Zantac Lawsuit


Researching drug company and regulatory malfeasance for over 16 years
Humanist, humorist
Showing posts with label Withdrawal Support. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Withdrawal Support. Show all posts

Thursday, October 29, 2020

Discussion: Medicating Normal - Flowers of Scotland



W
henever I see the words 'Perth' and 'Angus' mentioned in the same sentence I'm reminded of my favourite rock band. Perth (Australia) being the final resting place of former AC/DC vocalist, Bon Scott, and Angus being the guitar rock God that he is. AC/DC's roots are, in the main, from Scotland. Bon, Angus, and his brother, Malcolm, being born there.

Anyway, I digress.

PLUS Perth, Angus Voices and the Dundee Healthy Minds Network have recently been involved in a discussion after each watching the critically acclaimed documentary/film, Medicating Normal (See review here)

The discussion panel consisted of representatives from the above mentioned, namely; Beverley Thomson, writer, speaker and researcher; Dr. Dan Fisher, psychiatrist and person with lived experience of recovery from schizophrenia; Dr. Dainius Pūras, Professor of Child Psychiatry and Public Mental Health at Vilnius University; Susan Scott, development manager at Plus Perth, Mick Rattray, musician, and Angela Peacock, who appears in Medicating Normal. The discussion was moderated by Nicole Lamberson.

It's not easy listening to how lives have been shattered but one does come accustomed to it. Being a blogger and researcher for over 16 years, I've heard/read many first hand accounts, many similar to my own experiences on, and withdrawing from, GSK's 'miracle pill', Seroxat (Paxil)

Groups such as those featured in the video (below) have so many commonalities. They were brought together because they encountered similar experiences. They, after years of being told they had something wrong with them, all reached a point of Eureka after researching the prescribed drugs they were given, some by choice, some by accident. They are part of a club that has grown considerably over the years as more and more laypeople question the efficacy and safety of psychiatric drugs (brain pellets).

It's a tragedy, that despite there being thousands upon thousands of similar stories, people who have never experienced brain pellet harm, be it personally or witnessing a loved one going through withdrawal hell, seem apathetic to the problem. Medicating Normal isn't a movie being directed toward those who sing from the same hymn book, it's directed at those who choose, for whatever reason, to shrug their shoulders and continue about their daily routines of posting photos of their dinner on Facebook and Twitter.

So, how can we tap into the psyche of the apathy crowd? - Making movies about personal experiences is one way, writing blogs is another, forming groups that put these horrendous accounts into the public domain and also discussions. Talk, talk, talk! Write, write, write! Eventually the apathy crowd, which includes prescribers, coroners and pharmacists, will have to sit up and pay attention.

There has been quite a campaign in recent years to stifle the voices of those harmed by brain pellets. Those who prescribe after assessing patients refuse to see the damage they are doing - prescribed harm is often dismissed as anecdotal or conspiracy - the latest trend, on Twitter at least, is that those who speak out about their experiences on brain pellets are part of an antipsychiatry cult.

It's quite laughable but a normal human reaction, I guess. I mean, who wants to go to bed at night knowing they may have caused suffering to another human being? A defence mechanism kicks in and those that do wrong convince themselves that they are doing right. With no logical explanation, they create a façade in the hope that others in their profession will promote. It buries the problem and clears the conscience of the problematic pill-pushers.

The discussion below hits home in so many ways for me. Patient has depression - Patient is given brain pellet - Patient still depressed - Patient given another brain pellet brand. Patient develops side effects - Patient told it's another disorder - Patient given another brand of brain pellet - and so the cycle continues.

Polydrugging is papering over the mistakes made by the prescriber, nothing more, nothing less.

The quote, "The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results", is often attributed to Einstein.

When we hear or read about experiences of those harmed by drugs on top of drugs, it's quite easy to see who the insane ones are. It certainly isn't the flowers of Scotland featured in this video.

I salute you all.

Here's the discussion: 


Bob Fiddaman




Thursday, March 12, 2020

Street Drug Charities Open Doors to Antidepressant Withdrawal Victims





BBC News: 12 March 2020

The mental health charity Mind says it is signposting people to street drug charities to help them withdraw from antidepressants because of the lack of alternatives available. Those affected can experience debilitating symptoms.

Notes of a meeting held at MHRA on 2 September 2008
Bob Fiddaman said he would like to discuss problems of withdrawing from Seroxat. He said that though his concerns centred around Seroxat, he recognised that other SSRIs posed similar problems which ought also to be addressed.

Patient perspectives on informed drug prescribing 24 November 2004
 ~ Charles Medawar
The first thing that didn’t happen was any meeting to discuss the issues with the UK regulators. For six years, they refused to meet – and this explains why ‘The Antidepressant Web’(ADWEB) displays facsimile copies of the several hundred letters we exchanged. 

Click on all three links. Pay attention to the years.

Nothing more to say.


Sincerely,


Bob Fiddaman ~ The "Pill-Shaming Activist"

Friday, May 17, 2013

Guest Post: Life ‘at’ and Escape ‘from’ Paroxetine Island

The hell of Aropax withdrawal



Following on from Part I [Like a Lamb to the Slaughter] of Mark's trilogy of guest posts.

This post sees Mark describe the frustrations and hardships of withdrawing from GlaxoSmithKline's Aropax, known in the UK as Seroxat and in the US and Canada as Paxil.



