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Journal Article

Citation

de Jong V, Raz A. J. Mind Body Regul. 2011; 1(2): 73-84.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, Canadian Federation of Clinical Hypnosis, Publisher University of Calgary Press)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Psychiatrists who opt to treat depression with antidepressant medication typically "start low and go slow" - initially prescribing modest doses and then gradually increasing them. General practitioners, moreover, tend to prescribe low, even sub-therapeutic, maintenance doses of antidepressants. Indeed, some patients report clinical improvements even while taking extremely low-dose medication. Controversial meta-analytic findings suggest a negligible clinical benefit of antidepressants over placebos for the treatment of mild-to-moderate depression, although both interventions improve depression ratings compared to no-treatment. Do sub-therapeutic doses of antidepressants provide a treatment prospect for healthcare professionals who wish to use placebo-like treatments for depression? In this paper, we use results from psychiatrist interviews to explore the vagaries of sub-therapeutic doses and shed light on whether they have a place in the armamentarium of the modern clinician.

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