National prevalence of receipt of antidepressant prescriptions by persons without a psychiatric diagnosis.

View Abstract

OBJECTIVE

The study addressed recent concerns regarding increasing prescription of antidepressant drugs to patients with no recorded psychiatric diagnosis.

METHODS

Records from ten large integrated health systems in the Mental Health Research Network were used to examine diagnoses received by 1,011,946 health plan members who filled at least one antidepressant prescription in 2010.

RESULTS

Among individuals filling antidepressant prescriptions, psychiatric diagnoses recorded during the year were depressive disorders (48%), anxiety disorders (27%), bipolar disorders (3%), and attention deficit disorders (3%). The proportion of those filling prescriptions who had no psychiatric diagnosis was 39%, which fell to 27% after the analysis excluded prescriptions for antidepressants often prescribed for nonpsychiatric indications (tricyclic antidepressants, trazodone, and bupropion).

CONCLUSIONS

Prescription of antidepressants to patients without an appropriate diagnosis appears to be less common than previously reported.

Investigators
Abbreviation
Psychiatr Serv
Publication Date
2014-07-01
Volume
65
Issue
7
Page Numbers
944-6
Pubmed ID
24788368
Medium
Print
Full Title
National prevalence of receipt of antidepressant prescriptions by persons without a psychiatric diagnosis.
Authors
Simon GE, Stewart C, Beck A, Ahmedani BK, Coleman KJ, Whitebird RR, Lynch F, Owen-Smith AA, Waitzfelder BE, Soumerai SB, Hunkeler EM