Originally published April 10 2006
NewsTarget.com
In June 2001, a jury in Wyoming determined that the antidepressant
drug Paxil caused a man to kill his wife, daughter and granddaughter
before killing himself. The jury awarded the surviving family $8 million
in damages, according to American Medical Publishing's Prescription
Medicines, Side Effects and Natural Alternatives.
In Portland, Ore., Jay Johnston followed his doctor's orders and took
the prescribed antidepressants Zoloft and Prozac. He then attempted
suicide with a shotgun, permanently disfiguring himself. In the same
month as the Wyoming jury's decision, Johnston sued his doctor for
not properly monitoring him. The jury found the doctor guilty of criminal
negligence and awarded Johnston $5 million, reports Dr. Ann Blake Tracy
in Prozac: Panacea or Pandora. Similarly, who could forget Eric Harris,
who -- along with Dylan Klebold -- killed 11 people and then himself
in the Columbine school shooting? At the time of the shooting, Harris
was being treated with the prescription antidepressant Luvox.
These patients are among the growing statistics of people who committed
suicide, or tried to commit suicide, while undergoing treatment with
prescription antidepressants.
Antidepressant drugs such as Prozac, Luvox and Paxil are selective
serotonin reuptake inhibitors, commonly known as SSRIs. Serotonin is
one of your brain's most important biochemicals; it controls everything
from appetite to mood swings. If you're depressed, compulsively eating
or gambling, not sleeping properly or even just moody, you're probably
lacking serotonin. It's important to note, however, that you can also
have too much serotonin.
In Health and Nutrition Secrets, Dr. Russell L. Blaylock writes, "It
is also known that these medications increase brain levels of the neurotransmitter
serotonin, which, in high concentrations, can also act as an excitotoxin." When
antidepressant drugs raise serotonin to an excitotoxin level, the brain
reacts in ways similar to mental illness. According to Burton Goldberg's
book, Alternative Medicine, side effects of SSRIs include uncontrollable
facial and body tics, dizziness, hallucinations, nausea, sexual dysfunction,
addiction, electric-shock-like sensations in the brain and, of course,
homicidal or suicidal thoughts and behavior.
Unfortunately, the doctors prescribing these SSRIs often forget that
you can have too much of a good thing -- that is, too much serotonin
-- so they prescribe SSRIs to just about everyone. Now, there are some
truly bad doctors out there, such as the psychiatrist whom Dr. Joseph
Glenmullen describes in Prozac Backlash:
"Anna was started on Prozac but became severely anxious, agitated
and sleepless ... Having never been suicidal before, two weeks after
starting Prozac, Anna went to her HMO because she felt like killing
herself. The psychiatrist on call told Anna the Prozac was indeed making
her worse and hospitalized her. But her original psychiatrist disagreed,
restarted Prozac, although at a lower dose and added a second, sedating
antidepressant (Trazodone), which Anna only took for two days."
Anna's original doctor seems to be little more than a licensed drug
dealer. However, let's give the benefit of the doubt to most antidepressant-prescribing
doctors and say that they're just ignorant of antidepressants' potentially
fatal side effects. Based on Goldberg's figures, physicians -- not
psychiatrists -- write over 70 percent of all prescriptions for SSRIs,
so they may very well be ignorant of the antidepressant scare.
Pharmaceutical companies, however, have no excuse. Prozac's maker,
Eli Lilly, frantically fought any change in the prescribing guidelines
for antidepressants; even a general warning. Not even public allegations
linking the drug to suicides, murders, murder-suicides and mass murder-suicides
could weaken Eli Lilly's staunch defense of the antidepressant. Dr.
Glenmullen explains that Eli Lilly's stance was a result, of course,
of financial greed: "Pharmaceutical companies spend hundreds of
millions of dollars developing and launching a drug like Prozac. By
1991, Prozac was already the number-one bestselling antidepressant,
with sales near $1 billion a year. The stakes were indeed high. So
the pharmaceutical industry and drug advocates decided to defend Prozac
at all costs, despite the risks to individual and public safety." In
other words, to the pharmaceutical industry, it seems nothing -- not
the individual lives of depressed people, not the massacre at Columbine
-- is more important than making $1 billion a year.
You know your life is more important than that; you know that humanity
is more important than any financial sum. It's up to you -- not your
doctor and certainly not a pill -- to find a way to overcome depression.