Life ‘at’ and Escape ‘from’ Paroxetine Island [PI]




Life at Paroxetine Island(PI) can only really  be described in hindsight and with insight once one has spent time back on the mainland and drug-free. Here are some observations:


  • On arrival at PI one has all motivation, passion, spontaneity and confidence taken away and one is given yawning, fatigue and indecisiveness 24/7 in exchange.
  • On my 1st night at PI I experienced the most real, horrific and terrifying dream of my life. It involved my death. At the time I was clueless as to what caused this.
  • Like creeping mold is to the internal walls of a house in winter so too was paroxetine to my brain. It was a slow, insidious takeover of not just my brain but also my soul. Dulling my emotions and senses, and even when the wallpaper started falling off I was clueless as to the cause.
  • My quality of life grew worse and worse, as I became more and more removed from reality.
  • Life was sucked out of me and I was no longer living I was simply existing.
  • I became a loner and yet I wasn't lonely.
  • Much time and effort was spent fighting back evil intrusive thoughts, thoughts that did not belong to me, thoughts that were extraordinarily immoral, offensive and almost audible in my mind beckoning me towards self-destructive behaviour. Thoughts that were demonic in nature.
  • Personality and behavioural changes occur on PI perhaps best described as a severing of the conscience.
  • Loss of feelings and caring occurred, a total disconnect from reality. The mantra of PI was:
  •  ‘So what, who cares’! And I was soon singing it.
  • An early attempt to break free and swim to the mainland resulted in such psychological, emotional horror and panic I rushed back to my doctor and asked to go back to PI. I was sent back no questions asked. 
  • Despite promising to never swim away again several more failed attempts to escape left me in a state of learned helplessness, a massive major paradigm shift now occurred in my being. I now believed that I needed to be on Paroxetine Island!
  • One day I learned of a person who had escaped from PI and swum back to the mainland. I became very envious, jealous even!
  • I was now determined that I too would get back to the mainland. Little did I know that I was about to start a 3-year traumatizing nightmare, a journey through ‘Hell,’ that was going to require every ounce of strength to survive, fighting for my life, daily. 



My Escape from Paroxetine Island (PI)

I would like to start by just saying that my escape from PI was the most difficult thing I've ever done in my life. No non-poisoned-by-an-SSRI-brain can conceive, imagine, or understand the traumatising nature of this ordeal.


  • I presented to my doctor in January 10, after 10 years use, wanting to get off paroxetine. His reply “okay come off slowly”, and sent me on my way. (Absolutely criminal!)
  • I had no idea what slowly was. But decided to start to alternate doses 20 mg one day and 10 mg the next.
  • After 6 months I was on 10 mg and in a distraught state.
  • The distress drove me to seek counselling, yet it offered no relief. Except lighten my wallet.
  • At 9 months and on 5 mg feeling death would be a welcome relief I reluctantly presented to my Doctor (Dr W), only to be told I had an underlying depression and I needed to up dose. At this point I realised Dr W was clueless. I replied, ‘that is not right’. He referred me to a psychiatrist Dr S.B.
  • Confused, distraught, frustrated, and in a very dark place, somehow knowing deep down something was not right here but what could it be, I confided in the neighbouring pharmacist. He leaned over and quietly whispered, “Mark I’m not supposed to tell you this but it’s not you it’s the drug”.
  • It was like a light switch was flicked, the light bulb went on, I came to my senses. Of course it’s not me, it’s the drug! It was the damn drug! How could I have been so stupid! Words cannot describe the humiliation that started to flood my being followed by anger and disbelief.
  • I immediately started digging, and stumbled upon an SSRI addict’s and survivors support group. I realised I had found a place ‘sought by millions but found by few’. I owe my life to them.
  • On asking the psychiatrist Dr S.B. if he was aware of any problems with people getting off Paroxetine  he replied, “Well if there were problems with people getting off paroxetine people would be suing the drug companies” [I was later to realize this was a Dr who clearly had his initials around the wrong way].
  • He also okay’d a Healtheries supplement I wanted to take to try to get some relief. I was sent on my way. I now realised I was on my own.
  • I broke free of PI on 28 September 2010.
  • The 9 month taper down and the next 2 years drug free was hell. The nightmare I had to suffer (believe me to call it a nightmare is an understatement) coming off this drug had nothing to do with me and everything to do with this drug!
  • I wouldn't want my worst enemy to go through this. I was unable to function experiencing daily uncontrollable restless anxiety, endless crying and drug induced suicidal ideations starting from 6 a.m. lasting throughout the day and receding somewhat in the evening. I felt as if I was being psychologically and emotionally raped daily. This withdrawal horror went on for almost 3 years, with the drug induced withdrawal hell pushing me for months to cut my wrists, then for months it tried to get me to hang myself, then it wanted me to shoot myself, and if that wasn't enough drive my car into oncoming traffic. I still remember the day I fought off an overwhelming desire to jump off a bridge.
  • These drugs are not given to patients under 18 because they cause suicide …well if my experience is anything to go by they should extend the relabeling ban to those under 50!
  • In order to get through this hell alive I dragged several family members so far into emotional overdraft I will never be able to repay them. You can forget being able to hold down a job during this ordeal it’s a battle to just survive each day.
  • I so much wanted to reinstate to take the horror away, yet I was driven by a sense of unbelievable anger and humiliation to not do so. Often chanting back ‘it’s not me it’s the drug’ when waves of hell flooded me.
  • All I wanted was an opinion on my sore arm, I never consented to this.
  • At about 18 months drug free I felt the shark infested waters start to recede, a few months later I washed ashore onto the mainland, exhausted, traumatized and in total disbelief that I was still alive.
  • I felt like Rip Van Winkle coming to after being placed in a living coma becoming acutely aware of the damage done to me, waking up in shock and disbelief.
  • Let there be no mistake about it, if I was an enemy combatant and the NZ army did this to me, someone would have been dragged to the Hague and jailed for this! 
  • Hippocratic Oath…..Yeah Right!
  • I was determined to get an explanation for this insult to my humanity an answer for something no human should have to endure.



