Anonymous
Post 05/18/2024 23:34     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

Obviously she needs mental health and possible prescribed meds.

As that is going immediately start:

Multi vitamin with iron and zinc

Extra Vit D pill

Magnesium Glycinate 500mg 1 hour before bed

Better diet (less sugar, more protein/fats)

1 hour of exercise a day

Journaling

Look on Amazon for books and workbooks for teen anxiety.

Follow her period because PMS can be really bad for girls with anxiety.

Good luck - it’s tough.

Also find a therapist or support group for yourself
Anonymous
Post 05/18/2024 22:38     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

Anonymous wrote:Ok OP. I have a lifelong anxiety disorder. Both my kids have ADHD that brings along anxiety as a friend. And even with my history, I waited way too long to medicate my oldest.

Its scary. It’s also very common post COVID and very treatable. If you get good treatment.

For situational anxiety, therapy alone can be fine. But even then, you sometimes need to use meds to get the anxiety to a place for the kid to be calm enough for CBT to work. And CBT takes time to work. For lifelong anxiety? It’s a medical condition. Any solution is almost certainly medication + therapy. Not either/or. We talk about having a toolbox in our house. Medication, a therapist, activities that are healthy and calming (I do yoga, one kid plays an instrument), etc.

Medication doesn’t have to be lifelong. And it can be something that your kid is on during more stressful periods of her life and off during others. I was on in law school. Then off. Then back on after baby #2 in 2 years.

Your plan looks like this. Get a psychiatrist and therapist. Do not recommend using your pediatrician for meds. They can’t be specialists in everything, and getting these meds right is tricky. They take a while to build up, what works for one person does nothing for another, side effects can be tough— or non-existent. Plus (and not to scare you because it’s very low probability), if things are going to go off the rails in mental health, it tends to happen in early college. If that were to happen, you’d want someone who knew your kids mental health at baseline and was a specialist.

And get a therapist. One more reliable than “every other week, except when I’m on vacation”. And get on more than one waiting list. A therapist fit is very personal. You don’t want to start from scratch if the first try isn’t a good fit. Or feel forced to use a meh fit.

In the meantime, keep your kid busy within her limits. By which I mean distracted. Binge watch Gilmore Girls. Take her shopping. Build in some form of physical activity. Swimming, walking, tennis, hitting a punching bag— anything to burn off the stress. Drag her to yoga class with you. Brainstorm with her on things she enjoys or would like to learn. Using your hands (knitting, nanoblocks sets, origami, drawing, sewing) can be especially helpful.

Take stressful things off her plate. Have her take some incompletes if needs be. If it’s stressful and can wait, hit pause. Not stop. Not forever. Just until she starts meds and they kick in and she gets a therapist. Be a cruise director.

Unfortunately, good adolescent mental healthcare is in high demand and good providers are worth waiting for. Because bad ones can do more harm than good. If you can bridge the gap until she can see good ones, do.

Good luck. It may take some trial and error, but you care and you are there, and that’s important. You can get the pieces in place and this can be a blip. And there can be an upside. My own kids are in college and really good about coming to me now with problems and screwups that lots of kids hide until the parent sees the Fs on report cards. And it’s not because I’m a perfect parent. I think it’s because when they were struggling I fought for them. With the school, with their teachers, to get good mental health treatment. They remember that I stuck with them when it was tough, and it banked a lot of goodwill.

Not my kids made very smart college choices for themselves. And continue to make good choices, especially about their physical and mental health. And, I think they will be happy, fully functional, successful, well balanced adults. It really can be fine. And it’s much easier to deal with before they turn 18. At that point, your ability to require treatment disappears. They need to understand the importance of caring for their mental health before then.

Hugs.


Op. We are trying g to switch therapists. Unfortunately, as you note, it has been hard to find someone with openings and NONE have in person openings. I can’t believe this is the layout of therapist land but it is. And is sad. It’s my intent to have something in place with someone for who in college, as you suggest.

I will start with our ped as we have a well visit coming up. But will see if a psych is possible within a reasonable timeframe. I’m afraid I may have issues with that as well.

Finding mental health help is so difficult.

Can I ask what meds your children were or are on?

Thank you.
Anonymous
Post 05/18/2024 22:09     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

DD 12 is two weeks in on meds and I’ve already noticed a difference. Therapy wasn’t working. We’ll try again once the meds have fully kicked in. Given I no longer see her in the fetal position on the floor each night, I’d say things are moving in the right direction.
Anonymous
Post 05/18/2024 20:40     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

Ok OP. I have a lifelong anxiety disorder. Both my kids have ADHD that brings along anxiety as a friend. And even with my history, I waited way too long to medicate my oldest.

Its scary. It’s also very common post COVID and very treatable. If you get good treatment.

For situational anxiety, therapy alone can be fine. But even then, you sometimes need to use meds to get the anxiety to a place for the kid to be calm enough for CBT to work. And CBT takes time to work. For lifelong anxiety? It’s a medical condition. Any solution is almost certainly medication + therapy. Not either/or. We talk about having a toolbox in our house. Medication, a therapist, activities that are healthy and calming (I do yoga, one kid plays an instrument), etc.

Medication doesn’t have to be lifelong. And it can be something that your kid is on during more stressful periods of her life and off during others. I was on in law school. Then off. Then back on after baby #2 in 2 years.

Your plan looks like this. Get a psychiatrist and therapist. Do not recommend using your pediatrician for meds. They can’t be specialists in everything, and getting these meds right is tricky. They take a while to build up, what works for one person does nothing for another, side effects can be tough— or non-existent. Plus (and not to scare you because it’s very low probability), if things are going to go off the rails in mental health, it tends to happen in early college. If that were to happen, you’d want someone who knew your kids mental health at baseline and was a specialist.

