Depression is a serious disorder that can cause significant problems in mood, thinking, and behavior at home, in
school, and with peers. It is estimated that major depressive disorder (MDD) affects about 5 percent of adolescents.
Only in the past two decades has depression in children been taken very seriously. The depressed child may
pretend to be sick, refuse to go to school, cling to a parent, or worry that the parent may die. Older children
may be irritable, sulk, get into trouble at school, be negative, grouchy, and feel misunderstood.
Because normal behaviors vary from one childhood stage to another, it can be difficult to tell whether a child
is just going through a temporary phase or is suffering from depression. Sometimes the parents become worried
about how the child's behavior has changed, or a teacher mentions that your child doesn't seem to be himself.
In such cases, if a visit to the child's pediatrician rules out physical symptoms, the doctor will probably suggest
that the child be evaluated, preferably by a psychotherapist who specializes in the treatment of children.
The good news is that psychotherapy has been found to be the preferred treatment over medications.
Research has shown that, as in adults, depression in children and adolescents is treatable. Certain antidepressant
medications, called selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), can be beneficial to children and adolescents
with major depressive disorder, the severest form of depression. However, there has been some recent concern that
the use of antidepressant medications themselves may induce suicidal behavior in youths. Following a thorough
and comprehensive review of all the available published and unpublished controlled clinical trials of
antidepressants in children and adolescents, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued a public
warning in October 2004 about an increased risk of suicidal thoughts or behavior (suicidality) in
children and adolescents treated with SSRI antidepressant medications. In 2006, an advisory committee to the
FDA recommended that the agency extend the warning to include young adults up to age 25.
There's no doubt that since the introduction of SSRI antidepressants in the 1980s suicide rates have dropped significantly. However, three
recent studies -- in 2002, 2008, and 2010 -- have shown that these types of antidepressants work only in the severest forms of
depression some of the time, and that for mild, moderate, and even severe depression, they work no better than sugar pills.
According to the latest study, published in the Journal of the
American Medical Association on January 6, 2010, "True drug effects...were nonexistent to negligible among depressed patients with
mild, moderate, and even severe baseline symptoms..."
(Click here to read more about this research)
Fortunately, there are alternatives, such as psychotherapy, lifestyle changes, and other complementary and alternatives
therapies. These are my specialty areas.
To learn more about childhood depression and San Jose Child Therapy, visit my website at
RandiFredricks.com, call 408-315-0645,
or
contact me online
.