Author Topic: FDA warning on SSRIs  (Read 42775 times)

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Offline Anonymous

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FDA warning on SSRIs
« Reply #315 on: November 22, 2005, 03:43:00 PM »
The source of capitol and the demands
on executives is the cause for over selling.

If the stock exchange was not used to
fund these businesses then they would need
another sort of funding.

Most common would be for the government, or
government's to nationalize them. Most people
do not trust the government, so ...

That brings us back to the stock market and
quarterly reports and all that pressure for
profits.

I guess the government could regulate the industry
further, but most people don't want the governement to regulate businesses to death.

Therefore we have the system we have today!
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Anonymous

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FDA warning on SSRIs
« Reply #316 on: November 22, 2005, 04:43:00 PM »
A comment an ally made recently re: institutions, and the unfortunate backlash:

Well psychiatrists wear white coats, and they wave brain scans around and they have a very impressive vocabulary. Joseph Goebbels said it perfectly:

"If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the State."

I think of the "State" in our situation as not Nazi Germany but the profession of Psychiatry as it is primarily practiced today.

I also think once psychiatry got their "treatments" out of the mental ward and into the streets the people were no longer being "shielded" from the "consequences of the lie". Pharma greed put the treatments in many homes and now we are all reaping the results; suicide, murder, insanity, abuse. It was always there with booze and street drugs but it's hit an all new level.
***************

There's a black market on 'legal' drugs now. Kids are selling their Ritalin which is crushed and snorted. Moms are drowning their kids, severing their arms, shooting them.
While I wouldn't wish a psych ward on anyone, we can't deny the reality that psych drugs could possibly be doing more harm than good. And the DSM continues to grow. Everyone can have their own dx and rx to go with it.
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Offline Anonymous

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FDA warning on SSRIs
« Reply #317 on: November 22, 2005, 05:01:00 PM »
Quote

On 2005-11-22 13:43:00, Anonymous wrote:


Pharma greed put the treatments in many homes and now we are all reaping the results; suicide, murder, insanity, abuse. It was always there with booze and street drugs but it's hit an all new level.

"

What was the per capita levels of suicide, murder, insanity, abuse say in the year 1900, 1950 and 2000?

I assume you did your research to make the statement that these four items are higher per
capita than ever.


Quote


There's a black market on 'legal' drugs now. Kids are selling their Ritalin which is crushed and snorted. Moms are drowning their kids, severing their arms, shooting them.

"


Ritalin, I think I read here, is a 70
year old medication.

Who supplied the speed in the 60's?
Are those supplies available today?

I would imagine that yes, if Ritalin
is the preferred source of speed then
careful examination should be provided.

Such as, is the Ritalin stolen, or is
it perscription abuse.

What is illegally in the perscription
system and why?

Is it because the medication was deveoped
70 years ago?

Is it because a stolen batch of pills is
essentially free to the user?

Of today's whole supply of illegal speed
how much of a percentage is it of stolen
Ritalin?
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #318 on: November 22, 2005, 05:11:00 PM »
I think the biggest problem to finally
getting an alternative to pharmaceuticals
is that these other treatment professionals
fail to document their successes.

It hurts everyone and leaves very few real
options other than pharmaceuticals.
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #319 on: November 23, 2005, 09:42:00 AM »
War on Drugs appears to be meeting one of its objectives? Meet the new 'drug dealers'.

THE NEW YORK TIMES
November 16, 2005 Front Page
Being a Patient
Young, Assured and Playing Pharmacist to Friends
By AMY HARMON

Nathan Tylutki arrived late in New York, tired but eager to go out dancing. When his friend Katherine K. offered him the Ritalin she had inherited from someone who had stopped taking his prescription, he popped two pills and stayed out all night.

For the two college friends, now 25 and out in the working world, there was nothing remarkable about the transaction. A few weeks later, Katherine gave the tranquilizer Ativan to another friend who complained of feeling short of breath and panicky.  "Clear-cut anxiety disorder," Katherine decreed.

The Ativan came from a former colleague who had traded it to her for the Vicodin that Katherine's boyfriend had been prescribed by a dentist. The boyfriend did not mind, but he preferred that she not give away the Ambien she got from a doctor by exaggerating her sleeping problems. It helps him relax after a stressful day.

"I acquire quite a few medications and then dispense them to my friends as needed. I usually know what I'm talking about," said Katherine, who lives in Manhattan and who, like many other people interviewed for this article, did not want her last name used because of concerns that her behavior could get her in trouble with her employer, law enforcement authorities or at least her parents.

For a sizable group of people in their 20's and 30's, deciding on their own what drugs to take - in particular, stimulants, antidepressants and other psychiatric medications - is becoming the norm. Confident of their abilities and often skeptical of psychiatrists' expertise, they choose to rely on their own research and each other's experience in treating problems like depression, fatigue, anxiety or a lack of concentration. A medical degree, in their view, is useful, but not essential, and certainly not sufficient.

They trade unused prescription drugs, get medications without prescriptions from the Internet and, in some cases, lie to doctors to obtain medications that in their judgment they need.

A spokeswoman for the Drug Enforcement Administration says it is illegal to give prescription medication to another person, although it is questionable whether the offense would be prosecuted.

The behavior, drug abuse prevention experts say, is notably different from the use of drugs like marijuana or cocaine, or even the abuse of prescription painkillers, which is also on the rise. The goal for many young adults is not to get high but to feel better - less depressed, less stressed out, more focused, better rested. It is just that the easiest route to that end often seems to be medication [legal drugs] for which they do not have a prescription.

Some seek to regulate every minor mood fluctuation, some want to enhance their performance at school or work, some simply want to find the best drug to treat a genuine mental illness. And patients say that many general practitioners, pressed for time and unfamiliar with the ever-growing inventory of psychiatric drugs, are happy to take their suggestions, so it pays to be informed.

Health officials say they worry that as prescription pills get passed around in small batches, information about risks and dosage are not included. Even careful self-medicators, they say, may not realize the harmful interaction that drugs can have when used together or may react unpredictably to a drug; Mr. Tylutki and Katherine each had a bad experience with a medication taken without a prescription.

But doctors and experts in drug abuse also say they are flummoxed about how to address the increasing casual misuse of prescription medications by young people for purposes other than getting high.

Carol Boyd, the former head of the Addiction Research Center at the University of Michigan, said medical professionals needed to find ways to evaluate these risks. "Kids get messages about street drugs," Ms. Boyd said. "They know smoking crack is a bad deal. This country needs to have a serious conversation about both the marketing of prescription drugs and where we draw the boundaries between illegal use and misuse."

To some extent, the embrace by young adults of better living through chemistry is driven by familiarity. Unlike previous generations, they have for many years been taking drugs prescribed by doctors for depression, anxiety or attention deficit disorder.

