Antidepressants is a funny old subject. I watched something recently that suggests something like 60%+ is a placebo effect. People on the trial were given placebo's and most were reporting improvement in their mood.
One of the first AD's I tried was Prozac. Wow! I thought I was losing my mind. I was on sertraline for sometime and was having a problem coming off it; experiencing these very slight electric shock sensations from head to toe. When I was complaining to the GP, he said I was imagining it and the Psychiatrist said he never heard of it. A few months later, I watched a documentary about the problems people encounter on AD's. Almost every person interviewed reported similar "electric shock" sensations coming off Sertraline. I'm convinced some of these Pharmaceutical companies play down side effects and Doctor's go along with their text book guidelines.
I think on the whole, people benefit from AD's, they've just got to find the right one for them, which can be another minefield. For me, they never did anything for my depression, although the GP will say I might be worse without them.
I've always found my GP of 13 yrs very cold. Like you, I have often wondered if a follow up telephone call would have really been too much for his £100,000pa salary. Over Christmas I was severely depressed. My GP went from seeing me weekly/fortnightly to nothing at all for 3 months. Yet, he turned his head away from me once when he seen me in reception, and a second time, when he had to walk straight past me. Would it really be unprofessional to say, "Hi, I haven't seen you, are you okay?". I've thought often about changing him, but the thought of starting from scratch with my complicated case feels too daunting. A few months before this I had actually confronted him about a couple of things I wasn't happy about. Any time I've seen him since, he has tried that bit harder. Although, the git still sits with his back to you as you walk through the door
