tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10459981.post2204661370781101687..comments2023-09-28T15:35:46.255+01:00Comments on <center>FIDDAMAN BLOG</center>: GlaxoSmithKline's Extraordinary Lengths of Denial? [Paxil/Seroxat Withdrawal]Unknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10459981.post-75523194778388875452010-11-07T09:44:53.958+00:002010-11-07T09:44:53.958+00:00I am fed up of GSK deying that Paxil(Seroxat)is no...I am fed up of GSK deying that Paxil(Seroxat)is not addictive,at the end of the day common sense should prevail,I cannot stop taking this drug without having problems, wether they are withdrawal symptoms or discontinuation syndrome at the end of the day it is the same thing.I should have been warned about the side effects when my GP prescribed this drug to me,if she had warned me about the problems this drug would have caused me, I would not have taken it.The law is a complete ass as far as I am concerned,maybe if your arm fell off or your head swelled to twice its size then they would say there is a problem with the drug but because it is depression,and not physically visible they say the problem was already there.I challenge Mr Andrew Witty to take a course of this wonderdrug and then stop taking it and see what his outcome is,after all it should not be a problem as the side effects are minimal and life can carry on.GSK are a bunch of sharks and when they are trying to promote how good they are trying to find cures for these terrible diseases, and what they are doing for third world countries,at the end of the day it is only money they care about.tiger22007noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10459981.post-42131766576134354942010-03-20T10:47:48.429+00:002010-03-20T10:47:48.429+00:00Glaxo tried every shady legal trick in the book to...Glaxo tried every shady legal trick in the book to get rid of the different types of litigation filed against it (withdrawal, suicide and birth defects). The injured plaintiffs had to go through hell all over again simply because they dared to seek compensation. In the end, over 99% of the cases were settled out of court with confidentiality clauses and with Glaxo basically denying blame. These secrecy clauses should be banned.Evelyn Pringlenoreply@blogger.com