Direct-to-consumer drug advertising, approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 1997, has for most of their adult lives sent the message that pills offer a cure for any ill. Which ones to take, many advertisements suggest, is largely a matter of personal choice.

"If a person is having a problem in life, someone who is 42 might not know where to go - 'Do I need acupuncture, do I need a new haircut, do I need to read Suze Orman?' " said Casey Greenfield, 32, a writer in Los Angeles, referring to the personal-finance guru. "Someone my age will be like, 'Do I need to switch from Paxil to Prozac?' "

For Ms. Greenfield, who could recite the pros and cons of every selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor on the market by the time she graduated from college, years of watching doctors try to find the right drug cocktails for her and for assorted friends has not bolstered faith in their expertise.

"I would never just do what the doctor told me because the person is a doctor," said Ms. Greenfield, who dictates to her doctors what to prescribe for her headaches and sleep problems, and sometimes gives her pills to friends. "I'm sure lots of patients don't know what they're talking about. But lots of doctors don't know what they're talking about either."

Prescriptions to treat attention deficit disorder in adults age 20 to 30 nearly tripled from 2000 to 2004, according to Medco, a prescription management company. Medications for sleeping disorders in the same age group showed a similar increase.

Antidepressants are now prescribed to as many as half of the college students seen at student health centers, according to a recent report in The New England Journal of Medicine, and increasing numbers of students fake the symptoms of depression or attention disorder to get prescriptions that they believe will give them an edge. Another study, published recently in The Journal of American College Health, found that 14 percent of students at a Midwestern liberal arts college reported borrowing or buying prescription stimulants from each other, and that 44 percent knew of someone who had.

"There's this increasingly widespread attitude that 'we are our own best pharmacists,' " said Bessie Oster, the director of Facts on Tap, a drug abuse prevention program for college students that has begun to focus on prescription drugs. "You'll take something, and if it's not quite right, you'll take a little more or a little less, and there's no notion that you need a doctor to do that."

Now, Going Online for Pills
The new crop of amateur pharmacists varies from those who have gotten prescriptions - after doing their own research and finding a doctor who agreed with them - to those who obtain pills through friends or through some online pharmacies that illegally dispense drugs without prescriptions.

"The mother's little helpers of the 1960's and 1970's are all available now on the Internet," said Catherine Wood, a clinical social worker in Evanston, Ill., who treated one young client who became addicted to Xanax after buying it online. "You don't have to go and steal a prescription pad anymore."

In dozens of interviews, via e-mail and in person, young people spoke of a sense of empowerment that comes from knowing what to prescribe for themselves, or at least where to turn to figure it out. They are as careful with themselves, they say, as any doctor would be with a patient.

"It's not like we're passing out Oxycontin, crushing it up and snorting it," said Katherine, who showed a reporter a stockpile that included stimulants, tranquilizers and sleeping pills. "I don't think it's unethical when I have the medication that someone clearly needs to make them feel better to give them a pill or two."

Besides, they say, they have grown up watching their psychiatrists mix and match drugs in a manner that sometimes seems arbitrary, and they feel an obligation to supervise. "I tried Zoloft because my doctor said, 'I've had a lot of success with Zoloft,' no other reason," said Laurie, 26, who says researching medications to treat her depressive disorder has become something of a compulsion. "It's insane. I feel like you have to be informed because you're controlling your brain."

When a new psychiatrist suggested Seraquil, Laurie, who works in film production and who did not want her last name used, refused it because it can lead to weight gain. When the doctor suggested Wellbutrin XL, she replied with a line from the commercial she had seen dozens of times on television: "It has a low risk of sexual side effects. I like that."

But before agreeing to take the drug, Laurie consulted several Internet sites and the latest edition of the Physicians' Desk Reference guide to prescription drugs at the Barnes & Noble bookstore in Union Square.

On a page of her notebook, she copied down the generic and brand names of seven alternatives. Effexor, she noted, helps with anxiety - a plus. But Wellbutrin suppresses appetite - even better.

At the weekly meetings of an "under-30" mood-disorder support group in New York that Laurie attends, the discussion inevitably turns to medication. Group members trade notes on side effects that, they complain, doctors often fail to inform them about. Some say they are increasingly suspicious of how pharmaceutical companies influence the drugs they are prescribed.

"Lamictal is the new rage," said one man who attended the group, "but in part that's because there's a big money interest in it. You have to do research on your own because the research provided to you is not based on an objective source of what may be best."

Recent reports that widely prescribed antidepressants could be responsible for suicidal thoughts or behavior in some adolescents have underscored for Laurie and other young adults how little is known about the risks of some drugs, and why different people respond to them differently.

Moreover, drugs widely billed as nonaddictive, like Paxil or Effexor, can cause withdrawal symptoms, which some patients say they only learned of from their friends or fellow sufferers.

"This view of psychology as a series of problems that can be solved with pills is relatively brand new," said Andrea Tone, a professor of the social history of medicine at McGill University. "It's more elastic, and more subjective, so it lends itself more to taking matters into our own hands."

To that end, it helps to have come of age with the Internet, which offers new possibilities for communication and commerce to those who want to supplement their knowledge or circumvent doctors.

Fluent in Psychopharmacology
People of all ages gather on public Internet forums to trade notes on "head meds," but participants say the conversations are dominated by a younger crowd for whom anonymous exchanges of highly personal information are second nature.

On patient-generated sites like CrazyBoards, fluency in the language of psychopharmacology is taken for granted. Dozens of drugs are referred to in passing by both brand name and generic, and no one is reticent about suggesting medications and dosage levels.

"Do you guys think that bumping up the dosage was a good idea, or should I have asked for a different drug?" someone who called herself Maggie asked earlier this month, saying she had told her doctor she wanted to double her daily intake of the antidepressant fluoxetine to 40 milligrams. xxxxxxxxxxx cut xxxxxxxxxxxxx

A Post-Hurricane Care Package
Dan Todd, marooned in Covington, La., after Hurricane Katrina, said he would be forever grateful to a woman in New Hampshire who organized a donation drive for him among the site's regular participants.

Within two days of posting a message saying that he had run out of his medications, he received several care packages of assorted mood stabilizers and anti-anxiety drugs, including Wellbutrin, Klonopin, Trileptal, Cymbalta and Neurontin.

"I had to drive down to meet the FedEx driver because his truck couldn't get past the trees on part of the main highway," said Mr. Todd, 58. "I had tears in my eyes when I got those packages."

It doesn't always work out so well. When Katherine took a Xanax to ease her anxiety before a gynecologist appointment, she found that she could not keep her eyes open. She had traded a friend for the blue oval pill and she had no idea what the dosage was.

An Adderall given to her by another friend, she said, "did weird things to me." And Mr. Tylutki, who took the Ritalin she offered one weekend last fall, began a downward spiral soon after.

