
EXOMIND® vs. Traditional TMS: What Patients Should Know Before Choosing
May 20, 2026For many people, SSRIs are the first treatment they hear about when depression starts to affect daily life. Sometimes they help a great deal. Sometimes they help a little, but not enough. And sometimes they do not seem to move the needle at all. If that has been your experience, I want you to hear this clearly: that is not the end of the road. You still have options, and some of those options are available right here at Coastline Psychiatric Liaisons.
What SSRIs Are And What They Do
SSRIs are a group of antidepressants called selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors. Doctors often prescribe them for depression, and they are also used in some anxiety-related conditions. In simple terms, they work on serotonin, a brain chemical tied to mood and emotional balance. The goal is to help improve symptoms like sadness, hopelessness, low energy, loss of interest, and negative thinking over time.
For many people, SSRIs are a helpful first step. They are common for a reason. Still, they are not the right fit for everyone, and they do not help every person enough. That can feel discouraging, but it does not mean you have failed treatment. It means your brain and your body might need a different path.
How To Tell If SSRIs Are Not Enough
This can look different from person to person. Some people take an SSRI for the right amount of time and still feel deeply depressed. Others notice a small improvement, but they still feel far from well. Some keep struggling with mental fog, low motivation, or the feeling that they are only barely getting through the day. In other cases, the medication helps mood a little, but the side effects feel too hard to live with.
When depression does not improve enough after trying at least two antidepressants at the right dose and for the right amount of time, doctors often call that treatment-resistant depression. That term can sound heavy, but I do not want people to hear it as hopeless. I want them to hear it as a sign that we need to broaden the conversation and look at what else could help.
Other Paths Forward When SSRIs Are Not Enough
When SSRIs do not do enough, I think it helps to shift the question. Instead of asking, why am I not getting better, we ask, what kind of treatment fits me better now? That opens the door to other options beyond standard medication management. For some people, that could include a different kind of antidepressant. For others, it could include a treatment that does not depend on a daily pill at all. Whole-person care matters here, because the goal is not just to keep trying the same thing harder. The goal is to find a treatment that truly fits your symptoms, your life, and your needs.
A Short Look At Spravato®
One option we offer in our office is Spravato®, also known as esketamine nasal spray. It is approved for adults with treatment-resistant depression. It works differently from standard antidepressants, which is one reason it can become an important option when SSRIs have not done enough. Spravato® is given under medical supervision in a structured setting, not as a take-home treatment.
I keep this section short because I want to focus more closely on EXOMIND®, but Spravato® matters in this conversation. For the right patient, it can open a new door when older medication paths have fallen short.
Why EXOMIND® Has Become Such An Important Option
EXOMIND® is a noninvasive, drug-free treatment built on TMS technology. It uses magnetic stimulation to target parts of the brain involved in emotional regulation, cognitive function, and self-control. It is FDA-cleared for the treatment of depression, and sessions are designed to be short, comfortable, and easy to fit into real life, with no downtime after treatment.
What I like so much about EXOMIND® is that it gives us a different kind of conversation. Some people come in feeling disappointed because SSRIs did not help enough. Others feel worn down from trying medication after medication. EXOMIND® gives us a way to talk about support that does not depend on adding another daily prescription. It also lets us talk about more than mood alone. Many patients want relief from depression, but they also want better mental clarity, better focus, and the feeling that they can fully show up in their lives again. EXOMIND® fits naturally into that bigger discussion.
This Is Not The End Of The Road
If SSRIs have not worked well for you, please do not take that as a sign that nothing will. It tells us something important, but it does not close the door. It tells us it is time to look at other options with fresh eyes and a more personal plan.
At Coastline Psychiatric Liaisons, we offer both Spravato® and EXOMIND® right in our office. If you are tired of feeling stuck, call Coastline to schedule a consultation. We can talk through your symptoms, your treatment history, and whether one of these SSRI alternatives could be a better path for you and your mental wellness.
FAQs
1. What Are SSRIs Used For?
SSRIs are antidepressants often used to treat depression, and they are also prescribed in some anxiety-related conditions. They work on serotonin, a brain chemical tied to mood and emotional balance.
2. What If An SSRI Helps A Little, But Not Enough?
That still matters. Some people get partial relief but continue to struggle with low mood, low energy, mental fog, or poor function. When that happens, it is worth talking about other treatment options instead of assuming this is as good as it gets.
3. What Alternatives To SSRIs Does Coastline Offer?
Coastline Psychiatric Liaisons offers Spravato® and EXOMIND® in office. Both can become part of the conversation when SSRIs have not done enough and a patient needs another path forward.


