Anonymous
Post 05/09/2026 17:43     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

Get your kids, especially girls, off of social media. It helped my DD a lot with anxiety and depression.
Anonymous
Post 05/09/2026 17:25     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

So sad all these recommendations to just go on SSRIs
Anonymous
Post 05/09/2026 16:49     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

DD is taking low dose lexapro (generic). She said it seems to help.

I second PP who said you need to get your kid outside. Go for a hike with her.
Anonymous
Post 05/09/2026 16:46     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

Go to ped and get meds. Don't be hysterical over this and be calm about it with your kids. Meds are common and not a huge deal--worth a try.
Anonymous
Post 05/09/2026 16:19     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

Thank you
Anonymous
Post 05/09/2026 15:22     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

Anonymous wrote:New here -my 11 yo daughter has panic attacks a school and home so pediatrician said to put her on Zoloft. But he really did not do any evaluation other than what I reported that I saw. She is highly grifted and I suspect also has adhd - but I am no doctor. Is it ok just to pick a random
Medicine without a diagnosis? How do you get a diagnosis ?


Having panic attacks is enough diagnosis to get started, IMO.

Our pediatrician started my daughter on Prozac. She said "I like to start with Prozac because XYZ..." Docs often have their first line go-to for a reason. We are 5y into this journey, unfortunately these meds are trial and error in many ways. Sometimes you get lucky. Sometimes you end up complex and with a psychiatrist.

When they are so miserable, trying a med to get started and improve their daily life ASAP is important. Sounds like your daughter would benefit from a full neuropsych evaluation for the rest and moving to a psychiatrist for med management.
Anonymous
Post 05/09/2026 11:29     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

My DD has terrible anxiety - I know how awful it feels. We didn't go the medication route as CBT worked for her, but I wanted to chime in to share this book for parents:

https://www.amazon.com/dp/0190883529?ref_=ppx_hzsearch_conn_dt_b_fed_asin_title_2

It was recommended to me by her therapist, and really helped me understand how to better talk to my child - both in general and specifically about anxious moments.
Anonymous
Post 05/09/2026 11:19     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

New here -my 11 yo daughter has panic attacks a school and home so pediatrician said to put her on Zoloft. But he really did not do any evaluation other than what I reported that I saw. She is highly grifted and I suspect also has adhd - but I am no doctor. Is it ok just to pick a random
Medicine without a diagnosis? How do you get a diagnosis ?
Anonymous
Post 05/19/2024 15:33     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

Exercise. Don’t put your kid on meds for mild anxiety.
Anonymous
Post 05/19/2024 15:33     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

Anonymous wrote:Another vote for talking to the pediatrician. My kids has been on an SSRI prescribed by the pediatrician for 4 years and it has worked well. Weekly therapy has also helped but I think the medication is key.


+1 Teen DD during COVID times saw a therapist virtually and was prescribed meds suggested by the therapist by her pediatrician. I don't think therapists (other than psychiatrists) can prescribe meds.
Anonymous
Post 05/19/2024 15:23     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

I have a child with anxiety disorder and mild depression.

Putting her on Zoloft was the best thing I ever did - and I'm sorry I waited so long to do it.

Anonymous
Post 05/19/2024 10:46     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

OP, I'm sorry your child is going through this and that you are stressed out about it. It is so hard to see our kids suffer.

I would separate out the therapy and medication discussion. You should see your pediatrician or a psychiatrist for medication. A therapist generally can't prescribe meds. If you are having trouble getting in to see a psychiatrist, I agree with PPs and start with your pediatrician as you wait to be matched with a psychiatrist. Given that psychiatrist is doing meds only and not therapy, I think online sessions are ok. FWIW, my child just started seeing a psychiatrist at Healthy Foundations Group in Chevy Chase, and the wait was only 6 weeks.

For a therapist, I would try to find the right fit and prioritize in-person sessions. If possible, I'd try to make appointments with a few. It sounds like your child is seeing one now, and it's not a great fit. In my experience, it's worth it to look around to find one that will work well with your child.

And please take care of yourself too. You may want to see a therapist and definitely should prioritize self-care. I have found that yoga and meditation are very helpful for me.

Good luck and sending you a virtual hug.
Anonymous
Post 05/19/2024 08:03     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

Anonymous wrote:
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.


One’s on Concerta and one’s on Vyvanse. Both added Wellbutrin. But their primary diagnosis is ADHD. It’s just that ADHD almost always presents with something else. Their something else is anxiety. But, without neuropsych testing, we would likely not have caught DD’s ADHD. It doesn’t present the same in girls and boys, so it is hard to catch in high performing girls. Often presents as anxiety. We only tested because it is so genetic and DH, DS and I were all diagnosed.
Anonymous
Post 05/19/2024 05:31     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

Another vote for talking to the pediatrician. My kids has been on an SSRI prescribed by the pediatrician for 4 years and it has worked well. Weekly therapy has also helped but I think the medication is key.
Anonymous
Post 05/18/2024 23:57     Subject: Anxiety meds for teens - help

Ss was more able to apply what he learned in therapy with medication-celexa. No side effects that I can recall other than mild drowsiness the first few weeks. Everyone is different though. Good luck.