Drop Down Menu
  Search...
 

Local journalist's warning on Prozac 03.03.08

A DERRY journalist has bravely spoken of her personal experience of taking Prozac following last week's controversial report doubting the drug's effectiveness in treating depression.
Claire Allan who is also a novelist, felt compelled to speak out about her own illness fearing people would come off their depression medication too suddenly.
The 31-year old author sank into a depression four years ago when her son Joseph was just six months old. Claire had just returned from maternity leave to her job as a reporter with the Derry Journal and said "things started to unravel".
"Routines changed at work and I just lost the ability to cope. It was - get the baby up, get him home, get him into the bath and give him a bottle. I didn't sit down until around 9pm and I was wiped out. Exhausted," she said.
Claire Allan. Claire tackles the issue of depression in her first novel 'Rainy Days and Tuesdays' which was published by Poolbeg last year and which also features Inishowen in the storyline. She was recently in Dublin doing promotions for the paperback edition coming out this week and spoke to the Independent about her battle with depression four years ago.
"I was a professional career woman. I had always achieved what I wanted to achieve. But now I was half a working person, half a mummy and there was nothing left for me. 
"It was a constant battle working out who I was. One day I was having lunch with a friend. I just sat there and cried. She said 'I really think you should see someone'."
Claire said her doctor diagnosed depression and told her to take a month off work and to rest. "She put me on Prozac and said 'we need to get your mood up quickly or it will get ten times worse'." Claire said the drug helped her and within two to three weeks, she "felt the cloud lift". "I got more energy and I started to fall in love with my son. I felt like a mummy should. Before, there had been no joy."
But after six months of feeling well, Claire came off the Prozac without her doctor's guidance. "It was horrendous. I felt worse than I had before. I cried and cried and had suicidal thoughts. That is why the report worries me," she said. She took Prozac for a further six months in tandem with some counselling. These days, she feels well. She has taken Prozac since and says it does lift her mood but doesn't work in isolation. "You have to change your life too. But I have accepted that sometimes I need it just as I would take insulin if I was a diabetic."
Claire yesterday told InishowenNews.com that she is looking forward to the publication of the second in her four-book deal with Poolbeg - 'Blue Line Blues' - due out in September.
If you have any concerns about depression, more information can be found at  www.aware.ie  or  www.samaritans.org  .
Return to > News