"It's not about what they tell you, it's about what they don't."
~ Bob Fiddaman, Author, Blogger, Researcher, Recipient of two Human Rights awards
Researching drug company and regulatory malfeasance for over 16 years
Humanist, humorist
Showing posts with label Australian children. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Australian children. Show all posts
Thursday, September 29, 2011
Paddy McGorry's DeLorean Program - The Survey
The early intervention program is akin to the chemical imbalance theory in as much that it is based purely on speculation. There is no science behind it, none at all. Possibility is not an excuse for treatment, if it were, then smokers would be offered chemotherapy years in advance of "possibly" developing lung cancer. McGorry et al can no more predict a mental disorder than you or I can next weeks Lotto numbers. To fund any program based on speculation is a high risk... in as much as the same way of treating the disorders with psychiatric medications that have a proven track record of causing suicide and horrific withdrawal problems.
You can now complete an online survey and also offer your thoughts on Patrick McGorry's EPPIC model.
Take the survey HERE
More about McGorry and the DeLorean Mob:
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28,
Fid
ORDER THE PAPERBACK 'THE EVIDENCE, HOWEVER, IS CLEAR...THE SEROXAT SCANDAL' By Bob Fiddaman US and CANADA HERE
OR UK FROM CHIPMUNKA PUBLISHING
AUSTRALIAN ORDERS HERE
Friday, September 23, 2011
The Defence of Prof. Ian Hickie
Prof Ian Hickie |
Patrick McGorry's sidekick, Prof Ian Hickie, has come out fighting this week with an opinion piece that was published on the Sydney Morning Herald website.
One would have thought that Hickie, who I have highlighted before on this blog, [Back story] would have used the Sydney Morning Herald as a platform to show evidence that the DeLorean Machine [The Early Intervention Program] was fool proof and robust.
Instead, Hickie chose to slam his critics...and he did so in the style and ahem, candour, that anyone who opposes his fairy tale theories would expect.
Here's a snippet:
...an odd mix of armchair critics, conspiracy theorists and a former chairman of the American Diagnostic and Statistical Manual taskforce, Dr Allen Frances, oppose the expansion of early intervention programs for teenagers and young adults. Conversely, child advocates have attacked the proposed reforms for putting too little emphasis on the expansion of specialised child services.
In parallel, the Scientologists have repeatedly used freedom of information legislation to mount an ''investigation'' into the work of McGorry, our colleagues and myself. Various members of these groups have made highly personal ''conflict of interest'' allegations in an attempt to distract attention from the evidence that favours these new approaches.
Way to go Hickie!
When all else fails shout conspiracy or Scientology. One would have thought psychiatrists and professors would have devised a better argument after all these years. Amazing isn't it, they can pluck an "illness" out of thin air yet call them to task over it and you are labelled an armchair critic, conspiracy theorist or Scientologist.
These guys just love their labels eh.
Ian Hickie was the inaugural CEO (2000-2003) of 'beyondblue: the national depression initiative', which has very successfully sold depression in Australia, with many millions of dollars of government money. This has worked brilliantly for the drug companies, and beyondblue does not accept pharma funding, so the drug companies get the promotion for free. I've previously wrote about beyondblue back in November 2008.
Beyondblue and Hickie paved the way for EPPIC, a psychiatric service aimed at addressing the needs of older adolescents and young adults with emerging psychotic disorders.
Hickie and McGorry had already been working together for several years, in fact Hickie is a key player in McGorry's 'Headspace'.
The PDF above is a seemingly egregious example of the conflicts of interests that exist: a whole journal supplement based on the SPHERE project clinical audit. The audit was funded by Bristol-Myers Squibb (see p. S54), the manufacturer of Serzone. The publication of the supplement was funded by beyondblue with Commonwealth [Australian] Government money (see title page).
The audit, which used Hickie's SPHERE questionnaire, found ridiculously high rates of mental disorders. This was reported in the supplement by Hickie, Davenport, Naismith, & Scott (2001, p. 52) as:
'Sixty-three per cent of people attending general practice have some evidence of mental disorder (including alcohol or other substance misuse) by self-report or GP's diagnosis of psychological difficulties.'
63%?
That's some cash cow huh?
Not surprisingly, if you scroll to the bottom of the PDF you will find: Source: Hickie et al. Educational Health Solutions; 2000
As long as the DeLorean Mob continue to berate their critics with name-calling, their critics will continue to press for the science behind their theories.
To be honest, any name-calling aimed in my direction really is water off a duck's back. It just highlights the inability of the other side to prove their point and shows them to be straw clutchers. It's just their way of stifling voices.
I'm reminded of my childhood days:
Scene: Early 70's School playground, me eating a packet of crisps.
CLASSMATE: Give me a crisp Fid.
ME: No.
CLASSMATE: You big gay!
Some things just never change.
Related posts: -
Hickierie Dickory Doc - McGorry Turns Back the Clock
33 year old mother slams Hickie
This one is especially for Ian Hickie and his DeLorean mob:
Thursday, September 15, 2011
Another Psychiatrist Slams McGorry's DeLorean Mob
Australian Psychiatrist, Patrick McGorry. A soothsayer who can predict the future mental health of children. |
Superb article written by psychiatrist Tanveer Ahmed is doing the rounds. In it, he [I assume it is as he] picks apart Paddy McGorry's flux capacitor on his time-travelling DeLorean.
