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Depression treatment begins with diagnosis. If you've been treated before, you will probably recognize the process. Your doctor will talk to you or administer a short diagnostic test to compare your symptoms with those that define depression.
A common source for diagnostic information is the fourth edition of The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (usually called the DSM-IV® by psychiatrists) and the symptoms listed in it.
Your doctor may diagnose you with major depressive disorder (MDD) if you have at least five of the nine symptoms listed below during the same 2-week period — and those symptoms include either a depressed mood or a loss of interest or pleasure in your normal activities.
Review the list of symptoms:
After diagnosis, a person with depression may undergo the three phases of treatment outlined by the American Psychiatric Association. Each phase has a goal.
Do you still have symptoms? Take the Depression Symptom Inventory. Next page
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