"I completely regretted and felt really guilty about it," Katherine said.
Taking Katherine's pills with him when he returned to Minneapolis, Mr. Tylutki took several a day while pursuing a nursing degree and working full time. Like many other students, he found Ritalin a useful study aid. One night, he read a book, lay down to sleep, wrote the paper in his head, got up, wrote it down, and received an A-minus.

But he also began using cocaine and drinking too much alcohol. A few months ago, Mr. Tylutki took a break from school. He flushed the Ritalin down the toilet and stopped taking all drugs, including the Prozac that he had asked a doctor for when he began feeling down.

"I kind of made it seem like I needed it," Mr. Tylutki said, referring to what he told the doctor. "Now I think I was just lacking sleep."

Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company
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Offline Anonymous

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FDA warning on SSRIs
« Reply #320 on: November 23, 2005, 10:02:00 AM »
Quote

On 2005-11-23 06:42:00, Anonymous wrote:



"War on Drugs appears to be meeting one of its objectives? Meet the new 'drug dealers'.

THE NEW YORK TIMES
November 16, 2005 Front Page
Being a Patient




FYI: This was posted already at:
http://fornits.com/wwf/viewtopic.php?to ... forum=22&0
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #321 on: November 23, 2005, 10:54:00 AM »
If Ginger would like to save space she can replace the text with a link to the previous posting.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #322 on: November 23, 2005, 12:32:00 PM »
Oh, sorry, that wasn't my point.

I should have included that it has been
posted there to let you know, in case
there is any discussion.

Having said that ... I just checked and
there was no discussion ... so I guess
disregard my info post  ::bangin::
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #323 on: November 29, 2005, 04:27:00 PM »
http://www.ironwooddailyglobe.com/1125ssri.htm
Antidepressants under scrutiny

Published Friday, November 25, 2005 11:24:04 AM Central Time
By MARGARET LEVRA
Globe Staff Writer

Experts agree that withdrawal from antidepressant medications must be done under a controlled environment, or it could result in tragedy.

Mark Laguna, 40, of Pence, Wis., is currently lodged in the Iron County jail, facing a first-degree intentional homicide charge for the March 16 shooting death of his wife Brenda.

Laguna is taking two well-known Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors, Celexa, and Wellbutrin, along with Ceroquel, for schizophrenia, and Xanex.

Defense attorney Fred Bourg from the public defender's office in Ashland, Wis., is attempting to have Laguna transferred to a mental health facility to be evaluated and weaned from these medications before his February trial.

For withdrawal without complications, the dosage of an SSRI must be decreased over a period of time, said Karen Barth-Menzies, with the
Baumhedlund Law Firm in Los Angeles on Thursday. Barth-Menzies is the lead attorney for withdrawal cases involving SSRIs.

SSRIs are "extremely powerful drugs, designed to alter a person's brain chemistry. They can cause a person to completely change behavior -- change
their way of thinking and cause them to become psychotic." The drugs cause "severe agitation and suicide to some, and it causes others to commit acts of violence against others," she said.

She noted side effects "can occur on any dosage fluctuation."

Having dealt with the violent side effects of SSRIs, Barth-Menzies said, "Sometimes they do not even realize what they did. It's basically a
psychotic break. They have no control of what they are doing at the time, followed by disbelief. What happened? Who did that? How did that happen?"

Barth-Menzies said there are millions of people in the country on these medications.

"From what we can tell, 3 to 5 percent of the population will have suicidal or violent reactions, either harm against self or harm against others," she said.

Dr. Joseph Glenmullen, a clinical instructor in psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, said withdrawal from SSRIs should be done under a controlled environment.

On Tuesday, Glenmullen said he could not comment on possible effects on Laguna from SSRI withdrawal without more in-depth information.

Glenmullen recently testified in a Federal Drug Administration hearing that resulted in the recent warning that antidepressants make patients, including children and adolescents, suicidal.

The warning covers 10 of the current popular antidepressants, Prozac, Zoloft, Paxil, Effexor, Celexa, Lexapro, Wellbutrin, Luvox, Remeron and
Serzone.

Safety of Drugs
In his publication, "Suicides and Homicides in Patients Taking Paxil, Prozac, and Zoloft: Why They Keep Happening -- And Why They Will Continue," California author Jay S. Cohen M.D. wrotefrom almost the day that they were
introduced in the late 1980s and early 1990s, sudden, unexpected suicides and homicides have been reported in patients taking serotonin-enhancing antidepressants such as Prozac, Paxil and Zoloft. "I'm not surprised this problem hasn't disappeared, nor will it unless we look deeper," he wrote.

Cohen said the selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors help millions of people, but, "any drug that can cause positive changes in people's brains can also cause negative ones, unless care is taken to avoid it."

SSRIs could create a unique combination of side effects that might severely impair judgment and impulse control, Cohen noted. SSRIs can also cause a severe degree of agitation or restlessness that may become intolerable and
reduce impulse control, he wrote. Impulsive behavior, especially if coupled with impaired cognitive functioning, can be dangerous, he added.

Any psychiatrist will tell you that excessive doses of antidepressants can cause brain dysfunctions, including disorientation, confusion, and cognitive disturbances, Cohen said.

Antidepressants can also trigger similar, manic-like symptoms in people whose depression is part of a manic-depressive syndrome, which often gets
overlooked when people are given SSRIs.

"Some of these individuals may have serious adverse reactions to antidepressants, including irritability, aggression, and mania," wrote Dr.
Ronald Pies, professor of psychiatry at Tufts University.
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #324 on: November 30, 2005, 11:54:00 PM »
http://www.chattanoogan.com/articles/article_76511.asp
Lawsuit Filed In Case Of Suicide After Paxil Use
posted November 28, 2005

A lawsuit has been filed in Circuit Court against the makers of Paxil in a case in which a 20-year-old took his own life after using the drug.

The suit is also brought against a psychiatrist and counselor who provided treatment for Ryan Robert Austin.

The suit was filed by Robert Austin, grandfather of the young man.

Defendants are Dr. Susan K. McGuire, Denise Triggs, Focus Psychiatric Services and GlaxoSmithKline.

The suit says Dr. McGuire began treating Ryan Robert Austin in February 2001 when he was 16 and after he had gone into Valley Psychiatric Hospital. It says he had behavioral problems, attention hyperactive disorder and other problems and had previously been on Paxil briefly.

It says he began seeing Dr. McGuire every three months.

The suit says he was living with his maternal grandparents, and the grandmother went to the Focus Psychatric offices in June 2004 to discuss his depression problems.

The complaint says the grandmother was given samples of Paxil but not instructed on its possible effects or on its proper dosage.

The suit, filed by attorney John McMahan, says Paxil can increase the risk of suicidal thinking and behavior.

