
When to Seek Help and Emergency Resources
Seeking professional help: depression should be evaluated and treated by a healthcare professional — general practitioners (who often provide first-line treatment and medication), psychologists (who provide psychotherapy), and psychiatrists (who provide both, with particular expertise in pharmacological management). Barriers to help-seeking are significant: stigma, cost, access, and the cognitive symptoms of depression itself (hopelessness, low motivation, difficulty concentrating) all conspire against help-seeking. Mental health parity laws in many countries now require insurance coverage of mental health treatment equivalent to physical health treatment — but significant access gaps remain.
For mild-moderate symptoms, initial approaches can include self-guided CBT programs (multiple apps and workbooks have evidence for mild-moderate depression), primary care physician consultation, and lifestyle changes. For moderate-severe symptoms, combination treatment (antidepressant + psychotherapy) is significantly more effective than either alone (30-40% additional benefit) and should be the standard of care rather than the exception. For severe or treatment-resistant depression, specialist psychiatric evaluation is essential; options include augmentation strategies (adding lithium, atypical antipsychotics, or thyroid hormone to antidepressants), switching antidepressant class, ketamine infusion (FDA-approved for treatment-resistant depression with rapid onset), and electroconvulsive therapy (ECT — far more effective and safer than its reputation suggests for severe, refractory depression).

Suicidality and crisis intervention: suicidal ideation — thoughts of death or suicide — occurs in a significant proportion of people with MDD and represents a medical emergency when passive ideation progresses to active planning with intent and means. Warning signs that require immediate intervention: talking or writing about wanting to die; researching methods; giving away possessions; expressing hopelessness or purposelessness; saying goodbye; sudden calm after period of agitation (can indicate resolved decision to act). If you or someone you know shows these signs: remove access to means (firearms, medications); stay with the person; contact emergency services; call a crisis line (988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline in the US; similar services in other countries).
Living well with depression and preventing recurrence: depression recurs in approximately 50% of people who have a first episode, and 80% of those who have two episodes. Maintaining the lifestyle habits established during recovery (exercise, sleep, social connection, Mediterranean diet) provides the strongest protection against recurrence. MBCT (mindfulness-based cognitive therapy) reduces recurrence by 44% in people with three or more prior episodes and is now endorsed by NICE (UK’s clinical guidance body) as a recommended recurrence prevention strategy. A written relapse prevention plan — identifying personal early warning signs, listing the coping strategies that worked, and specifying when to seek help — is one of the most practically protective tools for long-term mental health management.