Mark Carter NZ

Coming soon Part III





Bob Fiddaman







JOIN THE FIDDAMAN BLOG ON FACEBOOK


Wednesday, February 01, 2012

2012 - The Year of Dr David Healy



Internationally respected psychiatrist, psychopharmacologist, scientist, and author Dr David Healy has been busy of late. The launch of two new websites [one in blog form] and a book has got people talking in the blogsphere and on Twitter.

For those who don't know, Healy became a household name in the advocacy circles when he first spoke out about antidepressant use, particularly those of the SSRi family, of which Seroxat is one. He has been used as an expert witness in many cases against the pharmaceutical industry and, to my knowledge, is the only UK based health professional who has got to grips with the whole SSRi withdrawal issue, even offering tapering regimes for those who are struggling with their, apparent, non-addictive medication.

He's met with the MHRA, the UK regulatory agency who claim there are other SSRi withdrawal specialists based in the UK [but they cannot name who they are or where they are located] and provided them with a withdrawal protocol for SSRi's. Sadly, and predictably the withdrawal protocol fell on deaf ears and still remains on the table at the MHRA collecting dust and cobwebs.

It's safe to assume that the MHRA, who remember are fully funded by the pharmaceutical industry, are not one of Healy's biggest fans, to actually agree to meet with him back in 2010 must have stuck in the throats of those present. You see, the MHRA do not like being told how to steer their ship, they don't like being told that they are wrong. It's clearly evident, to me at least, that they are failing miserably in safeguarding human health. PIP implants and hip replacements are just two of the medical devices that have recently hit the news and highlighted the MHRA's failings. Prescription drugs such as Avandia, Vioxx, the class of SSRi antidepressants and benzos have also shown how the MHRA are failing to regulate properly.

Anyway, this post is about Healy's new ventures, namely his two new websites, Data Based Medicine Limited, which operates through its website RxISK.org and his personal website davidhealy.org.

Data Based Medicine Limited, of which Healy is the founder and Chief Executive Officer, aims to make medicines safer through online direct patient reporting of drug effects. Some may say it was created in direct opposition to the MHRA's current patient reporting system, the Yellow Card Scheme [YCS], a scheme that, over the years, has proven to be about as useful as a sailboat without a sail. The MHRA, of course, will argue that they have the best worldwide reporting system in place, in essence it's probably the best of a bad bunch and not something I'd shout from the rooftops if I were in charge of the MHRA.

Where Data Based Medicine Limited differ from the MHRA is that they intend to take anecdotal evidence and to present it as real based evidence. The YCS is, after all, an official anecdotal reporting service lacking in any follow-up or action.

The blurb for RxISK.org reads:

RxISK.org is your site to help make medicines safer for all of us. No-one knows drug side effects like the person who is taking a pill. Yet this voice is not heard. RxISK will provide a megaphone to you and your doctor to change the way we see drug safety.


Drug safety is an issue for us all. Prescription drugs are now a leading cause of death.


However, there is no evidence base for managing this new plague, nor are there any guidelines to help your doctor save you.


This means it takes time for the harmful effects of Vioxx, Avandia, and Prozac to be recognized.


You may have been told there is no evidence linking the treatment you are on to problems you are now having.


One reason there may be no evidence is because you and your doctor have been silenced. We need you to help us get across the message “We are not Anecdotes”. With your help, we're here to make medications safer for all of us.


Healy's other website, davidhealy.org, features articles, books, discussions and a regularly updated blog from Healy himself. His latest post is an eye-opener and relates to the way pharmaceutical companies admit and deny, almost in the same breath. That particular post can be read HERE.

If that weren't enough, Healy also has a new book [available March 2012] subtly entitled Pharmageddon "a searing indictment and forceful argument against the pharmaceuticalization of medicine..."


Once I land a copy of the book I'll review it and post on here.

All in all, the start of 2012 has been productive for David Healy. He's no martyr, he's just someone who has seen a problem and has set out to do something about it...without being answerable to those that created the problem in the first place.






Sunday, June 19, 2011

**EXCLUSIVE: Glaxo Turn Away Consumer Suffering Seroxat Withdrawal

Talk to your doctor, it's not a Glaxo problem.

I think that I am familiar with the fact that you are going to ignore this particular problem until it swims up and BITES YOU ON THE ASS!
Quote from the movie JAWS


I was recently contacted by a reader, who was desperate for any sort of help, guidance or advice that I could offer her to help her through her horrific Seroxat withdrawal. She was in a terrible state and had tried every possible avenue to seek intelligent advice on how to withdraw from Seroxat safely.

She wishes to remain anonymous, reasons for which shall become clear as you read the following. Her name has, for the purpose of this article, been changed to "Zoe".

Zoe was prescribed Seroxat 11 years ago after she had suffered an upheaval in her life and Seroxat was deemed to be the drug that could help. She was extremely concerned at the time about taking anything that would be addictive and was told Seroxat was NOT addictive and safe enough for children, she would be able to stop in a few months when she was feeling better.



ZOE HAS SPENT THE LAST 11 YEARS TRYING TO COME OFF SEROXAT.

Now in her 30’s and desperate to start a family she has forced herself to go through the horrors of Seroxat withdrawal in a desperate attempt to take her life back and enable her to have a safe pregnancy, only too aware of the horror stories of so many other poor women whose babies have been born with serious and life threatening heart conditions.

When she drops her dose the physical and mental side effects she experiences are debilitating and she is literally left in shock . She found her doctor and psychiatrist could offer no satisfactory answers or help, so in her desperation she reached for the phone and called GlaxoSmithKline [GSK]. ‘They must be able to help me, they are the makers of the drug’, she thought.

