Conference Coverage

What’s the proper place of benzodiazepines in psychiatry?


 

REPORTING FROM PSYCH CONGRESS 2019


In another presentation, psychiatrist Murray B. Stein, MD, MPH, of the University of California at San Diego and VA San Diego Healthcare System, offered these tips about prescribing benzodiazepines for patients with anxiety.

Be very cautious about prescribing as needed

“It’s rarely indicated to prescribe benzodiazepine [as needed] when you’re treating people with anxiety,” he said. “The main reason is patients don’t know when they need it. They take their pills either when they’re so anxious that they’ve already been freaking out for a long time, or they take it when they’re first starting to feel at least a bit anxious. That leads to taking it to prevent being anxious.”

Allow an as-needed approach in certain situations

It can be appropriate to prescribe benzodiazepines for specific short-term anxiety-provoking situations, such as speaking in public, Dr. Stein said.

However, he said, advise patients to try the medication beforehand so they understand its effects. “I’ve had one occasion where I thought we had a dose worked out well. Somebody had to do a work presentation, and he took the medicine and got up in front of the group. He wasn’t anxious at all. But he couldn’t remember a single thing.”

Don’t use them as patients start SSRIs

Patients can get anxious as they start SSRIs, especially for panic disorders, Dr. Stein said. So it might seem reasonable, as some psychiatrists believe, to add benzodiazepines on a short-term basis.

But Dr. Stein said he is not a fan of this approach. As he noted, benzodiazepines are hard to stop. He prefers to help patients understand possible side effects of SSRIs instead, and he emphasized the importance of being available to help patients get through them.

Dr. Jain and Dr. Stein each reported multiple relationships with industry.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Alopecia areata linked to mental health disorders
Federal Practitioner
Treatment-resistant OCD: There’s more we can do
Federal Practitioner
Parsing the fine points of anxiety
Federal Practitioner
Patients with OCD/hoarding differ from those with OCD/nonhoarding
Federal Practitioner
More than 40% of U.K. physicians report binge drinking
Federal Practitioner
Benzodiazepines nearly double the odds of spontaneous abortion
Federal Practitioner
About one-third of anxiety patients relapse after stopping antidepressants
Federal Practitioner
Team sports may mitigate tough childhoods
Federal Practitioner
Misguided fear is keeping benzodiazepines from elderly
Federal Practitioner
Technology, counseling, and CBT apps for primary care
Federal Practitioner