It says on July 18, 2004, that Ryan Robert Austin overdosed on multiple pain medications and was taken to Erlanger Medical Center, then to Valley
Hospital.

The suit says on July 22, 2004, that Ms. Triggs was told about morbid and depressing poems the grandmother had found, including morbid scenes of his committing suicide.

On the early morning of Sept. 12, 2004, he shot himself in the head in the driveway of his home and died instantly. He was 20. A suicide note was found in his pocket.

The suit asks unspecified compensatory and punitive damages.
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #325 on: December 02, 2005, 09:49:00 AM »
http://www.seattleweekly.com/features/0 ... _psych.php

The Drugging of the American Mind
A new generation of meds to treat mental illness has turned millions of Americans into human guinea pigs. Among them is an eyewitness who thinks the drug 'revolution' has gone too far.
by Philip Dawdy

In the 1990s, there was a small, quiet revolution in American health care that promised to be as far reaching as the advent of antidepressants like Prozac. The revolution involved a new class of medications called atypical antipsychotics, designed for the treatment of schizophrenia.

The atypicals were an instant hit with doctors and schizophrenics alike. Initially, the drugs treated schizophrenia far better than older drugs like Thorazine and Haldol had done. In mental-health circles, atypicals were sometimes referred to as "the silver bullet," the breakthrough to a centuries-long quest to effectively treat the most vicious of mental illnesses without turning patients into zombies.

But now this is a revolution in trouble.

The new meds don't work as well for schizophrenics as their initial rock-star status suggested, according to recent research. Questions about their effectiveness are now being raised. At the same time, these very same meds are being handed out like candy to a different class of patients: the millions of Americans with bipolar disorder, or good old manic-depression. We are not talking about people in psych hospitals or on the brink of suicide. We are talking about people with plain vanilla bipolar disorder?the kind where you can't sleep and are wound up for days but are a long way from diving off a bridge or running naked down the street.

In other words, fairly regular, mainstream Americans now take the most powerful mood-altering drugs in all of psychiatry. Last year, 23 million prescriptions were written for these drugs. Sales this year are expected to hit $10 billion, three times what they were in 2000. Atypicals are the fourth largest class of patented medications in America.

Patients aren't taking them for a few days or weeks, either. Doctors expect their bipolar patients to take these drugs for years, much the same as they've taken traditional mood stabilizers, like lithium, which tamp down mood swings. In fact, there's a growing rumble in the psych world that researchers would like to use atypicals to replace mood stabilizers altogether.

Yet there is no comprehensive scientific evidence to support this paradigm shift. Zero. The psychiatric industry says this isn't a problem because real-world treatment has always outpaced research. But if you happen to be a patient, it's a very big problem?atypicals have the worst side effects of any drugs used to treat bipolar disorder. As a patient, I've experienced this shift firsthand, sometimes as a willing test subject. So, I have a question: Without scientific evidence, why are doctors prescribing these meds so freely and expecting patients to take them for so long?

For the past 15 years, psych meds have been touted as the answer for every flaw of mood, feeling, and behavior in American society. We are in the midst of what's called the psychopharmacological revolution, a shift from the days of nasty meds that didn't work well to new generations of meds that aren't nasty and work very well. That's the hype, at any rate. But the revolution isn't playing out as advertised.

Even the habitually cautious National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) now says that psych meds?including atypicals?only work 50 percent of the time.

But the mental-health world is congenitally incapable of being skeptical about how psych meds work in patients' lives. Doctors quickly become wedded to new therapies, and patients follow. As a result, a new treatment paradigm for millions of bipolars is charging ahead when researchers, doctors, and patients ought to be very cautious.

A new class of drugs for treating mental illness, atypical antipsychotics are becoming more widely used. Sales this year are expected to hit $10 billion. (Jay Vidheecharoen)  

Bipolar patients should be asking why doctors want them to use meds long term that regularly generate debilitating side effects in both bipolars and schizophrenics?the kind of side effects that can mess with a patient's life almost as much as the underlying illness. Last summer, Eli Lilly quietly and with little media notice settled a lawsuit for $750 million. The suit alleged that patients had injuries, including diabetes, caused by Zyprexa, the top-selling atypical in the world. Reportedly, 23 patients have died as a result of using the drug.

All psych meds generate side effects, but atypicals even more so. On these meds, patients can gain 20 to 40 pounds in a year. Blood sugar levels shoot upward. Cholesterol goes up as well. The question of side effects is important not only because of short-term comfort, but because of patients' long-term physical health. Extreme weight gain and altered blood cholesterol levels, for example, give rise to what doctors call the "metabolic syndrome," a fancy way of saying underlying cardiac and respiratory problems can be caused by these medications over time.

That's not speculation, either. Recently published long-term data on schizophrenics taking atypicals showed weight gain on the order of 2 pounds a month, for example. Researchers say the same dynamic is present in bipolars. Any patient who takes atypicals can tell you all about those effects. To date, however, there have been no long-term studies of the effects of these medications on bipolar patients. There are other effects, too, life-reducing ones. The daylong grogginess that comes with atypicals like Seroquel. Cognitive slowing. Risperdal's tendency to stiffen faces. An odd sense that somehow you aren't the same person you were before. There's something about the immediacy of sensation that changes. Nothing is as vivid as it was before. You feel calm and diluted at the same time.

The goal of mental-health treatment is to enhance human life, not limit it.

But something else about long-term treatment of bipolar disorder with atypicals is as troubling as the side effects. These powerful meds don't do a good job of knocking down symptoms over the long term. In the five years that atypicals have been used aggressively in treating the disorder, I have only encountered a handful of patients who say that their original starter dose of Zyprexa, say, wiped out their mania and depression and that life has been balanced ever since.

More commonly, patients will start on an atypical after failing to see their symptoms disappear, or remit, on more traditional meds?and that happens all the time. The atypical will perform well for a few months, but then for many bipolars, the symptoms roar back to life. They begin cycling out to the manic fringes again. Their minds race, they cannot sleep, they fall apart. That's the nature of the bipolar beast? limited symptom remission.

Let's talk best-case scenario: They are self-aware, responsible patients and recognize what is happening. They go see their doctor. As often as not, that's a general practitioner or internist instead of a psychiatrist. The doctor's common response will be to either increase the dosage or switch the patient to another atypical. Within a few months, the process will be repeated because the patient has had yet another bout of hypomania, a restless state of insomnia and racing thoughts.

I know bipolars with fairly moderate forms of the illness who have been on three different atypicals in three years. (There are five commonly used atypicals; see chart, this page.) They have gone through multiple dosages of each?and they are usually taking a mood stabilizer and an antidepressant at the same time.

I am not the only bipolar who finds this medication and dosage switching to be unacceptable.