On September 13, 2011, smh.com.au ran with an article entitled "Politics and mental health a poor mix", McGorry and his sidekick, Prof Ian Hickie, come under scrutiny once again.
Ahmed writes:
In one of the more farcical applications of psychiatry to political debates, a report this month linked inaction on climate change to the possibility of worsening mental health. Released by the Climate Institute, it suggested that increasing natural disasters might be linked to climate change, which might lead to increased costs in mental healthcare. The evidence for every link was slight at best, yet the novelty of the report ensured widespread attention.
It was launched by Professor Ian Hickie, who has been rightly recognised for giving mental health a greater profile, but who has also played politics to do so.
Hickie has done more than any other clinician to promote tick-a-box diagnosis, particularly among general practitioners, who now regularly prescribe antidepressants through questionnaires alone. With former Australian of the Year Professor Patrick McGorry, Hickie has made overblown claims about the prevalence of mental health.
It is disingenuous to suggest, as McGorry has done, that there is no conflict of interest because their organisations are non-profit. Their bodies shared in $2.2 billion of funding in the federal budget. Their exorbitant claims - such as one in four people will suffer mental illness - are indicative of a blurring of the lines between illness and normal, human responses to adversity.
For Hickie to claim that climate change can cause mental illness is yet another reason why people should not take McGorry's band of DeLorean driving merry men seriously. They will be predicting the weather next!
Weatherman: Tomorrow sees a north-easterly breeze and cloudy skies in the south. Please take your Paxil as not to give yourself a mental disorder.
**This forecast was brought to you by LoonHayTic Pharma PLC
Earlier this year McGorry pulled a clinical trial. He, with the financial assistance of Seroquel manufacturer Astra Zeneca, wanted to carry out a clinical trial [of sorts] with children, amongst others, who had not yet been diagnosed with a psychotic illness.
Psychiatrists, psychologists and researchers from all over the world lodged a complaint when they heard of the planned trial.
McGorry pulled the trial and now denies that the complaint had anything to do with his decision. If the 9 page complaint didn't change McGorry's mind...then what did?
If you look at the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry listing you will see that it was changed to say that ethics approval had been received on 8 July 2010: [HERE]
Yet on the 16 Aug 2011 there was no mention of this - [HERE]
I find it strange that the criteria for a clinical trial can change, almost overnight, when one of it's supporters comes under fire from his peers.
It's a sunny day here as I write this, forecast for the weekend predicts rain. Anyone got any psych meds?
More about McGorry HERE.
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ORDER THE PAPERBACK 'THE EVIDENCE, HOWEVER, IS CLEAR...THE SEROXAT SCANDAL' By Bob Fiddaman US and CANADA HERE OR UK FROM CHIPMUNKA PUBLISHING
AUSTRALIAN ORDERS HERE
Wednesday, August 31, 2011
Patrick McGorry, Clinical Trials and the Flaws
A thought just occurred to me regarding Aussie shrink Patrick 'DeLorean' McGorry and his heavily criticised early intervention program.
For those that have never heard of McGorry he is the Australian psychiatrist who basically can predict if a child will fall foul of a "mental illness" in future years. This is based on family history and...well, erm... likelihood. In other words it's a guessing game.
Anyway, whilst browsing the Clinical trials website it occurred to me that many, if not all pharmaceutical companies, have an exclusion criteria when carrying out clinical trials. An example would be a recently completed Paxil trial. Some of exclusion criteria was:
Patients with a history or complication of another (non-MDD) mental disorder (schizophrenia, etc.)
Patients with a history or complication of manic episodes
Patients diagnosed as having an attentional deficit disorder or hyperactivity disorder
Patients with a 3 or more-point score of "suicide" (HAM-D Item 3) or with a strong suicidal tendency by C-SSRS and investigator clinical judgement.
The full exclusion criteria for this particular trial can be read HERE.
Anyway, the point I am making here is thus:
If Paddy McGorry believes he can predict if a child will fall foul of a psychosis like illness and he firmly believes his early intervention program is fool proof then what of future exclusion criteria in clinical trials?
Surely if, in the above instance, those deemed to have been diagnosed with "ADHD" could not be part of certain clinical trials then what of McGorry's line of kids he has waiting to tick boxes to see if they will fall foul of such a disorder in future years?
Pharma can't have their cake and eat it. Maybe they should contact McGorry to pre-test all the children they add to their clinical trials.
**ring ring ring ring
"Hello, Paddy McGorry speaking."
"Hello Paddy, GSK here. We was just wondering if you could screen a bunch of kids for us to see if they will fall foul of a mental disorder sometime in the future."
**KA CHING
"Of course, send them over."
Maybe with the DeLorean Intervention Program, McGorry may just stop kids being picked for trials by pharmaceutical companies who, despite knowing their psychiatric medication is not safe for kids, continue to find ways to use it on kids.
If McGorry's program is so fool proof then why don't pharmaceutical companies use it before accepting children and teens onto their clinical trials?
I think my argument is valid, don't you?
Your move Paddy.
