Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not recommended. If you need an SSRI you shouldn't be drinking anyway.
This:
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/depression/expert-answers/antidepressants-and-alcohol/faq-20058231
And some people have discovered that if they stop drinking and get control over their alcohol abuse, eventually they don't need the SSRI either. Alcohol is a depressant and SSRIs are anti-depressants.
People are using the term "depressant" without understanding the context and definition.
Alcohol is not a mental "depressant." It is a CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM Depressant. People just use the phrase "alcohol is a depressant" as a short form. But, in fact, alcohol depresses the activity of the CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM. That is NOT the same as being a mental health depressant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not recommended. If you need an SSRI you shouldn't be drinking anyway.
This:
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/depression/expert-answers/antidepressants-and-alcohol/faq-20058231
And some people have discovered that if they stop drinking and get control over their alcohol abuse, eventually they don't need the SSRI either. Alcohol is a depressant and SSRIs are anti-depressants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not recommended. If you need an SSRI you shouldn't be drinking anyway.
This:
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/depression/expert-answers/antidepressants-and-alcohol/faq-20058231
And some people have discovered that if they stop drinking and get control over their alcohol abuse, eventually they don't need the SSRI either. Alcohol is a depressant and SSRIs are anti-depressants.
Anonymous wrote:Not recommended. If you need an SSRI you shouldn't be drinking anyway.
Anonymous wrote:I could have like one or else I’d black out and puke. That was in my 20s and I drank a lot more back then. Not sure what it would be like now that I only have 5 drinks a week. It’s one of the reasons why I haven’t gone back on an SSRI.