Mental-health experts typically wave away such complaints by saying, "Each patient is an individual and responds differently to different medications, and patients must often switch from medication to medication to find the treatment that works best for them. There are medications that will work well for you. There is hope."

Doctors, researchers, and advocates have trotted out the same line since the psychopharmacological revolution hit the American mainstream about 15 years ago. Its implied promise was that taking new-generation psych meds would remit symptoms forever. Applied to mood stabilizers and antidepressants, which have comparatively lesser side effects, the promise doesn't sound like much more than harmless cheerleading. But when the same logic is applied to atypicals, it sounds irresponsible and coldhearted because, with their rotten side effects, they still fall short of the goal. The name alone tells you that atypicals are a wholly different class of drugs. All of these meds carry FDA-required black-box warnings because their use can cause diabetes.

Atypical antipsychotics are major juju?a kick in the brain, the purple pill that puts you on the floor, the white pill that turns your face stony. Some patients pine for the side effects of lithium and Lexapro, which are benign by comparison.

I say none of this lightly.

I've lived with bipolar disorder for 16-plus years. I have taken all the major medications at one time or another. In that time, I have interviewed, talked with, counseled, and basically hung out with hundreds of bipolars, schizophrenics, and depressives. Few of us have ever seen the promise of the psychopharmacological revolution fully realized, except for short bursts at a time.

Much of what has become standard long-term treatment, or maintenance, in mental illness is based on short-term studies. The FDA doesn't require long-term tests in order to license medications. As a result, most psych meds are typically studied in eight- to 12-week trials. That tells doctors about patients' short-term response and little more. There is little incentive for drug companies to fund further studies. The federal government rarely steps into the breach to fund long-term studies, either.

But most psychiatry involves giving patients drugs for maintenance, not to bail them out of a short-term crisis. Absent long-term data, maintenance becomes more of an art than science, though psychiatrists and doctors don't like to admit that, especially to patients sitting in their office.

There is a disconnect here that makes patients sitting ducks. Their illness is lifelong not short term.

Patients are often downright desperate when they see their doctor, especially if they've had a recent relapse?one of the most annoying aspects of the disorder is that symptoms will re-emerge at some point, even if you strictly adhere to treatment.

Besides trying to find a treatment that works, patients are also trying to placate competing interests. Families and friends press them to find some kind of medication that works?take anything! Employers warn they are on thin ice. If they don't find something that works, then they are likely to be bounced right out of American life.

They'll take damn near anything a psychiatrist or general practitioner suggests to get a short-term result. That's potentially millions of patients going to their doctors each year looking for something? anything?that works. Often, these same patients find that the next something doesn't work, either.

Nice psychopharmacological revolution we've got.

The irony is that as problematic as atypicals are for bipolars, they are the best deal schizophrenics have ever seen. Until the 1950s, schizophrenics were treated in some of the most inhumane ways imaginable. Tied to a bed for weeks on end. Padded rooms. Lobotomies. None of that worked very well.

Then along came Thorazine, Haldol, and a host of other antipsychotics that, in many cases, stopped patients' hallucinations, paranoia, delusions, and violent outbursts. The trouble was that antipsychotics typically took a huge toll, inducing disabling side effects such as frozen expressions, shuffling gaits, and shaking limbs? zombieism, in effect.

In 1989, a medication called Clozaril hit the world that caused none of these physical side effects. It was dubbed "atypical." But this medication proved toxic to some patients' immune systems. As a result, the medication was used sparingly even though it seemed to work better than the older antipsychotics.

By the mid-1990s, newer atypical antipsychotics were introduced. They didn't have Clozaril's toxicity. Doctors quickly shifted to the new meds. Within years, atypicals like Zyprexa, Risperdal, and Seroquel almost completely displaced the older drugs. Patients seemed to do well on them?no more tremors, no more frozen stares. Many people were able to get out of state hospitals and restrictive group homes and live fully realized lives in the community.

It was a watershed moment in treating mental illness.

In 2000, sales of atypicals reached $3.2 billion. But already questions had emerged among psychiatrists about just how well these newer meds performed against older antipsychotics, and whether the expense was justified. Atypicals are not cheap?the bill for someone with severe schizophrenia could easily run $1,000 a month, 10 times more costly than the older drugs.

What's more, doctors and patients documented a new series of side effects from these meds. In particular, patients' blood sugar levels shot up, cases of diabetes were reported, and patients rapidly gained weight.

The bind for doctors and patients was that there was a complete data vacuum about just how good these meds were or weren't when it came to maintaining schizophrenia. Doctors also had questions about whether the side effects were as prevalent as many in the business feared.

In 2001, the NIMH funded a $43 million, 1,400-patient study of the long-term performance of four atypicals (Zyprexa, Risperdal, Seroquel, and Geodon) against one old antipsychotic (Trilafon). The CATIE study was the first long-term study of atypicals in schizophrenics. The results were published in the New England Journal of Medicine in September, and generated a fair amount of media attention.

That was because 74 percent of the patients discontinued taking their assigned medication. They either couldn't handle its side effects or it wasn't working. This was a startling outcome in light of the decade-long hype around atypicals.

The best of the atypicals in this respect was Zyprexa. Only 64 percent of the Zyprexa patients had to stop taking that drug. Put another way, only 36 percent of the Zyprexa patients found the drug's performance justified taking it for 18 months. Among the other drugs, Seroquel had the worst discontinuation rate at 82 percent. What's more, the newer meds didn't treat schizophrenia's symptoms much better than Trilafon did, another surprising outcome.

The CATIE study was the shot heard round psychiatry. NIMH went into overdrive trying to explain to the media that the patients didn't stop taking meds altogether, but switched to something else. Advocacy groups put together media calls and stressed that CATIE wasn't an indictment of an entire class of meds. Pharma companies issued press releases claiming that their drug was the winner (Eli Lilly's Zyprexa) and, in one case, that their drug had been used at too low a dosage (Janssen's Risperdal). The general consensus was that atypicals remain the best treatment available for schizophrenia no matter how side effects cloud their use. No one wants to go back to the bad days of the old antipsychotics.

In the media flurry, no one said a word about bipolars, who now make up 50 percent of the market for atypicals. But there were obvious implications.

As with schizophrenics, the same kind of search for the perfect combination of meds to remit symptoms of bipolar disorder has been going on for decades.

The disorder is marked by extreme mood swings between delusional euphoria and psychosis and the black pit of depression. An estimated 15 percent to 20 percent of bipolars commit suicide. Although the illness was long believed to affect about 3 million Americans, recent estimates double or triple that figure to between 6 million and 9 million.

Bipolar is a tricky illness. It is linked to high levels of intelligence and creativity, for example. Its effects on personality are legendary?uninhibited people-seeking (bipolars are often the life of the party), hypersexuality, and incessant talking, for example.

