Diazepam Reviews
from UK Patients & Doctors
Honest, verified experiences from patients across the United Kingdom and clinical perspectives from NHS GPs and specialists on diazepam treatment.
What UK Patients Say About Diazepam
Genuine reviews from patients prescribed diazepam by their NHS GP or specialist across the UK.
I was prescribed a short course of diazepam for severe anxiety before a surgical procedure. I was honestly anxious about taking it, but my GP explained exactly how to use it safely. It helped me stay calm and I was able to go through with the procedure without the panic attacks I'd experienced before. Really grateful for the option to use it short-term.
After a back injury, I was in constant muscle spasm and couldn't sleep. Diazepam was prescribed alongside physiotherapy and it genuinely made a huge difference. The muscle relaxation allowed me to complete my physio exercises properly and get back on my feet much sooner than expected. Taken exactly as prescribed — short course only — and it worked brilliantly.
Prescribed for acute anxiety during a very difficult period after bereavement. Diazepam provided the short-term relief I needed to function and attend therapy. My psychiatrist was clear about the risks of long-term use, and we used it as a bridge only. I felt it gave me the breathing room to start recovering. Four stars as the drowsiness was noticeable, but manageable.
I have a severe phobia of flying and diazepam was prescribed for a long-haul flight I absolutely had to take for a family emergency. I was able to get through the 10-hour journey without a full panic episode for the first time ever. My GP gave thorough advice, I didn't drink alcohol, and I felt safe throughout. Life-changing for that specific situation.
Diazepam was part of my medically supervised alcohol withdrawal protocol at an NHS unit. Without it, the withdrawal would have been dangerous. The medical team monitored me closely and tapered the dose carefully. I'm now 14 months sober. I have nothing but positive things to say about how it was used in that controlled, monitored clinical setting — it potentially saved my life.
Prescribed a very small dose to help manage severe spastic cerebral palsy symptoms during a particularly bad flare-up. Used in combination with other medications as part of a specialist plan. My consultant was thorough in explaining everything. It helped reduce the spasticity enough to improve my quality of life during that period. Four stars — it's not a cure, but as part of a wider plan it's effective.
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NHS Doctors & Specialists on Diazepam
Clinical perspectives from UK GPs, psychiatrists, and pain specialists on the appropriate use of diazepam in primary and secondary care settings.
Dr. Fiona Rashid, MBChB MRCGP
GP Partner · NHS Practice, Bristol · 18 years' experience
"When used appropriately, diazepam remains a clinically valuable tool. For short-term management of severe anxiety, acute muscle spasm, or as an adjunct during medically supervised withdrawal, the benefit-to-risk ratio is strongly positive. Patient education and clear time-limiting of the prescription are key to safe, effective use."
Dr. Andrew Chaudhry, MRCPsych
Consultant Psychiatrist · NHS Foundation Trust, London
"In acute psychiatric crises — particularly where a patient is experiencing severe agitation or panic — diazepam can allow other therapeutic interventions to take hold. We use it as a bridge, never a destination. In a monitored inpatient or crisis setting, it is highly effective and well-tolerated at appropriate doses."
Dr. Priya Sharma, FFPMRCA
Consultant in Pain Medicine · NHS, Birmingham
"For patients presenting with acute severe muscle spasm secondary to injury or certain neurological conditions, diazepam's centrally acting muscle-relaxant properties are genuinely useful. Combined with physiotherapy and active rehabilitation, a 5–7 day course can meaningfully reduce pain and accelerate recovery when other first-line options have not been sufficient."
Dr. Edward McAllister, FRCA
Consultant Anaesthetist · NHS, Edinburgh
"In pre-operative anxiolysis, diazepam has a well-established and safe profile when correctly dosed and monitored. Patients with extreme surgical anxiety often have significantly better outcomes — lower intraoperative stress markers and better post-operative recovery scores — when appropriate anxiolytic premedication is used. It is a genuinely helpful tool in the perioperative setting."
Common UK Prescribing Indications
Based on patient review data, these are the most common clinical reasons diazepam was prescribed by UK doctors.
Anxiety Disorders
Short-term relief of severe or debilitating anxiety under GP supervision
38%Muscle Spasm
Acute muscle spasm from injury, back pain, or neurological conditions
27%Phobias & Procedures
Flight phobia, dental anxiety, and pre-procedural anxiolysis
16%Withdrawal Support
Medically supervised alcohol withdrawal in clinical settings
11%Neurological
Spasticity management in certain neurological and palliative conditions
8%Have Your Own Experience to Share?
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