If a GP doesn't want to wade into psych/neuropsych disorders of his or her patient, they should say that or refer them to a psychiatrist, not be an asshole. I had a GP who was well versed in psych meds, having been trained in emergency medicine, but he only was a sounding board when I wasn't sure about taking a new med. Irony, though, because even some psychiatrists don't understand the medications they're prescribing. 20 mg of Prozac didn't help me, decades ago, so the psychiatrist at Johns Hopkins upped it to 40 mg. Jacked me into hypomania. Didn't sleep for 40 hours, hypersexual, hallucinations. Downhill from there until I was admitted in-patient at the NIH with rapid cycling bipolar.There’s a reason. A GP. Is not trained in psychiatry, it is not in their scope of practice. Basically this means a GP giving psychotropics is essentially doing a google search and prescribing from his research, not his experience. A GP prescribing like that is not the best care and can be problematic. I am a psychotherapist and have been for over 20 years and can see both sides of the issue. I’d estimate that it is about a 50/50 shot. I have seen the other side where a client of mine sees his GP and gets on a medication that does not work, comes off abruptly-and has a major problem. Don’t take your doctor’s response personally. He’s being responsible, despite what you assume.