Classically, the disorder is treated with a mood stabilizer. Lithium was long the gold standard. In recent years, there has been a shift to anticonvulsants like Depakote or Lamictal. Often, bipolars are also given an antidepressant like Paxil or Effexor to deal with bouts of depression. Until 2000, the mood stabilizer plus antidepressant approach was essentially the state-of-the-art treatment. It just doesn't knock down symptoms forever.

Bipolars can "break through" these meds and wind up having acute episodes of rage or suicidal depression. Another common breakthrough symptom is hypnomania, when the mind races so quickly that the patient cannot sleep for days on end.

In response, doctors loaded patients with higher doses of mood stabilizers and antidepressants. Ten years ago, it wasn't unusual for a bipolar to end up on 2,500 milligrams of lithium and 60 milligrams of Prozac a day, both fairly high doses. Patients who didn't respond at those levels would sometimes be given a small dose of an old antipsychotic, if their doctor could trust them. The idea was that patients would use it as needed for a few days until they returned to baseline. Doctors didn't want patients on antipsychotics for long due to the risk of giving bipolars the same ugly side effects the drugs gave schizophrenics. I was one of those bipolars who was prescribed an antipsychotic, a small dose of Mellaril in my case. I wasn't even remotely psychotic, in the classic sense of that term. But there was an angry edge that had crept into my daily life (this was in the mid-1990s). On occasion, my mind was too ramped up for me to get anything other than fitful sleep. So, I'd take Mellaril when I was manic or hypomanic and just fog my brain and sleep. That way, I wouldn't wind up in a hospital, or doing anything that couldn't be redeemed.

I took 40 milligrams of Mellaril perhaps twice a year. It was never a pleasant experience. Mellaril made me feel leaden and rendered me impotent. Once a girlfriend of mine found the Mellaril in my medicine cabinet. She asked what they were. Nuclear weapons, I told her.

Then I developed paranoia in late 2000. This was a new experience for me, and it dogged me day and night. I knew it had to be addressed quickly before something irreparable happened. So I went to my doctor. He asked me what I knew about antipsychotics, and I told him I was no fan of Mellaril. He suggested the atypical Risperdal. I knew that it was being used by schizophrenics.

"So I take this for a few days?" I figured the deal would be the same as with Mellaril.

"No, you take it all the time," my doctor answered.

"Why?"

"It doesn't have the side effects of the old stuff, and you can take it long term to remit your symptoms."

I'd never heard of antipsychotics being used for maintenance of bipolar disorder. "Are you telling me I'm schizophrenic?"

My doctor told me that his proposal was essentially experimental and off-label. The drug was unstudied in bipolars, nor was it FDA-approved for use in bipolar disorder. But he said there was plenty of anecdotal evidence to support people like me giving it a whirl. And, no, I wasn't a schizophrenic. So I went to Walgreens and gave it a whirl. Later, I visited the Risperdal Web site. It was devoted to the drug's use in schizophrenia. I was a guinea pig.

At first, I liked Risperdal. I took it at night along with Depakote and Wellbutrin, an antidepressant. The paranoia disappeared within days. Other than that, the drug kept me calm and made me sleep 10 hours a night. I'd be groggy in the morning. I put on 20 pounds, but I figured it was a small price to pay for ditching that paranoia and buying some peace of mind.

About a year later, my dose went to 1.5 milligrams a day?a baby dose by schizophrenic standards of 4 to 6 milligrams a day?due to a couple of episodes of hypomania that had slipped through the Risperdal curtain. Once again, I had run into the prototypical bipolar complaint of being unable to sleep.

On the higher dose, I felt slowed down and unable to think at my usual clip. This is a common experience for patients taking atypicals long term.

One day, a friend of mine told me that my face had no emotional range. She said I was fixed and stony when I should've been smiling. After two years of daily use, the more troubling side effects had blossomed. Weight gain and grogginess I could handle, but not looking emotionless to the world. I had taken psych meds each day for the previous 14 years and was more or less stable, so I decided it was time to be a guinea pig in a whole new way.

In the spring of 2003, I went to my then-doctor and told him I wanted to go off all my meds. I wanted to see what my nonmeds baseline was like.

For three months, things went well. I lost weight, my facial expressions snapped back to life, and my emotions had what seemed like a normal range. Then the edge returned, and I couldn't sleep. Soon after, I crashed.

My doctor put me back on Depakote and Risperdal. Within a day, I was so agitated I couldn't sleep and my heart raced. I measured 140 beats a minute at one point. I had to piss every five minutes and was so nauseated that I couldn't eat. I almost checked myself into Harborview Medical Center for monitoring. I had never had that kind of response to meds of any kind before and I was frightened. When I visited him a couple of days later, my doctor confirmed my hunch that Risperdal was the culprit.

"Let's replace that with Zyprexa," he said. I told him no. He gave me samples in case I changed my mind.

Since then, I have continued to chase that edginess and have had occasional bouts of insomnia. My new doctor and I decided last year that I ought to try Seroquel. So I began taking the smallest possible dose.

At first, it helped me sleep, although it took about two hours to be fully alert the next morning. It was as if I had taken a Quaalude and drank a fifth of whiskey the night before. I didn't like that, neither did I like putting on weight all over again. Seroquel also caused me to have bad dreams?horror-film bad?that I would awake from in full shout. There were mornings where I'd look at myself in the mirror and see scratches on my forehead.

Still, the edge was mostly gone. I liked that. But something about Seroquel bugged me.

Seroquel is very much the med of the moment for treating bipolar disorder. It is made by AstraZeneca. In the last two years, sales have more than doubled to $2 billion. Earlier this year, AstraZeneca officials bragged to investment analysts that they expected more than 30 percent growth in sales in 2005. Recently, the company began an advertising campaign with banner ads on MySpace.com, the popular social networking Web site.

Right now, it is only FDA-approved for short-term treatment of acute mania. It is not approved for maintenance treatment of bipolar disorder, rapid cycling (switching between mania and depression), or bipolar depression. Doctors are free to prescribe it for those uses, off-label. Seroquel is now the most prescibed atypical in the U.S., according to AstraZeneca.

Almost every bipolar I've spoken with has had Seroquel prescribed to them because they've gone to their doctors complaining of insomnia?the kind of insomnia that sleeping pills cannot address. Seroquel knocks down this problem with sledgehammer efficiency. Patients tell me that they've generally been started at 200 milligrams and then slept well for a few weeks. Then they cannot sleep again and up goes the dosage. One patient I know wound up taking 800 milligrams a day?the amount an acute schizophrenic takes?and still couldn't sleep. That dose of Seroquel runs $668 a month, according to drugstore.com.

