Pubdate: Fri, 21 Aug 1998 Source: Times, The (UK) Contact: http://www.the-times.co.uk/ Author: Joanna Bale GPS GIVE PROZAC TO TEENAGERS FOR EXAM NERVES FAMILY doctors are increasingly prescribing antidepressants such as Prozac to teenagers to help them to cope with anxiety during school examinations, according to psychiatrists and mental health groups. Helen Kay of the Mental Health Foundation said: "There is a great increase in anxiety among young people generally, and exam time is a particularly stressful period. We are aware that doctors are now prescribing antidepressants like Prozac to teenagers to help them to cope. "There is a much greater amount of pressure on young people nowadays to succeed at school and in their careers. They are very aware that the job market is now extremely competitive. But instead of drugs we would prefer to see more schools providing proper counselling and pastoral care for teenagers who suffer from this." Cosmo Hallstrom, medical director of the Charter Clinic in Chelsea, West London, said: "It is becoming more widely accepted that anti-depressants like Prozac are suitable for under-18s. "Anxiety and depression do not suddenly begin when you become an adult, but for various reasons in the past there has been a tradition against using medication in under-18s. If the symptoms are severe and persistent then, providing it is used carefully and appropriately, it is probably a good thing. There is a myth that depression is a minor condition that will go away with a few sessions of counselling." According to a recent survey of nearly 17,000 young people, published by the Samaritans, anxiety problems are on the increase. Some 17 per cent of girls and 8 per cent of boys aged between 13 and 25 said that they had made a suicide attempt. Just under half had once felt that there was no point in living. Suicide is Britain's second biggest killer of young people after road accidents. In 1995, 19 per cent of deaths in the 15-to-24 age group were suicides, with 738 young people killing themselves. Jackie Lang, head of Walthamstow Hall, an independent girls' school in Sevenoaks, Kent, and vice-president of the Girls' Schools Association, said: "It's a great pity that a personality altering drug is being given to a young person before a personality is formed properly. Youngsters should be given the chance to find out if they can cope with anxiety on their own. "However, I do realise that there is more pressure on young people to succeed in examinations because employment prospects are less secure than they have ever been and competition to get into good universities is increasing. It is not only A-level pupils who suffer, it now extends to GCSE, because more universities are saying that GCSEs are crucial in the selection of those they give offers to. Some medical schools will not look at pupils unless they have straight As at GCSE. "I am not aware of pupils being prescribed Prozac, but I am sure it is usually something that is kept quiet." Her school does not provide specific exam stress counselling, but gives general advice on how to cope and support through tutors and school nurses. A spokesman for Dista Products, the British company which makes Prozac, said: "The drug is licensed for prescription to over-18s, but GPs are allowed to prescribe it off-licence to under-18s if they wish. We do not have any figures on how many teenagers are using it, but it is becoming increasingly popular as a treatment for anxiety and depression." As well as depression, Prozac is also used to treat eating disorders, particularly bulimia, which is most common in teenage girls. Peter Wilson, child psychotherapist and director of the mental health charity Young Minds, said: "The problem about giving medication like Prozac to children is that drug trials have only been conducted on adults. We don't know what it is doing to a still-growing brain, so we must be cautious and make sure that it is closely monitored by experienced medical professionals. "We are living in a drug age, so it is really an issue of our times. Stress such as that caused by exams is part of growing up and being able to overcome it is part of a personality's development." - ---