Hi Missing
I think Melamie is defimitely right. It would be best to seek the advice of a doctor or pharmacist about medications. I wanted to respond to your poisting though as I think one or two things can be said safely, and hopefully usefully. You mentioned that you were previously seeing a psyhiatrist, but are now being prescribed these medications by your family doctor. I can't help wondering, from what you say, whether it might be better to see if you can find another psychiatrist. Even if you only saw them once or twice they would, I am sure, have greater specialist knowledge than your family doctor on your medication issues. In my country, the UK, family doctors manage the overwhelmeing majority of patients with depression, but they do refer a small percentage of people on to psychiatrists or psychologists etc. I would also say that in the UK most family doctors (we call them general practitioners) would not be too experienced in prescribing multiple antidepressants to an individual patient. They would tend to try one at a time, and if this didn't work would think about referring on. I don't, however, know what the position is where you live. "Cocktails" of medications don't seem too uncommon in those who post here, although they may of course have been initiated by a specialist and then continued by the family doctor.
You also mentioned that initially the combo worked very well, but that for the last 6 months you have been "sliding downhill". Again, I feel that it would be impossible for anyone on this site to be able to say with any confidence what is happening here. If you don't mind me saying so, if you were doing very well for 2 months but then have been going downhill for the last 6 months, then I really do feel that you should ideally have been under the care of a doctor with specialist knowledge throughout the whole of that time. None of this is any of your fault, and these things can happen when doctors finish etc, but speaking strictly as a non-medical person, it would seem by far the "aafest" thing to do, if at all possible, would be to see a new psychiatrist, or related specialist, as soon as you can. In the meantime you could also speak to the pharmacy as well. They could give you some general information about these me