More about McGorry HERE.
Fid
ORDER THE PAPERBACK 'THE EVIDENCE, HOWEVER, IS CLEAR...THE SEROXAT SCANDAL' By Bob Fiddaman US and CANADA HERE OR UK FROM CHIPMUNKA PUBLISHING
AUSTRALIAN ORDERS HERE
Monday, August 22, 2011
Who Moved The Goalposts on Patrick McGorry's Clinical Trial
The DeLorean v Google Cache |
So, Former Australian of the year Patrick McGorry has published a rebuttal on his blog to all the criticism he has received.
It's a response to an article by Jill Stark that appeared in The Age, a popular Australian newspaper.
McGorry writes:
The article is entirely based on misleadingly linking two entirely separate events. These events are: the decision of Orygen Youth Health Research Centre (for which I am Executive Director) not to proceed with an already ethically approved trial of the medication.
I'm glad he has raised the ethical issue.
If you look at the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry listing you will see that it was changed to say that ethics approval had been received on 8 July 2010: [FIG 1]
Yet on the 16 Aug 2011 there was no mention of this - [FIG2]
I find it strange that the criteria for a clinical trial can change, almost overnight, when one of it's supporters comes under fire from his peers
So, one has to ask why McGorry's claim that his trial was 'ethically approved' only appeared on Sunday night, hours after he had been slammed by the Australian press? The Google cache is a journalist's DeLorean Mr McGorry. It may also be your downfall.
FIG 1 How the clinical trial looks today |
FIG 2 How the clinical trial looked on Aug 16, 2011 |
A glitch in the flux capacitor, perhaps?
Fid
ORDER THE PAPERBACK 'THE EVIDENCE, HOWEVER, IS CLEAR...THE SEROXAT SCANDAL' By Bob Fiddaman US and CANADA HERE OR UK FROM CHIPMUNKA PUBLISHING
AUSTRALIAN ORDERS HERE
Sunday, August 21, 2011
McGorry Seroquel Drug Trial - The Complaint
Former Australian of the Year, Patrick McGorry |
McGorry, with the financial assistance of Seroquel manufacturer Astra Zeneca, wanted to carry out a clinical trial [of sorts] with children, amongst others, who had not yet been diagnosed with a psychotic illness.
Psychiatrists, psychologists and researchers from all over the world lodged a complaint when they heard of the planned trial.
McGorry pulled the trial and now denies that the complaint had anything to do with his decision. If the 9 page complaint didn't change McGorry's mind...then what did?
McGorry appeared an Australia's Lateline 24 hours prior to Jill Stark's article went to press
Related Articles:
Patrick McGorry: "Hey... Paddy... Leave Those Kids Alone"
Patrick McGorry - Torn Asunder Down Under
Early Intervention, McGorry, Politics & TV Shows
Psychiatrist Patrick McGorry Slams His Critics [Diddums]
Is Australia's "Number One Man" Misleading The Public?
Pre-Mental Disorder Screening and Drugging - THE PHARMACEUTICAL DELOREAN
Patrick McGorry's Delorean Pulls Over For New Passenger
Patrick McGorry and Co Under Fire
Hickierie Dickory Doc - McGorry Turns Back the Clock
Psychiatrist's Assessment of Patrick McGorry
Patrick McGorry's "Back to the Future" 2008 Study
Australian Doctor Magazine Sees Patrick McGorry Defend His Position
Are The Wheels Coming Off Patrick McGorry's DeLorean?
Professor Graham Burrows - The "Cosmetic Psychiatrist?" [Updated 7.34pm]
Patrick McGorry Responds to Criticism by Allen Frances
Australian Member of Parliament, Martin Whitely, also speaks out against McGorry's Headspace initiative HERE.
Patrick McGorry's Headstrong DeLorean Posse Part I
Can someone ask Paddy to define better?
Fid
ORDER THE PAPERBACK 'THE EVIDENCE, HOWEVER, IS CLEAR...THE SEROXAT SCANDAL' By Bob Fiddaman US and CANADA HERE OR UK FROM CHIPMUNKA PUBLISHING
AUSTRALIAN ORDERS HERE
Saturday, August 20, 2011
Was McGorry Forced To Pull AstraZeneca Funded Trial on Children?
Australian psychiatrist/soothsayer, Patrick McGorry |
Jill Stark has a revealing article about Prof. Patrick McGorry running in tomorrow's edition of 'The Age'. Because of the time difference UK/Australia...or maybe because I've been pushed into the future 'DeLorean' style, that article is now available online.
Stark's investigation shows how McGorry planned to carry out a trial using the antipsychotic Seroquel on children as young as 15. The trial, funded by AstraZeneca, was to "investigate whether the drug would decrease or delay the risk of people aged between 15 and 40 with early signs of mental illness developing a psychotic disorder such as schizophrenia", writes Stark.
Psychiatrists, psychologists and researchers from all over the world lodged a complaint when they heard of the planned trial, resulting in the trial being pulled.
I cannot quite grasp why anyone would want to give someone a mind altering drug to see if it would deter an onset of an illness that the subject may or may not get. It defies logic. Then again, when have pharmaceutical companies applied any logic when it comes to medicating children with disorders invented by those nutty professors in white coats?