Visit a therapist and do some cognitive therapy; even the staunchest
pill-pusher won't deny that antidepressant medication is no substitute
for counseling. If your brain lacks serotonin, there are many safe
and natural ways to boost the biochemical. You can find a concise,
yet informative article on boosting your mood through diet, right here
on NewsTarget.
Prozac, Luvox, Paxil and Zoloft are just brand names for the same
recipe for disaster. Every day, doctors prescribe medications that
are known to induce suicide and other violent behavior in depressed
people who may already be suicidal. This is so ironic that it's sickening,
and only knowledgeable consumers who tell their doctors that they don't
want to be given these dangerous drugs can make it stop.
The experts speak on antidepressant drugs and suicide:
"Legal verdicts on antidepressant drugs and suicide"
A lawsuit contends the manufacturer of the popular anti-depressant
Paxil concealed evidence that the drug can be addictive. The lawsuit
was filed on behalf of 35 people from around the country who say
they suffered symptoms ranging from electrical shocks to suicidal
thoughts after discontinuing use of the drug. Paxil is the second
largest selling anti-depressant in America. In June of 2001, a jury
in Wyoming awarded $8 million in damages to a family of a man after
determining that Paxil caused him to kill his wife, daughter, and
granddaughter before he committed suicide.
What's true for Prozac doesn't necessarily apply to other drugs classified
as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). For example, the
FDA has ruled that Paxil (paroxetine) should not be taken by anyone
younger than age 18 because it is associated with a possible increased
risk of suicidal impulses.
6/29/01-Portland, OR, $5 Million Awarded In anti-depressant Negligence
Case Jay Johnston tried commit suicide after being given Zoloft and
then Prozac. He is permanently disfigured from the shotgun blast. He
sued his doctor for not properly monitoring him and was awarded $5
million.
A brand-new drug can be like a license to print money. It certainly
worked that way for Eli Lilly. When the company launched the antidepressant
Prozac in 1987, nobody else had anything quite like it, and Lilly cleaned
up. But then other pharmaceutical firms rushed in with their own versions,
including Zoloft, Paxil, Celexa and the recently newsworthy Luvox,
found in the blood of Columbine High School shooter Eric Harris. The
competition has already eaten into Lilly's market share, and things
can only go downhill from here.
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI). Drug, such as Prozac,
that increases levels of circulating serotonin. SSRIs have the potential
for serious side effects, including suicidal thoughts, restlessness,
and aggression.
It is also interesting to note that in all the cases of school shootings,
the kids responsible for the violence were taking SSRI medications,
which are known to produce suicidal and homicidal "side effects." It
is also known that these medications increase brain levels of the neurotransmitter
serotonin, which, in high concentrations, can also act as an excitotoxin.
Prozac and similar antidepressant drugs, such as Paxil and Zoloft,
have seen a significant increase in use over the last decade, with
approximately 28 million Americans having used the drugs, and 70% of
the prescriptions for them written by physicians rather than psychiatrists.
Joseph Glen-mullen, Ph.D., author of Prozac Backlash, considers this
trend both dangerous and reckless, pointing out that anti-depressants
can have severe side effects. These include uncontrollable facial and
body tics (which can be signs of severe neurological damage), hallucinations,
dizziness, nausea, anxiety, withdrawal symptoms, sexual dysfunction,
and electric shock-like sensations in the brain. Dr. Glen-mullen cautions
that a small percentage of people can become homicidal, suicidal, or
both as a result of Prozac use.
"Do doctors prescribe SSRIs too often?"
One of the most compelling stories was that of Anna, who told me
Prozac caused her to make a serious suicide attempt while in the care
of a previous psychiatrist. As a freshman in college, Anna had been
miserably depressed, missing her family and feeling unhappy with
her roommates. As the year wore on, she consulted with a psychologist
who referred her to a psychiatrist for medication. Anna was started
on Prozac but became severely anxious, agitated, and sleepless. She
felt "all sped up inside," as if she were "in fast
forward while the rest of the world was in slow motion." Having
never been suicidal before, two weeks after starting Prozac, Anna
went to her HMO because she felt like killing herself. The psychiatrist
on call told Anna the Prozac was indeed making her worse and hospitalized
her. But her original psychiatrist disagreed, restarted Prozac, although
at a lower dose, and added a second, sedating antidepressant (Trazodone),
which Anna only took for two days.