I will be filing an official complaint with the Oklahoma State Board of Behavioral Health. This is in regards to my daughter. First of all, the psychiatrist in the office NEVER saw my daughter. The nurse practitioner did the intake and "treated" my daughter. After being on Prozac for several weeks and falling deeper and deeper into depression, my daughter allowed me to talk to the nurse practitioner. This is where the "secondly" comes into play. This particular nurse practitioner is the coldest, most smug person I've ever met in any medical field, but I figure I didn't have to like her as long as she's good at her job - she's NOT! Instead of taking my daughter off of Prozac, her first step was to put her on Abilify. So at that point, my daughter was on a medication that was potentially causing her to spiral out of control and thanks to the Abilify, she had the energy to potentially hurt herself. It was at that point that I talked to the nurse practitioner. She said that she was taking my daughter off Abilify and adding Wellbutrin. When I questioned her as to why she wasn't taking her off Prozac, she said she had to gradually take her off. I also asked her if my daughter's birth control could be adding to her depression, and she told me no. Well, my daughter went back to her again, and she told my daughter she was just going to keep her on the Prozac indefinitely also. Two weeks after that, my daughter was EXTREMELY suicidal. This past Monday at the urging of her therapist, we checked my daughter into Cedar Ridge in OKC. The FIRST thing the psychiatrist at Cedar Ridge did was to take my daughter off the birth control and the Prozac. He put her on a different medication for her mental illness, and within the first day - FIRST DAY - of her being at Cedar Ridge, I could already see positive changes in her. This particular nurse practitioner should not be allowed to dispense medication or work with patients. She could have cost me my (adult child) child's life by keeping her on a medication that was causing her to spiral out of control. This is malpractice in my mind.