McGorry claims the decision to scrap the trial was made in June and is unrelated to the complaint. Yeh right, and I've just witnessed a pig fly past my window and an owl and a pussycat rowing a pea green boat!
Stark's article can be read in full HERE
It seems more and more people are now speaking out against McGorry's soothsayer ways, something the citizens commission on human rights [CCHR] have been doing for years. Long may it continue.
Related Articles:
Patrick McGorry: "Hey... Paddy... Leave Those Kids Alone"
Patrick McGorry - Torn Asunder Down Under
Early Intervention, McGorry, Politics & TV Shows
Psychiatrist Patrick McGorry Slams His Critics [Diddums]
Is Australia's "Number One Man" Misleading The Public?
Pre-Mental Disorder Screening & Drugging - THE PHARMACEUTICAL DELOREAN
Patrick McGorry's Delorean Pulls Over For New Passenger
Patrick McGorry & Co Under Fire
Hickierie Dickory Doc - McGorry Turns Back the Clock
Psychiatrist's Assessment of Patrick McGorry
Patrick McGorry's "Back to the Future" 2008 Study
Australian Doctor Magazine Sees Patrick McGorry Defend His Position
Are The Wheels Coming Off Patrick McGorry's DeLorean?
Professor Graham Burrows - The "Cosmetic Psychiatrist?" [Updated 7.34pm]
Patrick McGorry Responds to Criticism by Allen Frances
Australian Member of Parliament, Martin Whitely, also speaks out against McGorry's Headspace initiative HERE.
Patrick McGorry's Headstrong DeLorean Posse Part I
Fid
ORDER THE PAPERBACK 'THE EVIDENCE, HOWEVER, IS CLEAR...THE SEROXAT SCANDAL' By Bob Fiddaman US and CANADA HERE
OR UK FROM CHIPMUNKA PUBLISHING
AUSTRALIAN ORDERS HERE
Friday, August 19, 2011
Professor McGorry Defends Early Intervention DeLorean Program
Australian Psychiatrist, Patrick McGorry. A soothsayer who can predict the future mental health of children. |
Australian soothsayer Patrick McGorry has been defending his early intervention program by appearing on Lateline, an Australian Broadcasting Corporation current affairs programme.
McGorry, who I have highlighted on this blog many times, claims the early intervention model he promotes has been proven to reduce mental illness symptoms and reduce costs to the health system.
'Proven' is past tense by the way.
Most notably, McGorry stated:
'What the studies actually show is there is no need to use anti-psychotic medications as first line in these patients [at high risk of developing psychosis].'
NB: The phrase 'first line' signals that he is not completely backing away from the use of antipsychotics in at-risk patients.
Also notable was the patronising but predictable dismissal by McGorry, Mendoza, and Crosbie of criticism as envy, in-fighting, bizarre, ignorant, self-defeating.... [I've seen playground bullies with better tactical skills]
Here's the transcript of his performance on Lateline
Related Articles:
Patrick McGorry: "Hey... Paddy... Leave Those Kids Alone"
Patrick McGorry - Torn Asunder Down Under
Early Intervention, McGorry, Politics & TV Shows
Psychiatrist Patrick McGorry Slams His Critics [Diddums]
Is Australia's "Number One Man" Misleading The Public?
Pre-Mental Disorder Screening & Drugging - THE PHARMACEUTICAL DELOREAN
Patrick McGorry's Delorean Pulls Over For New Passenger
Patrick McGorry & Co Under Fire
Hickierie Dickory Doc - McGorry Turns Back the Clock
Psychiatrist's Assessment of Patrick McGorry
Patrick McGorry's "Back to the Future" 2008 Study
Australian Doctor Magazine Sees Patrick McGorry Defend His Position
Are The Wheels Coming Off Patrick McGorry's DeLorean?
Professor Graham Burrows - The "Cosmetic Psychiatrist?" [Updated 7.34pm]
Patrick McGorry Responds to Criticism by Allen Frances
Australian Member of Parliament, Martin Whitely, also speaks out against McGorry's Headspace initiative HERE.
Patrick McGorry's Headstrong DeLorean Posse Part I
OTHER LINKS
Jill Stark did an excellent article about criticism of Patrick McGorry in The Sunday Age on 7 August. The Age is Melbourne's main newspaper, and the article was apparently on the front page, so the article would have been at least glanced at by many people. Six letters (including one from McGorry) were published in response:
McGorry accused of conflict of interest
The Big Issue: Mental Health
Not surprisingly, McGorry also responded with a piece on his website:
Merchants of doubt do no favours for people with mental illnesses
ORDER THE PAPERBACK 'THE EVIDENCE, HOWEVER, IS CLEAR...THE SEROXAT SCANDAL' By Bob Fiddaman US & CANADA HERE OR UK FROM CHIPMUNKA PUBLISHING
AUSTRALIAN ORDERS HERE
Thursday, June 23, 2011
Professor Graham Burrows - The "Cosmetic Psychiatrist?" [Updated 7.34pm]
Professor Graham Burrows: "I don’t think there’s anyone in the world today who could emphatically say how an anti-depressant works." |
As Australian psychiatrist Professor Graham Burrows defends his corner against recent allegations of over medicating patients, misdiagnosing and bed-hopping with the pharmaceutical industry, many of his former patients are trying to get their lives back on track. Burrows, is, it appears, a firm believer in the pharmaceutical products he prescribes - one such product is GSK's Seroxat, known as Aropax in Australia and Paxil in the US and Canada.
