Joeylittle, my doctor does not know this. I thought about leaving it on his voicemail, but I'm concerned if we continue playing phone tag then he will just answer me back on that one thing and not on all of my questions if we somehow miss each other again (I do have them written down, I'd be screwed otherwise... memory is sh*t these days). Unfortunately, today was a particularly difficult day schedule-wise for me, but I tried telling him when I'd be available and he instead called when I wasn't. I don't know what to do and was hoping for clarity heading into the weekend.
Anyway, back to the trazodone. That's really good to know about the dosage issue. I'm currently on 50mg, maybe I need to bump it up. Regarding a "plan" for getting off ambien, no, he didn't. I felt as though the whole appointment was kind of like pulling teeth with him. He took a very thorough history (much to my disliking) and then spent much less time talking med options with me. After he handed me the prescriptions, I was the one who had to initiate ANY sort of discussion about what to do about my previous meds. With the citalopram, his answer was well, you could take both, referring to the paxil and citalopram, and then he finally decided on me taking half for about a week before I could stop it. With the ambien and diazepam, I believe he said it didn't matter (in terms of weaning off). Actually, now that I think about it, I may have asked about taking the trazodone with the ambien. I really can't remember, ugh.
I also had to ask about how I could contact him in case I ran into any issues with the meds. I thought it was odd that he didn't just provide all this info up-front to me. I mentioned it to my therapist and she didn't really comment on it, so I thought maybe it was standard practice. I'm wondering why you're saying psychiatrists are hard to reach. How is that possible? I mean, I definitely get it in terms of trying to set up an initial appointment with one (many, many calls to multiple doctors went unanswered), but I thought once you became a patient that were legally obligated to get back to you. They're playing with lives, aren't they.
My therapist does think I may be having a reaction of some sort (making clear that this is not her area of expertise etc) and that I need to speak to him. I'm considering stopping the meds cold turkey as of today, as I don't think I've been on them long enough for that to be a problem. That said, I'd hate to quit without giving them a chance to work (as mentioned above, sorry for the repeat). I would probably just go back to taking my normal dosage of citalopram until I can figure out something else (I've been taking citalopram for several months and probably shouldn't just stop it).