Anonymous wrote:Have you asked her WHY she doesn't want to?
Referral to therapist. Meds may or may not be appropriate. FYI, Zoloft has very high risk of sexual side effects. In a few years, you'll be one of the men here whining that you never have sex. (I am very pro rx for depression, but it sounds like you need to educate yourself about depression pretty damn fast.)
Anonymous wrote:We recently had a young child and my wife has been going through some issues and her Gyno recommended that she take Zoloft. She has refused to take it and I think that this is putting a toll on our marriage, because I don't think she can handle being a stay at home mother just yet. I have respected her decision not to take it but I feel as if she needs it for something else. Should I set up an appointment for therapy?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You should listen to her and what she wants and what she thinks will improve her mental health. Otherwise you're just getting creepy and gaslight-y.
okay..I'm the first to be pro-woman on this forum but this is not fair. if she is legitimately depressed and not taking medication he has as right to be concerned and a right to want her to take her medication. there is no gas lighting going on here
Anonymous wrote:Either put it in her food or get a court order
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, a gynecologist <> psychiatrist.
Talk to her. Ask her what she wants. If she doesn't want psychiatric medication then she shouldn't be prescribed psychiatric medication unless she is truly a danger – not just an inconvenience.
Oh come on, untreated mental illness is more than just an "inconvenience", and it affects the whole family.
Anonymous wrote:I would talk to her about your concerns and encourage her to get therapy. Medication is a serious matter and she has every right to not want to take it, but obviously she is having some kind of symptoms enough for her doctor to recommend it. I would support her decision and encourage her to get therapy. It works best when you takes meds AND do therapy but plenty of people are helped by therapy alone.
Anonymous wrote: No proper doctor will prescribe medication BEFORE recommending therapy. None.
Anonymous wrote:First of all: all you have to do these days to get prescribed this kind of medication is one profound statement of "I feel so sad lately.", "I feel so stressed lately.", "I feel so anxious lately."
Medication should always be the last resort. No proper doctor will prescribe medication BEFORE recommending therapy. None. Unless it's a dramatic crisis situation where your wife wants to kill herself of course, that's different. But a good doctor will try to help your wife without simply putting her on drugs. Consider that first.
Then: your wife's decision not to take medication is first of all a good thing. It means she still feels strong and secure enough to think she can manage in a different way. Therapy is the way to go. Also talk to her. Try to seriously help her and not just put her on something so everyone's life gets easier.