In a 2002 short documentary Burrows claimed that shyness was a treatable condition, treatable with Aropax. In fact much of Burrows' statements from the 2002 transcript leave me wondering whether he was merely promoting GSK's product, I think it fair to make that assumption, tell me what you think:
Narration: Paxil or Aropax as it’s known in Australia is one of the Prozac-like antidepressants. And while many psychologists say they meddle with human nature, psychiatrists like Graham Burrows claim they’re merely much-need medications.
Professor Graham Burrows: I don’t consider it meddling if in fact this person is suffering so much that it’s interfering with their life that they want to be changed. They want to feel more comfortable, they want to be able to deal with the social situations. They want to enjoy life when they’re not enjoying life. That couldn’t really be called meddling.
The narrator continued by announcing that Burrows believed that up 13% of Australians had "chronic shyness" and more than half of them probably need permanent medication to turn their lives around.
Opposing this was psychologist Dr Sallee McLauren:
"One of the central things with people who suffer from anxiety is the sense of powerlessness. They think that they cannot control the anxiety. Now this is simply not true. We can certainly learn to manage that anxiety. That’s why it’s very important for people who suffer from anxiety not to just adopt that passive approach of just popping a pill. It’s very important instead to learn how to be an agent in your own life. So how to stand up to the anxiety".
Here's Burrows response to McLauren:
"That’s not true and I’d disagree with that sort of opinion and that’s often a divided opinion between psychologists and psychiatrists, it depends who you go to because there are people who have claimed that the person can be well, but in fact when you take them off the medication they get bad again and you get back into the CBT and they still have problems, that’s when they have to face the fact that this person needs medication."
"When you take them off the medication they get bad again?"
Did it, or indeed does it, ever occur to Burrows that they 'get bad again' due to the side-effects of the drug they are taking? Furthermore, to just take someone off Aropax is not recommended as the withdrawal symptoms can be horrendous.
Here, Burrows defies all the odds with one of the most eye-opening claims I have ever seen from a psychiatrist:
"There are people who have abnormal biochemistry in their brain. We can show that by blood tests. We can show that with positron emission tomography a neuro-imaging technique. We’ve done some studies to show that they actually have altered chemistry and by giving them the medication, their chemistry is converted back to normal if you like and they don’t have the anxiety and the depression they had beforehand."
First and foremost, THERE IS NO PROVEN PET SCAN to diagnose mental disorders.
Positron Emission Tomography, more commonly known as a PET scan is a pretty daunting procedure and one that doctors [GP's] certainly don't carry out before handing out psychiatric drugs, in fact, many of Burrows former patients have come forward to complain that he over-medicated them, one such patient claimed that Burrows prescribed him/her a psychiatric drug after just 30 seconds of diagnosis! If true, how did Burrows know his patient had a disorder?
The PET scanner is a ring-shaped apparatus with an attached table. You will lie on the scanning table, and the table will slide slowly through the opening in the scanner ring. One or two scans might be taken before the tracer is administered. After this initial scanning, either you will inhale the tracer or it will be injected into one of your veins, usually in your arm. Additional scans will be taken while the tracer is in your body.
During the scanning procedure, you must lie very still. The scanning table will glide you through the PET scanner, so you won't need to move. If your head is being scanned, special cushions may be placed against your head to hold it in place. The entire scan should take 30 minutes to two hours. Afterward, you can go home and resume your normal activities. [Source]
So if it takes a PET scan between 30 minutes and 2 hours plus the time taken for a medical team to assess the images caught, how can Burrows, or indeed any healthcare professional diagnose a patient with a 'mental disorder' based on a brief consultation? More importantly, if the PET scan is, once again, just based on theory it makes the whole process of dishing out psychiatric medication a complete nonsense, an unproven science with unproven disorders treated with unproven drugs.
The clincher, if a clincher was needed, of the 2002 short documentary come when Burrows made the following statement:
"I don’t think there’s anyone in the world today who could emphatically say how an anti-depressant works – whichever antidepressant group and having said that we do know a lot of chemistry about what actually occurs. Now I sometimes say does anyone know what electricity is, but we use it."
If Burrows can find the time I suggest he do a Google search, simply type in, "How does electricity work?"
In fact, Burrows should know how electricity works, in a study he co-authored [MJA 2007; 186 (3): 142-144] the use of electroconvulsive therapy is cited as being "the most effective treatment for severe depression."
Google the term, "How does electroconvulsive therapy work?" and you will find that nobody knows how it actually works, it's all based on theory, same as the chemical imbalance theory promoted by GlaxoSmithKline, manufacturers of Aropax.
The procedure for electroconvulsive therapy [ECT] is, for want of a better word, Frankensteinian. The treatment involves placing electrodes on the temples, on one or both sides of the patient's head, and delivering a small electrical current across the brain.