Because Zoe had made various accusations regarding Seroxat being addictive she was later contacted by one of GSK's lawyers. He, at first, seemed concerned and mentioned that they [GSK] could possibly set up an appointment with their own neurologist but Zoe should give permission for them to look through her doctor's notes. The lawyer said that GSK would confirm this in writing for her.

A week went by which saw Zoe go through another hellish withdrawal episode, in a phone conversation I had with Zoe she was sobbing and had thoughts of just 'ending it all'. We spoke for a while and I explained to her that what she was feeling was probably down to the side-effects of Seroxat withdrawal. I told her of my time tapering and of other countless stories regarding patients trying desperately to taper of GSK's wonder drug.

Zoe also contacted the MHRA to ask for advice, she was told to "talk to her doctor". She also asked them for a meeting with Kent Woods, the MHRA CEO, and spoke to a member of the MHRA who said he was very concerned and was going to get back to her at the early part of the next week regarding the meeting… She has not heard back from them since! They have made no contact when they promised they would…a really caring "independent body" aren’t they?

I told Zoe two things regarding the MHRA:

1.She won't get her meeting with Kent Woods.
2.The MHRA are a complete waste of space.

A letter from GSK soon arrived, the crux of which was that they [GSK] were unable to discuss her personal experience regarding her withdrawal, they quoted the Code of Practice of the Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry [ABPI] whilst adding, "..this does not allow us to provide advice on personal medical matters to individual members of the public so that we do not intervene in the doctor/patient relationship by offering advice which properly should be in the domain of your doctor."

I must admit, I had to laugh.

On page 132 of my book, 'The evidence, however, is clear...the Seroxat scandal', I write about how I was sent a response from GSK when I had asked them if Seroxat was a teratogen. They wrote back quoting the Code of Practice of the Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry [ABPI] whilst adding, "..this does not allow us to provide advice on personal medical matters to individual members of the public so that we do not intervene in the doctor/patient relationship by offering advice which properly should be in the domain of your doctor."

Can you see a pattern forming here of utter contempt?

Here we have a patient who has tried everything to get off Seroxat. To be sent a letter from the manufacturers of the drug, that basically is shirking its responsibility, is nothing short of callous.

Zoe telephoned the lawyer whom she had previously spoken with, his secretary answered but for some reason would not give her name, citing that she was not allowed to. The lawyer was in a meeting so could not take Zoe's call.

Zoe phoned back an hour or so later. The woman, who had previously told Zoe that she was not allowed to divulge her name, answered the phone by announcing her name!

Quite a game GSK play isn't it?

She eventually spoke with the same lawyer. He told her Seroxat was not addictive and that GSK were not brushing her aside, he told her to talk to her doctor and if he [her doctor] had questions he was to write to GSK to get the answers. Quite an astonishing request considering the drain on the National Health Service.

Don't you just love how GSK operate?

Here we have a woman desperate for help. Her doctor and psychiatrist do not know how to tell Zoe to taper off Seroxat without having to go through the side effects that follow each dosage drop, why would they? No such protocol exists because Glaxo have convinced doctors and psychiatrists that Seroxat isn't addictive. Furthermore, Zoe wishes to start a family, Glaxo won't help her get off their drug, instead they place her on a merry-go-round that isn't very merry at all. She is right to seek help coming off, it would be very unwise to fall pregnant whilst on Seroxat, Glaxo know that, so do the MHRA, yet Seroxat still carries no warning regarding the fact that it is a known teratogen. She contacts GSK and is advised by a lawyer!, I use the word 'advised' loosely. Was this lawyer a doctor, has he ever had training in the medical field or was he told what to say by Glaxo officials?



Zoe and I have discussed a tapering regime, I have also offered her some advice on how to combat the electric zaps that rip through her body on each dosage drop, information on the history of GSK and Seroxat was also given to her. We remain in touch and I strive to help her pick up the pieces, something Glaxo should be doing but they clearly don't seem to give a hoot about one of their consumers.

Interestingly, during one of her conversations with the GSK lawyer, Zoe mentioned that there was a case [litigation] against GSK regarding Seroxat withdrawal. The lawyer told her that there will be an announcement about the litigation in a few months, it’ll be all over the papers and in the news apparently !

Really? I'm all ears Mr Lawyer man!

Zoe and I continue to work on getting her off Seroxat.

This woman is a very strong lady, she’s a tough cookie and will definitely beat this drug. I’d say when this one’s fully recovered from the evils of Seroxat - GSK may find they have a new campaigner in town and by hook or crook I'll be standing right by her side.

GlaxoSmithKline proudly boast on their website that they are a "leading healthcare company that helps people to do more, feel better and live longer."


Back Stories regarding UK Seroxat litigation:

GlaxoSmithKline/MHRA - When Ignorance Turns To Bliss - Part I of IV

GlaxoSmithKline/MHRA - When Ignorance Turns To Bliss - Part II of IV - Witness For The Defence

GlaxoSmithKline/MHRA - When Ignorance Turns To Bliss - Part III of IV - Expert Statistician

GlaxoSmithKline/MHRA - When Ignorance Turns To Bliss - Part IV - The Colour of Money


Court documents from Seroxat birth litigation trial.

KILKER v GLAXOSMITHKLINE COURT DOCUMENTS

Notes of Meeting I had with MHRA to discuss withdrawal from SSRi's

Note of the meeting with Bob Fiddaman [PDF]







Saturday, June 18, 2011

Another Fidcast Coming Soon



I have another interview coming soon via the Fidcast.

Fidcast is basically a podcast where I interview patients, parents etc regarding their experience with SSRi antidepressant medication.

Coming soon is an interview with a patient who is struggling at the hands of Seroxat.

