Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’s doing great because she’s adequately medicated. I would not reduce her dosage unless you are willing to manage the escalation in behaviors but if you decide to try it, do it when she is not in school and you are around to monitor her.
This is what I was thinking. OP sounds like my young adult child. I feel better so I don’t need medication but doesn’t understand that you feel better because of medication.
Anonymous wrote:She’s doing great because she’s adequately medicated. I would not reduce her dosage unless you are willing to manage the escalation in behaviors but if you decide to try it, do it when she is not in school and you are around to monitor her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’s doing great because she’s adequately medicated. I would not reduce her dosage unless you are willing to manage the escalation in behaviors but if you decide to try it, do it when she is not in school and you are around to monitor her.
Disagree. These are strong medicines and reducing the dose is prudent. I’m an adult woman but I found I could reduce my SSRI dose down to 1/4 of the supposed therepeutic dose and get most of the benefits and fewer side effects. Because of the way SSRIs work, most of the withdrawal effects don’t happen until you stop completely. I was taking half a pill every 4 days before I started to feel withdrawals!
Anonymous wrote:She’s doing great because she’s adequately medicated. I would not reduce her dosage unless you are willing to manage the escalation in behaviors but if you decide to try it, do it when she is not in school and you are around to monitor her.
Anonymous wrote:What do you hope to achieve by reducing the does, especially if she is still anxious? I know I've decreased myself off of an SSRI and it's not fun. Allow 2-4 weeks to taper to a smaller dosage and expect similar side effects as when increasing the dosage.