We know electricity can be dangerous if used incorrectly, after all, we wouldn't tell a child to go and stick his or her wet fingers into a live plug socket would we? We'd warn them of the dangers, the risks.
Children today are being prescribed psychiatric medication, the number is growing and it will grow larger if programs, such as Patrick McGorry's EPPIC program is not opposed. McGorry claims he can predict if a child will fall foul of a 'mental illness' in future years. The Australian government seem to back him, having thrown millions of dollars in is direction.
As Burrows rightly states, "I don’t think there’s anyone in the world today who could emphatically say how an anti-depressant works." Yet antidepressants are prescribed despite the medical and psychiatric profession not knowing how they work on the brain. If they don't know how antidepressants work then they won't know how to combat the side effects and, I put it to Burrows et al, that they are not in a position to defend the huge number of claims that antidepressant medication can cause those taking them to commit suicide or homicidal acts, all of which have been well documented.
Incidently, The a plus project was promoted in Burrows' Depression Awareness Journal (which was funded by GSK). The project saw starter packs being handed out to patients in 2002, around the same time the documentary was made. Counselling was offered to patients on the proviso that they continued taking Glaxo's drug, Aropax!
Burrows' (2002) editorial:
We also examine the a plus project, a partnership of patients, GPs, pharmacists and psychologists, working together to improve treatment outcomes in depression.
Singh (2002):
The a plus project is a national programme for the treatment of clinical depression which employs a multidisciplinary, cooperative approach to ensure patients achieve the maximum benefit from their treatment. The a plus project is an example of a healthcare partnership in action, as it adopts a cooperative mental health approach featuring GPs, pharmacists, psychiatrists, psychologists and patients. (p. 8)
According to Singh, the a plus project was developed to improve the treatment received by GP patients: 'It was in response to such unmet community need that the a plus project was devised' (p. 10).
Singh likened the a plus project to beyondblue:
Australia recently witnessed another first in the treatment of depression building on the major national initiative of beyondblue. (p. 8)
Burrows, Graham D. (2002, June). From the Editor in Chief. Depression Awareness Journal, 11, inside front cover.
Singh, Bruce. (2002, June). The a plus project: A partnership in action. Depression Awareness Journal, 11, pp. 8-11.
[Professor Singh is and was a prominent, influential psychiatrist.]
Memo to Burrows:
If you are going to promote the use of Aropax for shyness, here's an idea - find out how it works and what the possible implications are when taking it. Until you have all the answers and scientific data may I suggest that you promote products that have been scientifically tested and that have been proven to be safe and effective - a simple cup of tea could be right up your street, make sure you are careful when plugging in that electric kettle though.
PS - Shyness IS NOT a mental disorder...unless you can prove otherwise?
**If you, or anyone you know, is struggling withdrawal problems with GlaxoSmithKline's Aropax [Seroxat/Paxil], contact GSK directly and ask them for help. If they refer you to your doctor, please contact me by email. [Email address in left hand sidebar]
Transcript segments taken from COSMETIC PSYCHOLOGY, ABC Television.
Related Articles:
The Marketing of Aropax in Australia and the A Plus Project
Australian Psychiatrist Graham Burrows Denies Any "Wrongdoing"
Are The Wheels Coming Off Patrick McGorry's DeLorean?
News 7: More Complaints Against Prof Graham Burrows
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
Australian Psychiatrist Graham Burrows Denies Any "Wrongdoing"
Just before 7 News third installment highlighting Australian psychiatrist Graham Burrows abhorrent behaviour went to air tonight his lawyers issued a letter to the programme makers.
Burrows denied any wrongdoing and said that he is 'already subject to rigorous scrutiny by the medical practitioners board and peer review.' He also denied 'any suggestion that his patient care has been inappropriate.'
Tonight's airing sees "Barbara", a former patient of Burrows, say that she is "scared of him" and another former patient, "Lyn" claim that she has just over 20% of her kidney function left due to the drugs prescribed to her by Burrows. "Lyn" took her case to the medical board but it had to drop the case after Burrows notes were apparently destroyed.
News 7 coverage on this, although small, has been significant and more people have come forward to the program-makers.
Here's the third installment, the other two can be seen by visiting the links toward the end of this article.
7 NEWS PREVIOUS INSTALLMENTS
PART 1
PART 2
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
News 7: More Complaints Against Prof Graham Burrows
Australian psychiatrist Graham Burrows remains tight-lipped on recent allegations that he over medicated patients and prescribed them psychiatric drugs after just spending 30 seconds with them.
Australia News 7 yesterday broke the news and today, journalist Louise Milligan confirmed that "...the medical board is now monitoring the allegations to determine what action is necessary to protect the public."
The updated video below also features 'Diane' whose husband was prescribed Tolvin by Prof Graham Burrows, a week later he shot himself. In a startling interview 'Diane' alleges that upon hearing the news Burrows told her it was his fault as he should have hospitalized her husband.
The interview also features Bernard Daniels whose son, Garth, was prescribed Zyprexa by Burrows. Mr Daniels protested and Burrows tried to get legal guardianship of Garth to keep him on the drug.
I'm sure there will be more news about Burrows surfacing over the coming weeks.
Related story:
'Patrick McGorry's Delorean Pulls Over For New Passenger'
Monday, June 20, 2011
Are The Wheels Coming Off Patrick McGorry's DeLorean?