Previous Fidcast can be heard HERE

Fid


ORDER THE PAPERBACK
'THE EVIDENCE, HOWEVER, IS CLEAR...THE SEROXAT SCANDAL' By Bob Fiddaman
US/CANADA COPIES HERE - UK COPIES FROM CHIPMUNKA PUBLISHING

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Dear GlaxoSmithKline, Have I Got News For You

Image: ngpharma.eu.com


I have an exclusive coming to this blog soon regarding GlaxoSmithKline's patient aftercare, or lack of it.

Regular readers or those that have had dealings with Britain's largest pharmaceutical company won't be surprised at Glaxo's lack of care and its shirking of responsibility to its consumers - its shareholders might though.

It appears to me that they [GSK] do not only try to intimidate experts who speak out against their products or bloggers who upload videos to youtube, they also try to intimidate someone who asks them for help regarding withdrawing from one of their drugs - I mean, what other company do you know would get a lawyer to phone up someone who had requested help in tapering off Seroxat?



Coming very soon to this blog.

Glaxo and/or the lawyer in question may leave a comment once the story is up and running.

Fid


ORDER THE PAPERBACK
'THE EVIDENCE, HOWEVER, IS CLEAR...THE SEROXAT SCANDAL' By Bob Fiddaman
US & CANADA HERE OR UK FROM CHIPMUNKA PUBLISHING  

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Researchers Seek Prolonged Antidepressant Withdrawal Cases



An Italian researcher is collecting case reports of prolonged antidepressant withdrawal syndrome for important research papers now in progress. Something that should have been done by the pharmaceutical companies and medicine regulators years ago!

Please send your case report immediately -- instructions and an e-mail address are given below. Reports may be in English, French, Spanish, or Italian.

The research effort is led by Dr. Carlotta Belaise, a colleague of Dr. Giovanni A. Fava and frequent co-author with him of scientific papers challenging the long-term use of antidepressants.

Dr. Belaise is a research fellow in the Affective Disorders Program of the department of psychology at the University of Bologna in Italy. Her research team is collecting data on antidepressant withdrawal syndrome, "which we strongly believe is a very important, common and delicate clinical problem."

"A couple of manuscripts on this important issue are in progress."

Please send your case report immediately in this format:

Your pseudonym (to use if your report is published)
The date of this report
Your current age
Gender (if female, menopausal?)
Psychiatric drug history
When and how did you taper off each medication?
Your symptoms in the earlier phase of withdrawal
Your current symptoms
Which symptoms have gotten better? Which have gotten worse? What treatments have been helpful?
Is there anything else you would like to say about withdrawal and withdrawal syndrome?


Your identity will remain confidential. Researchers may contact you through your e-mail address for clarification, if necessary, and possibly for longitudinal follow-up periodically to track your recovery. Your e-mail address will not be used for any other purpose.

Send your e-mail HERE

HAT-TIP: SURVIVING ANTIDEPRESSANTS FORUM

Fid

Read the new book, The Evidence, However, Is Clear...The Seroxat Scandal

US/CANADA COPIES HERE 
UK/IRELAND FROM CHIPMUNKA PUBLISHING 

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Surviving Antidepressants


A new help forum has been created with regard to bringing people together who are struggling with their antidepressant medication.

It looks simple enough to sign up to and a quick browse shows there's plenty of useful links.

Go check it out at http://survivingantidepressants.org/

Fid

Read the new book, The Evidence, However, Is Clear...The Seroxat Scandal

US/CANADA COPIES HERE
UK/IRELAND FROM CHIPMUNKA PUBLISHING



Friday, March 18, 2011

SHOUT OUT TO' AGENT OF CHANGE', JANIS HOUGH



I met Janis Hough online via Twitter, she'd made a comment about Seroxat. Formalities were exchanged, she met with the obligatory interruption from my Irish simpleton stalker, he targets those I make friends with too, when he's not slagging off Scientology or using dead children to goad me in to a response.

Anyway, enough about Glaxo's number one whore.

Janis has a cracking post up on her blog regarding Seroxat. The post, entitled, "Living without Seroxat and other Antidepressants", highlights Janis' work with a patient who has an addiction to Seroxat. She speaks of a client who has reduced from 30mg of Seroxat down to 1mg and is having panic attacks and anxiety.

Janis writes:

As a therapist and coach I see many clients who want to become free of the very drug that was supposed to help them feel better yet paradoxically they feel worse. So fuelled by seeing the latest client I wanted to add my experience in order to help others feel better.

So first off they are not a magic pill, there is no magic pill. They don’t fix the problem.
Latest research says that taking seroxat can lead you to feel suicidal, so which would be better to feel ‘depressed’ or ‘suicidal’, well neither, however if I was prescribed something to help I really would be depressed that it made me feel worse.

I sincerely hope she can help her client, whom I also know.

The full post can be viewed here

Fid

Friday, January 22, 2010

Is TV's Dr Hilary Jones a Sock Puppet for Pharma?


Image: independent.co.uk


My attention was diverted to TV's Dr. Hilary Jones again today, he of GMTV fame.

Paxil Progress, a forum where users of Paxil [known in the UK as Seroxat] discuss and offer advice on withdrawal, a forum that Dr Hilary Jones should check out if his latest attempt at earning pharma yet more money is anything to go by.

I wrote about Dr Jones [nothing to do with Indiana Jones] last week. He had offered advice to a 29 year old woman regarding Seroxat, advice that quite honestly defied belief. The advice was given in a newspaper supplement, a glossy magazine kind of effort. Many people, that I know of at least, left comments under Dr Jones advice. To date, no comments have been printed which either means the website isn't maintained or Dr Jones just isn't up for a debate regarding Seroxat.

Dr Jones' other paid job, apart from being a doctor and writing advice in glossy Sunday supplements, would appear to be to offer advice on whether you are depressed or not and whether a trip to your doctor is the order of the day.

