showed 17% of the adult population in England (7.3 million people) had been prescribed antidepressants in the year 2017 to 2018.
People who are considering taking, or stopping, antidepressants medication should talk with their healthcare professional about the benefits and risks. The healthcare professional should explain that withdrawal may take weeks or months to complete successfully,that it is usually necessary to reduce the dose in stages over time (called ātaperingā) and that most people stop antidepressants successfully.
Source: Nice. org