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Biff Tannen and Psychiatrist Graham Burrows.One of them has delusions about going back in time... the other is Biff Tannen. |
Back in May I highlighted Melbourne psychiatrist Graham "Biff Tannen" Burrows. Burrows had testified that Arthur Freeman, who threw his 4 year old daughter off the West Gate Bridge, had a "major despondent disorder" so he did not know what he was doing. Remarkably Burrows had been able to diagnose the mental state of someone 14 months back in time. Yup, that's right, Burrows had used the DeLorean to diagnose a patient... by going back in time by 14 months.
In my article, 'Patrick McGorry's Delorean Pulls Over For New Passenger', I highlighted the serious conflict of interests that surround Burrows:
Burrows is chairman of the Mental Health Foundation (founded in Melbourne Uni's Department of Psychiatry in 81); a department that receives funding from AstraZeneca, Servier and Pfizer. Burrows has also received travel assistance to attend Advisory Board meetings from most companies that market psychotropics in Australia.
Burrows is also the director of psychiatry at Austin Hospital in Melbourne where in 2006 the parents of a 30 year old man had to get a barrister to force the hospital to release him after the parents questioned the psychiatrists putting him on Zyprexa: [The parents won the legal battle to stop the psychiatrists "stripping them of all their rights to look after him."
The Mental Health Foundation issues press releases about the advantages of specific antidepressants: like Remeron [Avanza in Australia] and made by Organon.
In 2004, both Burrows and Patrick McGorry sat on the Advisory Board on Mental Health to advise the Victorian government on funding [Source]
It should come as no surprise then to learn that Burrows is now the subject of a major medical scandal in Australia. Calls for a government inquiry in to claims of over medicating and conflicts of interests involving drug companies.
This from 7 News Australia
Related Articles:
Patrick McGorry: "Hey... Paddy... Leave Those Kids Alone"
Patrick McGorry - Torn Asunder Down Under
Early Intervention, McGorry, Politics & TV Shows
Psychiatrist Patrick McGorry Slams His Critics [Diddums]
Is Australia's "Number One Man" Misleading The Public?
Pre-Mental Disorder Screening & Drugging - THE PHARMACEUTICAL DELOREAN
Patrick McGorry's Delorean Pulls Over For New Passenger
Patrick McGorry & Co Under Fire
Hickierie Dickory Doc - McGorry Turns Back the Clock
Psychiatrist's Assessment of Patrick McGorry
Patrick McGorry's "Back to the Future" 2008 Study
Australian Doctor Magazine Sees Patrick McGorry Defend His Position
Australian Member of Parliament, Martin Whitely, also speaks out against McGorry's Headspace initiative HERE.
Wednesday, June 15, 2011
Patrick McGorry Responds to Criticism by Allen Frances
Patrick McGorry |
Australian Psychiatrist Patrick McGorry has responded publicly to criticism aimed at him and his early intervention program by Allen Frances.
Frances, a former chair of the DSM-IV Task Force, has openly criticised McGorry with an article he wrote in Psychology Today last month [Back Story]
This prompted McGorry to respond in his own article, although he sought the help of Alison Yung to draft it. The article [response] appeared The Australian, an online newspaper that reaches out to a global audience.
Reading through McGorry's response leaves me somewhat baffled. Here he has a chance to explain how his early intervention program actually works, instead, it appears, he juxtaposes Allen's argument by criticising the American Health system, citing that it "has seriously failed the mentally ill." Furthermore, McGorry adds that Frances "is not in a strong position to give us advice."
McGorry continues his tirade against Frances accusing him of being ignorant to the early intervention module and "patronizing" to the Australian community.
In his final para McGorry quotes Tom Insel, Director of the National Institute for Mental Health in Washington DC. He writes:
The director of the National Institute for Mental Health in Washington DC, Tom Insel, recently told a workshop on mental health research in Canberra, that Australia was a decade ahead of the US in early intervention for psychosis and other mental ill-health in young people. He also emphasised that classification systems such as the DSM have failed.
Wow! The DSM a failure? Who would have thought it?
Nowhere in the article does McGorry, or indeed Yung, offer any scientific evidence to show that the early intervention program actually works. McGorry basically justifies the money being pumped into his Headspace initiative by citing figures of young Australian people with mental disorders. He adds that the Headspace initiative isn't about using psychiatric drugs on children, he writes:
Frances, like other critics of early intervention in psychiatry, seeks to confuse the treatment of first episode psychosis with efforts to intervene at an earlier stage, the subthreshold or ultra-high risk stage. The latter is not a focus of the Australian reforms. Finally, unlike in the US healthcare system, these models are guided by young people and their families, not dominated by medication, and are heavily influenced by the value of psychosocial care, which is covered within our system of health insurance.
Again, there is nothing from McGorry that shows scientific proof about intervening before first episode psychosis occurs.
Are we led to believe that McGorry will never use prescription medication on children who may or may not hit the first episode psychosis stage?
Can he openly declare that neither he or his team will offer psychiatric medication to children who he and his team suspect may fall foul of a mental disorder? Could he also admit, one way or the other, that the choices of medication for children with mental disorders are safe and effective for children? If so, could he provide the proof?