He's a doctor, right?

I'm trying to work out what training he has had regarding spotting obvious signs of depression, be it moderate or severe.

GMTV, the morning magazine show broadcast on ITV, seem to think he is just the right man for the job. Forget leading psychiatrists, let's get ourselves housewives favourite Dr Hilary Jones.

Let's take a look a Dr Hilary's Depression Test hosted on the GMTV website, a test where, it would appear, I'm in need of a visit to my doctor because I have moderate depression.

Dr Jones writes:

"Are you worried that you may be suffering from depression? Take my self-screening assessment to help you identify the symptoms of depression. Only answer "yes" to a question if the symptoms described have been happening for two weeks or more.

Okay. Let's try it. The brilliance of this 'quiz' is that you can only answer 'yes' or 'no' - There is no option for 'sometimes'.

Question 1
Are you feeling tearful for no obvious reason?
I answered NO

Question 2
Have you got little or no interest in doing everyday things?
I answered YES. I would have like to have added, who DOES like doing everyday things but that wasn't an option.

Question 3
Are you feeling down, hopeless or depressed?
I answered NO, although January is always a difficult time for me since it is the month my mother crossed over to the other side.

Question 4
Do you have trouble falling asleep or do you wake up in the early hours of the morning?
I answered YES. Again, I would have like to have added, long term use of Seroxat has kinda messed my sleep pattern up, it wasn't an option in Dr Jones' yes and no test.

Question 5
Do you feel tired and low on energy?
I answered YES. Who wouldn't waking up at 4.30am and not being able to get back to sleep? This is a daily occurrence that I believe has been caused by long term use of Seroxat.

Question 6
Do you have a poor appetite or do you overeat?
Clever question eh? I would say my appetite is pretty poor but would add that it's only that way because I cannot afford to eat properly. I should be craving food more but have become conditioned because of a piss poor budget. So, I answered YES.

Question 8
Do you have difficulty concentrating on things like TV or reading?
I answered NO

Question 9
Do you feel restless, nervous or anxious all the time?
I answered NO

Question 10
Do you want to hurt yourself, or think that you'd be better off dead?
I answered NO

The outcome?

You may be suffering from moderate depression. This self-assessment test is just an indicator, so please arrange to see your doctor to follow up any symptoms you may have.


Forgive my use of Anglo-Saxon here Dr but why don't you fuck off with your sugar coated image and depression tests that do nothing but put money in the pockets of pharmaceutical companies. You gave the wrong advice to a 29 year old woman last week and this week you are sending people out to their doctor's because YOU feel there is something wrong with them?

What was the advice you gave that woman again who wrote you because she was concerned about tapering off Seroxat, a drug that is more teratogenic than cocaine[1]

Let's see shall we?

"Stop taking a tablet every third day for a fortnight, then every other day for a fortnight. Then you should be ready to stop altogether."

Brilliant, if your name is Fred or Wilma Flinstone!

Now, Dr Hilary Jones, he of GMTV and Sunday supplement advisory column fame, is telling people who are no more depressed than... well, erm... ME, that they should go to see their doctor because they may have moderate depression.

Dr Hilary Jones is Chair of the National Obesity Forum [NOF], whose website is sponsored by Abbott Laboratories, Roche and Sanofi-Aventis Ltd.

The NOF Conference in 2009, where Dr Jones was present, was sponsored by Abbott Laboratories LTD and GSK plc.

Hardly surprising then that Dr Hilary Jones' "Depression Test" should direct people to Pharma's agents, your doctors!



[1] Paxil [Seroxat] "more powerful a teratogen than cocaine"

Doctor Sloot is a European doctor who works for Shearing Plough.

The following was taken from the court transcript in the current Kilker v GlaxoSmithKline trial, currently on-going in Philadelphia, US. [2]

In May of this year, 2009, a study was published by Doctor Sloot. The study said this.

What Doctor Sloot did is, he took Paxil and all the other reuptake inhibitors and he exposed rat fetuses to these 12 different drugs, including Paxil. And what Shearing Plough was trying to figure out, what they were trying to do was figure out whether one of the drugs that they were going to put on the market to compete with GSK's drug was capable of causing birth defects. And so they took the drug they were going to take to market, and before they took it to market, they did this test. And they compared it to all the other SSRIs. Because, as you will learn, GSK never did this test.

What Doctor Sloot discovered in May of this year is that out of all the teratogen, out of all the SSRIs, the 12, only one was a clear teratogen, Paxil. He discovered that Paxil in May of this year was actually more powerful a teratogen than cocaine.

It would be safer, according to Doctor Sloot's study, to take cocaine than it would be to take Paxil while you were pregnant.


Dr Hilary's blurb on the GMTV website reads:

Dr Hilary Jones is GMTV's health and medical advisor and has been with the breakfast TV station since 1993.

Dr Hilary qualified from The Royal Free Hospital School of Medicine, London, in 1976 and held a number of interesting posts for the next few years, including working between 1978 and 1979 as the only medical officer on Tristan de Cunha in the South Atlantic.

He became a full-time Principal in General Practice in 1982 and a GP Trainer in 1987. He still practises part-time as a NHS GP.

Hilary first appeared on TV-am in May 1989 on the 'Doc Spot' as the station's regular doctor and medical advisor. He has also co-presented 'The Health Show' with Terry Wogan, and presented three series of 'Loud & Clear', a weekly social action programme for Meridian. He has a regular guest slot on Steve Wright's Radio 2 show discussing medical matters.

