Patients with Minor Depression. Patients with minor depression (fewer than five symptoms that persist for less than 2 years) may respond well to watchful waiting and supportive care. For example, one study found that newer antidepressants were only modestly helpful in older patients with mild depression. Supportive care that consists only of brief and occasional counseling sessions with the family doctor may be as helpful as antidepressants in some cases.
Patients with Depression and Other Psychiatric Problems. Other psychiatric problems often coexist with depression. If patients also suffer from anxiety, treating the depression first often relieves both problems. More severe psychiatric problems, such as bipolar disorder or schizophrenia, require specialized treatments.
Patients with Depression and Medical Conditions. Depression can worsen many medical conditions and may even increase mortality rates from some disorders, such as heart attack and stroke. Depression, then, should be aggressively treated in anyone with a serious medical problem.
Patients with Depression and Substance Abuse Problems. Treating depression in patients who abuse alcohol or drugs is important and can sometimes help patients quit.
Choosing a Therapist
Most people with depression can be treated in an office setting by a psychiatrist or other therapist. Infrequently, the level of dysfunction may be serious enough to warrant hospitalization to provide protection from further deterioration or self-harm.
Health professionals who can prescribe antidepressants include:
- Psychiatrists (mental health professionals with MD degrees)
- Doctors
- Some nurse clinicians
Although other mental health professionals cannot prescribe drugs, most therapists have arrangements with a psychiatrist for providing medications to their patients. In general, mental health professionals are categorized by their training:
- Psychoanalysts tend to have a degree in psychiatry, psychology, or social work as well as several years of training at a psychoanalytic institute.
- Psychologists have graduate-level training, including an internship in a mental healthcare facility.
- A clinical social worker has a master's degree and 2 years of supervised experience in mental health and human services.
- Advanced-practice psychiatric nurses have a master's degree and can provide therapeutic services.


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