All of them put on 20 to 30 pounds in short order. Most of these patients had already tried one of the other atypicals, if not two or three, before arriving at Seroquel. Interestingly, many patients I've interviewed began taking Seroquel in 2003 or 2004. They stuck with it for about a year, and then switched to something else in 2005 after the heavy head in the morning became too great of a trade-off. For this reason, I, too, had to stop taking the drug earlier this year.

I wonder what AstraZeneca's executives will be telling investment analysts in 2006.

But the pharma giant recently went into press release overdrive. There was an academic conference on bipolar disorder in Holland last month. One study released at the conference claimed that Seroquel was highly effective in treating bipolar depression based on an eight-week study. Bipolar depression is a subtype of the broader disorder.

In recent interviews, several prominent researchers pointed to that study as proof of Seroquel's efficacy in treating bipolar disorder. Some researchers said that it ought to be used long term in bipolars, as a result?and as the only drug a bipolar would take.

The study states that Seroquel worked on the depression of 53 percent of the patients in the eight-week study. That means it didn't work for 47 percent of the patients. That's tantalizingly close to NIMH's own assertion that psych meds work only about half the time. It also dovetails with what patients I know have experienced on atypicals as a whole?50 percent performance.

Half-performance is wholly unacceptable. It certainly doesn't justify a paradigm shift.

The results are even less impressive in light of what Seroquel does to patients' bodies as well as the expense of the medication. Least impressive still is that if you are a bipolar taking an atypical like Seroquel, and you need to be to work at 8 a.m. each morning, then you'll likely need to take your pills around 9 p.m. the previous evening. Seroquel will knock you out for a good eight hours, and you'll need to devote two hours in the morning just to waking up. That leaves you about four hours in the evening for the rest of your life.

And they call this treating bipolar disorder? The doctors think there is solid evidence that it's a good idea to use these meds for long-term maintenance? Why do they tout complete symptom remission as a goal, when it creates an environment where patients, who are in no position of power, are literally forced to take successively more powerful meds when doctors themselves know that complete symptom remission is a fantasy? They are kidding themselves.

Much of this shift to atypicals for treating bipolar disorder has gone on under the noses of the media and advocates for the mentally ill. Perhaps the questions that need to be asked are too subtle to permit the kind of black-and-white answers that the media love and that advocates need.

Still, it's puzzling to me that such a vast change could be going on in the treatment of a major mental illness and the very people who should be asking the hard questions are mute. Last month, actress Linda Hamilton was a guest on Larry King Live on CNN. She was discussing her "20 years of bipolar hell." At the top of the show, King announced that the Terminator star was also there representing Eli Lilly and their well-being approach?exercise and nutrition?for "people with serious and persistent mental illness." In other words, she was talking to me. Too bad I wasn't asking the questions.

King is of course no exemplar of journalistic inquisitiveness. He didn't ask her if maybe?just maybe?those side effects and all that weight gain that she was on television saying patients needed to address were, in fact, caused by products made by Eli Lilly?namely, Zyprexa and Prozac. He didn't ask how reasonable it was to expect someone taking Zyprexa (or Seroquel or Risperdal) in high doses to get out there and exercise and eat good food, as she was saying they must, when their weight, blood lipids, blood sugar levels, and cholesterol were shot to hell by Zyprexa. I guess looking to the media and advocates for cold-blooded honesty and accountability is naive. But someone ought to be asking serious questions because atypical antipsychotics have serious problems.

The people who most need to be held to account here are not the pharma companies, however. They are acting much as you'd expect drug companies to behave?designing drugs, calling half-performance a victory for patients, and minting money.

It's doctors and researchers who must be held accountable. By dint of their medical degrees, they are supposed to be ethical actors. I am not convinced that it is ethical to ask millions of bipolars to take medications long term that work about as well at remitting symptoms as the old standby of a mood stabilizer plus antidepressant approach. Their proposed paradigm shift is doubly questionable given the side effects and hard-core nature of atypicals. Maybe I've become too much of a skeptic about psych meds, if by skeptical you understand that I actually expect meds to work and expect long-term treatments that don't dumb down active, intelligent humans.

I still take meds, however. They are a constant in my life and will be until I die. In fact, I still have a bottle of Seroquel in my medicine cabinet. It's there for short-term use when I cannot sleep and the edge dogs me once again, as it will. I'll take the Seroquel just like I once took Mellaril, for a day or two, here and there.

This is an awkward time for mental- health experts, researchers, and advocates. This month, a peer-reviewed academic paper was published on the Public Library of Science Web site pointing out that researchers still have not proved the serotonin-imbalance-in-the-brain hypothesis of depression. What proof there is, the authors claim, is mostly circumstantial. Two weeks ago, The Wall Street Journal ran an article covering the same points in relation to antidepressants. And a pesky reporter was calling around the country, asking questions about bipolar disorder and atypical antipsychotics that prominent researchers hadn't even asked themselves.

These are all matters that smart people should be willing to meet head-on.

The larger uncomfortable truth about the psychopharmacological revolution is that psychiatric medications are now part of mainstream American culture, but these meds do not consistently offer the kind of long-term benefits that many in the mental-health field claim. Nor do we fully understand the long-term consequences of their use. This is as true of antidepressants as it is of atypical antipsychotics.

That's a lousy deal for patients, regardless of their diagnosis. It's doubly lousy because there are no new classes of psych meds on the horizon. And any talk of gene-based cures and therapies is just talk, for now.

Meanwhile, patients have to live. They have to grapple with illnesses that are poorly understood scientifically, in an environment where medications can be as much of a problem as a solution, where incomplete evidence is the guiding light of long-term care in a revolution that's forgotten how to serve the patient first.

The hell with that.

www.abilify.com) Otsuka America Yes 2002
Clozaril** (www.clozaril.com) Novartis Yes 1989
Geodon (www.geodon.com) Pfizer Yes 2001
Risperdal (www.risperdal.com) Janssen Yes 1994
Seroquel (www.seroquel.com) AstraZeneca Yes 1997
Zyprexa (www.zyprexa.com) Eli Lilly Yes 1996

* A special FDA-required warning alerting consumers and doctors to known side effects of a drug, or class of drugs, owing to documented deaths or injury.

**Due to cases of toxicity, Clozaril (clozapine) is rarely prescribed.
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #326 on: December 07, 2005, 09:31:00 AM »
Schizophrenia is no longer seen as a genetically
predetermined disease.

Now scientists are beginning to uncover evidence that schizophrenia is heavily influenced by environmental factors. Their research has huge implications for treatment. Doctors now believe that therapy and social work are the preferred method of treatment for most schizophrenics.

http://www.fornits.com/wwf/viewtopic.ph ... forum=22&0
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #327 on: December 07, 2005, 12:11:00 PM »
Quote
Doctors now believe that therapy and social work are the preferred method of treatment for most schizophrenics.



http://www.fornits.com/wwf/viewtopic.ph ... forum=22&0"


The preferred treatment has always been
medication and therapy!
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #328 on: December 07, 2005, 06:08:00 PM »
http://www.spiked-online.co.uk/Articles ... 0CAE9E.htm
SPIKED
30 November 2005

'One-in-10 kids are mentally ill'? That's madness
Can you spot the three with disorders in your kid's nursery?
by Ken McLaughlin

Headlines around the world yesterday reported the finding that one in 10 pre-school children are mentally ill.