Hilary writes a topical weekly column for the News of the World and deals with readers' medical problems and health issues in the newspaper's Sunday Magazine. He also answers readers' health problems in Rosemary Conley's Diet and Fitness magazine each month and contributes to, and edits, Family Healthcare with Dr Hilary Jones magazine. In addition he has had a number of books published and has also presented a series of relaxation tapes and health videos. In August 2009 Hilary released the semi-autobiographical book, 'What's Up Doc?' – giving readers an insight into his life as a TV doctor.


Fid

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MHRA PULL REDUCTIL


Image: dietpillsthatwork.co.uk


The MHRA has told doctors to stop prescribing leading obesity drug, REDUCTIL [SIBUTRAMINE] amid fears it raises risk of heart attacks and strokes.

The BBC reports that the MHRA acted after a review by the European Medicines Agency (EMA) recommended suspending its licence in Europe.

It's a head scratching moment, for me at least.

The total number of reported fatal adverse drug reactions for Reductil currently stands at 17. There have been a total of 1,104 adverse drug reactions to Reductil. [Fig 1]


Fig 1

CLICK ON IMAGE TO ENLARGE


Meantime, there has been a total number of 169 fatal adverse drug reactions to Seroxat, that's a staggering 152 more than Reductil. Furthermore, there has been a total of 10,432 adverse drugs reactions reported to the MHRA regarding Seroxat, some 9,328 more than Reductil. [Fig 2]


Fig 2

CLICK ON IMAGE TO ENLARGE

Another example would be Eli Lily's, Prozac. The MHRA have received a total number of 226 fatal ADR reports and a mind blowing 9,106 number of non-fatal ADR reports. [Fig 3]


Fig 3

CLICK ON IMAGE TO ENLARGE


Even the SNRi, Efexor, has far more fatal ADR reports [149] than Reductil. [Fig 4]


Fig 4

CLICK ON IMAGE TO ENLARGE


Just how many more fatal reports for antidepressants do the MHRA need to convince them that these specific types of drugs have more risks than benefits?


Now, who was it that once said, "The evidence, however, is clear"?


Fid

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Thursday, January 21, 2010

Birmingham: The Chocolate Ghost Town






This town, is coming like a ghost town
Why must the youth fight against themselves?
Government leaving the youth on the shelf
This place, is coming like a ghost town
No job to be found in this country
Can't go on no more
The people getting angry

This town, is coming like a ghost town
This town, is coming like a ghost town
This town, is coming like a ghost town
This town, is coming like a ghost town

Dammers 1981

Performed by The Specials.

Well, it seems yet another once proud product of Birmingham has fallen by the wayside.

Kraft, the American food, and beverage company announced that it has agreed to buy Cadbury for £11.5bn - they will be getting a loan from... wait for it... UK banks!

Kraft recently sold it's American Pizza business for $3.7bn to help part-fund the Cadbury takeover - so, at the drop of a hat all those working for their pizza business were left jobless.

There are literally hundreds of UK businesses collapsing by the day, UK banks won't borrow them money you see. It would appear the criteria for getting a business loans these days would be 'Non-English can only apply'

Birmingham was once a thriving city, it's car industry vanished overnight with the loss of thousands of jobs at the Rover plant in Longbridge. The closure also had a knock on effect for suppliers to the car plant. An estimated 24,000 lost their jobs, many of whom remain unemployed and in debt to this day.

The HP Sauce factory in Aston, Birmingham, was moved to Holland with the loss of 120 jobs. Another proud product of Birmingham.

And now Cadbury.

As a child growing up I used to walk through 'the cage' at Cadbury. Myself and a few of my friends would whistle up to the workers who would throw down some broken chocolate. They were our Willy Wonka, if you like.


Image: wikipedia.org

The area of Bournville, where Cadbury is situated, is a quaint village, untouched by history. The Cadbury family moved their chocolate factory their in 1879.

Who would have thought that 130 years later a huge American firm, best known for its cheese, would be borrowing money from the British to buy a British company that employs British people that will no doubt end up on the dole queues in Birmingham.

George and Richard Cadbury must be turning in their graves.

Welcome to the United States of Britain!

Fid

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BBC 2 - 'Pill Poppers'


Image: guardian.co.uk



"The only problem being that no one knows what demons might crop up with mass use over the long term. And, just to complicate matters, a drug that might be life-saving for some patients might be fatal for others (as was the case with Seroxat, which induced suicidal thoughts in a worrying proportion of those who took it)."


If you missed last night's BBC Horizon documentary, 'Pill Poppers', you can now watch it online here

Sadly, this website is only available to those in the UK and the video won't be hosted after next week.

Here's a review of the programme from today's Independent online newspaper.

Review from The Independent

Review by Tom Sutcliffe



The Horizon film "Pill Poppers" was a mixed prescription, with some genuinely thought-provoking ideas and some rather elementary ones (how disconnected would you have to be to still need the idea of antibiotic-resistant bacteria explaining to you?). What it did rather effectively, though, was to give you a sense of tectonic shifts in our attitude to medicine. Broadly speaking, pills used to be thought of as highly targeted interventions to end illness. Now, they're increasingly thought of as general applications to preserve or even improve wellness. Statins were one good example. There has been a proposal that everyone over 50 take these anti-cholesterol drugs, a move that would obviously benefit the companies that make them. But the rationale for such mass prescription – to ill and well alike – depends on redefining a "normal" cholesterol level as that you would find in a 25-year-old. And since statins have side effects (and since the very long-term side effects won't be clear for years yet), there might be grounds for being cautious about medical enthusiasm for the drug. Ritalin was another good case in point, a drug that has proved very useful for children suffering from attention deficit hyperactivity disorder but which, when given to people who don't have ADHD, has been shown to improve concentration and competence. The only problem being that no one knows what demons might crop up with mass use over the long term. And, just to complicate matters, a drug that might be life-saving for some patients might be fatal for others (as was the case with Seroxat, which induced suicidal thoughts in a worrying proportion of those who took it). The essential point was this. You might think that by the time you press a pill out of its blister pack and pop it on to your tongue that all the really critical tests have been completed. In fact, you're the real guinea pig.