And get a therapist. One more reliable than “every other week, except when I’m on vacation”. And get on more than one waiting list. A therapist fit is very personal. You don’t want to start from scratch if the first try isn’t a good fit. Or feel forced to use a meh fit.

In the meantime, keep your kid busy within her limits. By which I mean distracted. Binge watch Gilmore Girls. Take her shopping. Build in some form of physical activity. Swimming, walking, tennis, hitting a punching bag— anything to burn off the stress. Drag her to yoga class with you. Brainstorm with her on things she enjoys or would like to learn. Using your hands (knitting, nanoblocks sets, origami, drawing, sewing) can be especially helpful.

Take stressful things off her plate. Have her take some incompletes if needs be. If it’s stressful and can wait, hit pause. Not stop. Not forever. Just until she starts meds and they kick in and she gets a therapist. Be a cruise director.

Unfortunately, good adolescent mental healthcare is in high demand and good providers are worth waiting for. Because bad ones can do more harm than good. If you can bridge the gap until she can see good ones, do.

Good luck. It may take some trial and error, but you care and you are there, and that’s important. You can get the pieces in place and this can be a blip. And there can be an upside. My own kids are in college and really good about coming to me now with problems and screwups that lots of kids hide until the parent sees the Fs on report cards. And it’s not because I’m a perfect parent. I think it’s because when they were struggling I fought for them. With the school, with their teachers, to get good mental health treatment. They remember that I stuck with them when it was tough, and it banked a lot of goodwill.

Not my kids made very smart college choices for themselves. And continue to make good choices, especially about their physical and mental health. And, I think they will be happy, fully functional, successful, well balanced adults. It really can be fine. And it’s much easier to deal with before they turn 18. At that point, your ability to require treatment disappears. They need to understand the importance of caring for their mental health before then.

Hugs.
Anonymous
Post 05/18/2024 20:16     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

Anonymous wrote:DC is experiencing some anxiety- not the first time but worse- trouble sleeping, stomach aches, crying a bit. Expression of social and general anxiety.

What worked for your teen? It’s so so hard to get in with therapists. I’m on a waitlist with one. And the other only has virtual every 2 weeks. And cancelled next week.

How were meds? I’m concerned about side effects. What did your kids experience and did it help with the symptoms.

I’m really struggling here. Crying as I type it. So be kind. Pls.


Pediatrician’s can prescribed SSRI’s and give you some therapists. Don’t wait for the therapist, go to your pediatrician.
Anonymous
Post 05/18/2024 18:57     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

Anonymous wrote:DC is experiencing some anxiety- not the first time but worse- trouble sleeping, stomach aches, crying a bit. Expression of social and general anxiety.

What worked for your teen? It’s so so hard to get in with therapists. I’m on a waitlist with one. And the other only has virtual every 2 weeks. And cancelled next week.

How were meds? I’m concerned about side effects. What did your kids experience and did it help with the symptoms.

I’m really struggling here. Crying as I type it. So be kind. Pls.



Look first for vitamin deficiency especially iron. You want a ferritin test and ferritin saturation. This is especially important for girls due to low irom during periods but happened to my son as well. Low iron causes anxiety.

One thing I wish I had known is that anti anxiety medication can interfere with height growth so.rule out things like low iron first and think short term for medication unless no other choice.
Anonymous
Post 05/18/2024 17:43     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

Anonymous wrote:Make sure they are exercising, eating lots of veggies. Make sure you are relaxed bc they are your mirror.


OP here. How? I’m struggling with this so much. Seeing my kid struggle is killing me.
Anonymous
Post 05/18/2024 17:41     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

Make sure they are exercising, eating lots of veggies. Make sure you are relaxed bc they are your mirror.
Anonymous
Post 05/18/2024 12:14     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

Teens with depression and/or anxiety are at higher risk of suicide. I would not be worried about side effects before trying if you think they might help. Pediatrician can subscribe.
Anonymous
Post 05/18/2024 12:13     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

Our pediatrician prescribed for our DD. Zoloft. It’s been so great for her. Still has anxiety and works on skills to manage but is sleeping better, edginess is gone and voluntary does more stuff with the family.
Anonymous
Post 05/18/2024 12:11     Subject: Re:Anxiety meds for teens - help

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Meds were pretty much life saving. There were side effects but he worked through them. The hardest part is finding a psychiatrist to prescribe.


What were the side effects?


Activation syndrome. It was bad for a bit but no meds was worse.
Anonymous
Post 05/18/2024 11:57     Subject: Re:Anxiety meds for teens - help

Anonymous wrote:Meds were pretty much life saving. There were side effects but he worked through them. The hardest part is finding a psychiatrist to prescribe.


What were the side effects?
Anonymous
Post 05/18/2024 11:35     Subject: Re:Anxiety meds for teens - help

Meds were pretty much life saving. There were side effects but he worked through them. The hardest part is finding a psychiatrist to prescribe.
Anonymous
Post 05/18/2024 10:49     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

I don’t have advice for anxiety but my dd has depression and ADHD. I wanted to send virtual hug to you. It’s hard, so hard and harder to not really be able to talk about it
Anonymous
Post 05/18/2024 10:39     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

DC is experiencing some anxiety- not the first time but worse- trouble sleeping, stomach aches, crying a bit. Expression of social and general anxiety.

What worked for your teen? It’s so so hard to get in with therapists. I’m on a waitlist with one. And the other only has virtual every 2 weeks. And cancelled next week.

How were meds? I’m concerned about side effects. What did your kids experience and did it help with the symptoms.

I’m really struggling here. Crying as I type it. So be kind. Pls.