I find it amusing that two psychiatrists are publicly having a slanging match, more importantly though, I find it enlightening that more and more people are voicing their opinion on McGorry's Headspace initiative.
Debate is good but scientific evidence is even better. To my knowledge there is no supporting scientific evidence that backs McGorry's initiative. Figures quoted may prove to McGorry that Australian kids need more help but hey even I, a blogger from Birmingham, UK, can quote figures by using the adverse reaction reports to psychiatric drugs that are posted on Medicine regulatory websites, the figures are drastically under reported yet still alarmingly high.
McGorry may believe he is the new Messiah for Australian youth. If he were to NOT use psychiatric medication on them I, for one, would kiss his feet!
McGorry's response to Allen Frances can be read in full HERE.
Fid
Related Articles:
Patrick McGorry: "Hey... Paddy... Leave Those Kids Alone"
Patrick McGorry - Torn Asunder Down Under
Early Intervention, McGorry, Politics & TV Shows
Psychiatrist Patrick McGorry Slams His Critics [Diddums]
Is Australia's "Number One Man" Misleading The Public?
Pre-Mental Disorder Screening & Drugging - THE PHARMACEUTICAL DELOREAN
Patrick McGorry's Delorean Pulls Over For New Passenger
Patrick McGorry & Co Under Fire
Hickierie Dickory Doc - McGorry Turns Back the Clock
Psychiatrist's Assessment of Patrick McGorry
Patrick McGorry's "Back to the Future" 2008 Study
Australian Doctor Magazine Sees Patrick McGorry Defend His Position
Australian Member of Parliament, Martin Whitely, also speaks out against McGorry's Headspace initiative HERE.
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
Do You Have A Mental Disorder? The Spoof Test
**The following is a parody post. There is no scientific proof behind the answers/conclusion offered.
SEROXAT SUFFERERS EARLY INTERVENTION QUESTIONNAIRE [SSEIQ]
FOR CHILDREN AGED BETWEEN 3 - 17
1. DO YOU SLEEP WHEN YOU FEEL TIRED
YES - NO - SOMETIMES
2. DO YOU EAT IF YOU ARE HUNGRY
YES - NO - SOMETIMES
3. DO YOU HAVE DREAMS WHEN YOU SLEEP
YES - NO - SOMETIMES
4. DO YOU LAUGH IF SOMETHING AMUSES YOU
YES - NO - SOMETIMES
5. DO YOU FIND SOME SUBJECTS AT SCHOOL DIFFICULT
YES - NO - SOMETIMES
6. HAVE YOU EVER WATCHED A HORROR MOVIE
YES - NO - SOMETIMES
7. HAVE YOU EVER DONE SOMETHING THAT YOU KNEW WAS WRONG
YES - NO - SOMETIMES
8. DO YOU DRINK FLUIDS WHEN YOU ARE THIRSTY
YES - NO - SOMETIMES
9. DO SPROUTS MAKE YOU FART
YES - NO - SOMETIMES
10. WATCH THIS VIDEO
DID YOU SEE THE GHOST?
YES - NO
11. CAN YOU COMPLETE THE MAZE WITHOUT TOUCHING THE WALLS?
{Guide the blue dot by dragging the mouse - try not to touch the sides]
**Tip - Go slowly, this is not time-tested. Concentrate and move closer to your screen
You have 10 attempts
YES - NO
If you answered mainly 'YES' - You have a mental disorder. Talk to your doctor about how this can be treated.
If you answered mainly 'NO' - Take the test again until your answers are mainly 'YES' or 'SOMETIMES'
If you answered mainly 'SOMETIMES' - You will be diagnosed with a mental disorder between the years 2012 and 2020. Talk to your doctor about how this can be treated.
The SSEIQ was designed by Dr Emmett Brown, Hill Valley, USA.
Dr Emmett Brown |
Declaration of interests:
Dr Emmett Brown has received funding, educational and promotional monies from the following:
The DeLorean Motor Company
Universal Pictures
Nostradamus
Big Balls Inc [Makers of quality crafted crystal balls]
Dr Louis Cypher [Travelling snake-oil salesman]
Looney Tunes Motion Pictures
The Sugar Plum Fairy
Pinocchio
Walter Mitty
*Disclaimer
The following post was created by Bob Fiddaman. It is meant as a parody and is in no way real or scientific.
Fid
RELATED POSTS:
Patrick McGorry: "Hey... Paddy... Leave Those Kids Alone"
Patrick McGorry - Torn Asunder Down Under
Early Intervention, McGorry, Politics & TV Shows
Psychiatrist Patrick McGorry Slams His Critics [Diddums]
Is Australia's "Number One Man" Misleading The Public?
Pre-Mental Disorder Screening & Drugging - THE PHARMACEUTICAL DELOREAN
Patrick McGorry's Delorean Pulls Over For New Passenger
Patrick McGorry & Co Under Fire
Hickierie Dickory Doc - McGorry Turns Back the Clock
Psychiatrist's Assessment of Patrick McGorry
Patrick McGorry's "Back to the Future" 2008 Study
Australian Doctor Magazine Sees Patrick McGorry Defend His position
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