mrss,just caught this thread today and I wanted to say how sorry I am to hear about your depression and the dreadful lack of care you received in the absence of your regular GP. As someone who has suffered with depression since childhood, I know just how despairing it feels when the black dog descends. Unfortunately, it's a time when you're not feeling at your strongest and it's all too easy to let yourself be pushed around or fobbed off by unsympathetic medical professionals who really should know better. I am just coming out of a three year spiral, during which I ended up accepting redundancy from work, as I did not believe that I would ever recover sufficiently to return. The day after I signed the papers was one of my bleakest days ever, and as it happened I managed to get an appointment at my GP surgery, but with a different GP instead of my usually incredibly supportive GP. The GP told me that I should pull myself together and get back into work (and this minutes after explaining to her that I had signed a redundancy agreement the day before). I was so shocked that I actually gave her a piece of my mind! I went home, and as you do when you're depressed, ran it over and over and over in my mind, and then thought, hell, no! I'm not letting her treat me like this. So, as Belle suggested that you do, I wrote to the practice and within days I had a phone call inviting me to meet with the practice manager and another senior member of the practice management team, which I duly did. I explained to them what had happened, and they presented several options of dealing with the matter, including a face-to-face meeting with the doctor concerned. I chose that option because I wanted her to know just how badly her treatment and attitude had affected me, and that had she behaved towards me in the same way just a day earlier, I might well have gone and thrown myself under a train, having been at the receiving end of disgraceful treatment from my employer and the union that was supposed to support me). Moreover, I wanted to address her face to face because in the event that I needed to make an urgent appointment in the future, and she happened to be the duty doctor and the only one available, that I could feel able to see her knowing that I would be listened to and treated accordingly. To cut a long story short, I received a very humble apology from the GP concerned, and as it happens, there has been an occasion when she was the only GP available and I had no choice but to see her. As I pointed out to her, I might be severely depressed, but I am not a doormat, and I can only wonder how other people living with depression or other debilitating mental health issues but lacking my assertiveness would have responded to that particular doctor. So, yes, when you're feeling better, it is definitely worthwhile making a complaint to the PALS - it might be too late for you, but hopefully it will mean that other patients do not have to endure the appalling lack of care offered to yourself. I applaud your willingness to seek support from others - and I hope that it won't be long before the medication kicks in, and that you can start to explore other forms of treatment such as yoga or acupuncture, as well as allowing yourself to start to enjoy these last few months of your pregnancy.