Apocalypse Suicide Page
Good Mood
Living with Depression
Mental Health Recovery
NIMH
SHOCKED! ECT

HealthyPlace.com Radio
Depression Support Groups

Books on Depression
Conference Transcripts
Depression Videos
Diaries - Journals
Disorders Definitions
Mental Health News
Online Depression Tests
Psychiatric Medications
Resources
Site Map

Email
ICQ
Instant Messenger

Visit and Post

Abuse
ADD/ADHD
Addictions
Anxiety-Panic
Bipolar
Eating Disorders
Personality Disorders
Self-Injury

 

send this page to a friend


 

How Family and Friends Can Help
The Depressed Person

The most important thing anyone can do for the depressed person is to help him or her get an appropriate diagnosis and treatment for depression. This may involve encouraging the individual to stay with treatment until the symptoms of depression begin to abate (several weeks), or to seek different treatment if no improvement occurs.

HealthyPlace.com Radio

listen to HealthyPlace.com Radio Families of the Mentally Ill: How Mental Illness Impacts Family Members

Best Things to Say to Someone Who Is Depressed

listen with windows media player

On occasion, it may require making an appointment and accompanying the depressed person to the doctor. It may also mean monitoring whether the depressed person is taking medication. The depressed person should be encouraged to obey the doctor's orders about the use of alcoholic products while on medication.

The second most important thing is to offer emotional support. This involves understanding, patience, affection, and encouragement. Engage the depressed person in conversation and listen carefully. Do not disparage feelings expressed, but point out realities and offer hope. Do not ignore remarks about suicide. Report them to the depressed person's therapist. Invite the depressed person for walks, outings, to the movies, and other activities. Be gently insistent if your invitation is refused. Encourage participation in some activities that once gave pleasure, such as hobbies, sports, religious or cultural activities, but do not push the depressed person to undertake too much too soon. The depressed person needs diversion and company, but too many demands can increase feelings of failure.

Do not accuse the depressed person of faking illness or of laziness, or expect him or her "to snap out of it." Eventually, with treatment, most depressed people do get better. Keep that in mind, and keep reassuring the depressed person that, with time and help, he or she will feel better.

Depressed People May Need Help to Get Help

The very nature of depression can interfere with a person's ability to get help. Depression saps energy and self-esteem and makes a person feel tired, worthless, helpless, and hopeless. Therefore,

  • Seriously depressed people need encouragement from family and friends to seek treatment to ease their pain.
  • Some people need even more help, becoming so depressed, they must be taken for treatment.
  • Don't ignore suicidal thoughts, words or acts. Seek professional help immediately.

Where to Get Help

advertisement

A complete psychological diagnostic evaluation will help decide what is the type of treatment that might be best for the depression person. You can contact the Psychological Association or Medical Society (for psychiatrists) in your county or state to receive a referral, your family doctor, county mental health association or local psychiatric hospitals. (more on where to get help and how to find a therapist who's right for you)

Source: National Institute of Mental Health

RELATED LINKS AND INFO

Helping A Depressed Person Receive Treatment For Depression, Another article
Helping the Depressed Person
When Someone You Love Has A Mental Illness (Resisting Medication, Relative's Anger, Your Guilt)
Finding the Underlying Medical Causes of Depression
Mental Illness - Information for Families
Best Things to Say to Someone Who Is Depressed

top ~ next ~ send page to a friend


  HealthyPlace.com Depression Center Links
home ~ site map ~ causes ~ types ~ people ~ living with
treatments ~ self-help ~ support ~ suicide ~ related issues

 
 


advertisement
     


HealthyPlace.com Homepage
Chat ~ Forums ~ Communities
HealthyPlace.com Films ~ HealthyPlace.com Radio ~ News
Site Map ~ Web Tour ~ Advertise ~ Email Us
send this page to a friend

We subscribe to the HONcode principles of the Health On the Net Foundation.

© 2000-2006 HealthyPlace.com, Inc. All rights reserved.
Terms of Use Privacy Policy Disclaimer Advertising Policy