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Antidepressant prescribing up 6% in last three months of 2020

By March 30, 2021No Comments

More than 20 million antidepressants were prescribed between October and December 2020 — a 6% increase compared to the same three months in 2019 — according to statistics reported by the NHS Business Services Authority (NHSBSA).

Overall, the statistics showed that 23% more patients received an antidepressant item in the third quarter of 2020–2021 compared to the same quarter in 2015–2016.

But an NHSBSA report on the statistics noted that, across 2020 as a whole, the rate of increase in antidepressant prescribing slowed, with fewer items prescribed than would have been expected based on 2019 trends.

The quarterly statistics, published on 4 March 2021, describe primary care prescribing of medicines used to improve mental health in England, which are subsequently dispensed in the community.

The statistics cover five categories of medicine: hypnotics and anxiolytics; drugs used in psychoses and related disorders; antidepressant drugs; central nervous system stimulants and drugs used for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder; and drugs for dementia.

Antidepressants “have been steadily increasing in usage since 2015”, the report said, with 20.5 million antidepressant drug items prescribed between October and December 2020, compared with 19.3 million items during the same three months in the previous year.

The report also considered the impact of the national COVID-19 lockdowns implemented between 23 March 2020 and 4 July 2020, and 5 November 2020 to 2 December 2020.

All of the drug groups observed a larger increase in monthly prescribing — on average five percentage points — between November and December 2020 compared to the same period in 2019.

For psychoses and related disorders, 3.32 million items were prescribed in the last three months of 2020; a 3.6% increase from 3.2 million items prescribed in the same three months of 2019.

However, overall prescribing of drugs for dementia continued to show a downward trend, with 1.02 million items prescribed between October and December 2020 compared to 1.08 million items in the same months of 2019.

Ciara Ni Dhubhlaing, president of the College of Mental Health Pharmacy, said that it was “worth noting” that most antidepressants are licensed to treat both depression and anxiety.

Read the full article on Pharmaceutical Journal here.

If you are suffering from either Anxiety or Depression, please see our information on Treatment for Depression or Anxiety Therapy in NYC.

Barry J. Richman

Author Barry J. Richman

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Barry J. Richman MD Psychiatrist NY

Manhattan, NYC Psychiatrist
(212) 889-5463