The study in question was by Adrian Angold, associate professor of psychiatry at the Duke University Medical Centre in North Carolina. In
Professor Angold's view, these children 'are really sick' - he suggests the development of tools and skills to assess the psychological health of babies, in order to diagnose and intervene before the onset of conditions
(1).

I suppose it is progress of sorts. After all, only six years ago we were informed that one in five children were so afflicted (2). Halving the rate of childhood mental distress in six years is no mean feat, and would, if true, have me praising those campaigners and professionals responsible for such an improvement in children's wellbeing. But these statistics reflect, not changes in the psychological health of children, but changes in how we categorise and view childhood behaviour.

Does this one in 10 statistic chime with your experience? The next time you drop your child off at nursery or school, look around. From a class of 30, this claim suggests that three of those children are mentally ill. They may be noisy, upset, disobedient or anxious, but would you really categorise them as mentally ill? Of course not - but then, this debate tends to see parents not as protective guardians but more as a contributor to children's psychological distress. It also conflates severe but rare mental distress
with the more mundane, if unpleasant aspects of negotiating childhood.

In some respects, the classifying of children, even infants, as mentally disturbed is nothing new, having its roots in the psychoanalytic theories of Melanie Klein and her followers. For Klein, each infant's development proceeds through 'paranoid-schizoid' and 'depressive' phases. However, these phases are seen as crucial in allowing the child to negotiate the anxiety
and fear experienced during development. They are transitory phases, which normally resolve themselves satisfactorily and help the developing maturity of the child (3).

While the 'psychoanalytic/psychiatric deluge' of the first half of the twentieth century was rightly criticised for downplaying the social and
political aspects of mental distress, it presented a more optimistic view of humanity than that espoused by psychiatry today. Theories of the importance of the unconscious in human behaviour may have undermined notions of rationality, and in this sense can be construed as labelling us all mad.

However, Kleinians also saw the aggressive and destructive aspects of the unconscious as a source of strength. In contemporary psychotherapeutic discourse, by contrast, it is the fragility of human nature that is emphasised. The assumption that we are all mad merges with a belief that we are all fragile and in need of professional help.

Mental health professionals now categorise a plethora of childhood - and adult - behaviour as indicators of mental disorder. Whereas a diagnosis of a serious mental illness such as schizophrenia (a concept which is itself open
to question (4)) is rare, figures of 10 to 20 per cent prevalence of mental disorder in children are found by reclassifying the hitherto mundane, if unpleasant, aspects of childhood and growing up under a psychiatric umbrella.

Bedwetting and truancy are seen as indicators of childhood mental health problems; refusing to obey parents becomes 'oppositional defiant disorder'; fighting or 'anti-social' behaviour becomes 'conduct disorder'. While bullying is frequently seen as a source of high mental anguish for children, on closer inspection the definition of what constitutes bullying has
expanded to include 'being mean to someone' and 'teasing or calling names'(5).

The tendency is to view problems as unresolved, not only throughout childhood but also into adult life. Mental health charities such as MIND and
the Mental Health Foundation routinely claim that one in four of us will suffer from a mental health problem. At times it appears that we are all ill. For example, a review of some North American studies found that 80million people have eating disorders, 50million suffer from depression and anxiety, 25million are sex addicts, 10million suffer from borderline
personality disorder and 66million have experienced incest or sexual trauma, to name but a few. The total number of sufferers of all disorders adds up to several times the population of North America (6). Perhaps everybody has
multiple pathologies! (7).

Some children and their parents may well feel anxious and unhappy, and may interpret their experiences through a psycho-medical framework. However, it could be argued that this is more to do with a rise in mental health professionals and campaign groups than to a rise in mental illness. If people are encouraged to view themselves as fragile, ill and in need of professional help, it is perhaps no surprise that some individuals
internalise such views.

Ken McLaughlin is a senior lecturer in social work at Manchester Metropolitan University.

(1) 'One in ten pre-schoolers may be suffering from mental illness', Guardian, 29 November 2005

(2) 'The Big Picture', Mental Health Foundation, 1999

(3) See Melanie Klein and Critical Social Theory, Fred Alford, 1989, for example

(4) See Schizophrenia Re-evaluated (1990) by Mary Boyle or The Dialectics of Schizophrenia (1997) by Phil Thomas for good critiques of the concept of schizophrenia as a useful diagnostic category

(5) See Childline's website

(6) See Manufacturing Victims by Tana Dineen, 1996.

(7) At a mental health social work conference I attended in 1998 this was the response given by one of the speakers when I questioned the uncritical acceptance of some of these studies

Reprinted from : http://www.spiked-online.com/Articles/0000000CAE9E.htm

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Email: [email protected] © spiked 2000-2005 All rights reserved. spiked is not responsible for the content of any third-party websites.
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« Reply #329 on: December 07, 2005, 10:25:00 PM »
http://www.nola.com/news/t-p/frontpage/ ... 364840.xml

Wednesday, December 07, 2005
By Paul Rioux
St. Tammany bureau
Excepts:
A 3-month-old Bogalusa boy died Monday night after his mother, apparently tired of his crying, put him in a clothes dryer and turned it on for several minutes, authorities said.

Adams, who authorities suspect may have been suffering from postpartum depression, placed the boy in an electric dryer with a few articles of clothing and turned it on for at least several minutes, Darden said.

"She remained calm throughout the whole situation and never really showed much emotion."

Adams also shared the home at 1501 N. Roosevelt St. with her 1-year-old daughter and grandmother, who was not home Monday, Darden said.

Galvan said neither of the children had signs of any earlier abuse or injuries.

"This child was extremely well-nourished," he said. "There was no evidence of previous neglect or records of involvement with child-protection services."

Noting that a bottle of antidepressant medication was found in the home, Galvan said he suspects Adams may have been experiencing postpartum depression, a condition linked to hormonal changes after childbirth. Symptoms include uncontrollable crying, mood swings, exhaustion, feelings of hopelessness and lack of interest in the baby. In extreme cases, mothers sometimes exhibit psychotic behavior toward their children.

Paul Rioux can be reached at [email protected] or (985) 645-2852
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gt;>>>>>>>>>>>>>><<<<<<<<<<<<<<
Hidden Lake Academy, after operating 12 years unlicensed will now be monitored by the state. Access information on the Federal Class Action lawsuit against HLA here: http://www.fornits.com/wwf/viewtopic.php?t=17700