Fid

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Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Glaxo's Myodil and Seroxat - A case of Déjà vu?





I've been reading about Glaxo's drug, Myodil and the UK group action that was 'settled out of court'. It bears striking similarities to the current UK group action regarding Glaxo's Seroxat.

Sadly, the original location of this post has been removed but it still remains on an Internet forum where it was disseminated.

Here is the post in its entirety. All credit goes to the original author, whom I believe was part of the Myodil Action Group.

You will note how the MHRA, then the MCA, conveniently 'mislaid' the Myodil licensing history. You can draw your own conclusions to that 'mishap'.

Magazine Issue 10 - Spring 2000

Toxic drugs are good for you

This January, Glaxo Wellcome announced a merger with SmithKline Beecham. This will ensure its place as the biggest company in the UK, and one of the world’s leading pharmaceutical companies, controlling approximately 7.4% of the market . Glaxo has exercised considerable power over health provision in the UK since the company was formed in 1929. But its behaviour has not always been in the best interests of those consuming its drugs. Robert Brack of the Myodil Action Group reports below how – for forty years – Glaxo knowingly sold a toxic drug to tens of thousands of people.

Between 1946 and 1988 Glaxo made and sold a spinal x-ray contrast medium called Myodil. Injected into the spinal canal in order to show up problems on x-rays, the drug was sold in approximately fifty countries including the UK. But Myodil, an oil-based yellow dye, was far from harmless itself – once injected into the spine it has been shown to cause a disease called Adhesive Arachnoiditis .

This causes chronic, intractable pain and is characterised by the inflammation of one of the three membranes surrounding the brain and spinal cord. The inflammation results in thickening of the middle membrane, called the arachnoid, causing it to adhere to structures near it. Finally the spinal cord nerves clump against the inner membrane and impair the flow of the spinal fluid. The chronic pain which sufferers have to endure is caused by inflammation and nerve atrophy. There is no cure and no treatment. Accounts of the number of people who have developed Adhesive Arachnoiditis due to Myodil vary between different sources , but it is likely to be tens of thousands.

Glaxo must have known that Myodil was toxic when it was first released onto the market in 1946, since the company was under an obligation to gather reports of adverse reactions to its drugs. By that time many studies had already been published which showed this.

Glaxo Laboratories Limited was incorporated on 28th May 1929 to deal in pharmaceutical drugs, with only one director, Alec Nathan. Nathan formed the company when it was discovered that the dried baby food ‘Glaxo’ was the cause of rickets in children. The first product Glaxo Laboratories Ltd produced was therefore Ostelin, a vitamin D concentrate to replace vitamins that were destroyed in the food drying process.

Glaxo realised that to manufacture a medicinal product is one thing, to sell the manufactured product profitably was another. It had to have influence in the local health departments and infirmaries. Glaxo advertised its products through medical and nursing publications and by writing directly to a selected group of doctors. Sales of the company's products grew and Glaxo, previously familiar to only a limited number of doctors, became more widely known. By targeting the people who prescribed Glaxo’s products it was able to sell to the Public Health Departments of a number of cities including Sheffield, Manchester and Birmingham. Sales of Nathan's products steadily increased.

Nathan had another method of influencing the Public Health Authorities – this was through the appointment to Glaxo of a government chemist called Harry Jephcott.

This recruitment drive led to other employees from the Public Health Authorities joining Glaxo's staff: a Mr Hunwicke from the Somerset County Public Health Laboratory, a Ms Allchorne and a Ms Findlayson from the government laboratory.

These staff officials naturally had connections and influence in the Public Health Departments. From this time on Glaxo was able to market its products from the inside.

The Second World War gave Nathan an opportunity to capitalise on the new recruits’ contacts and with government backing he set up a drug factory in Durham. By the end of the war his factories were producing 90% of the UK's supply of new drugs.

Harry Jephcott became Chairman of Glaxo Laboratories Limited in 1946. He soon recognised that the new National Health Service, established in 1948, could be his single most profitable customer. Instead of having to influence the hundreds of different Public Health Departments scattered around the country he needed contacts within the new emerging bureaucracy to ensure that he became prominent in supplying the service with Glaxo's drugs. He did this by targetting senior civil servants who were to run the Department of Health and Social Security from Whitehall.

Jephcott's appointment had proven to be a profitable one - soon Health Service officials were signing major deals with Glaxo. This strategy was to become an important factor in the significant growth of the company. Many competitors were taken over by Glaxo Laboratories Limited. The company now called itself the Glaxo Group and consisted of various companies that were each individually limited in their liability.

The Thalidomide tragedy in the 1960s resulted in the introduction of the 1968 Medicines Act. Previously there had been only a voluntary code of practice for the pharmaceutical industry to comply with. But the Thalidomide tragedy exposed the code as inadequate, and measures were introduced to bring the industry under legislation. The main purpose of the Licensing Authority was to test the safety, quality and efficacy of existing drugs on the market and to licence them. Under the new proposals a body corporate called the Medicines Commission was to be established with no less than eight members appointed by the Licensing Authority (Government Ministers) and to include representatives of the pharmaceutical and chemical industries. Part of the Act provided the members of the Medicines Commission with powers to establish advisory committees. The Committee on Safety of Medicines (CSM) and the Committee on the Review of Medicines (CRM) were set up when the Act came into effect on 1st September 1971.

The new legislation would mean stricter controls on the pharmaceuticals industry. This was unacceptable to the industry, which fought hard to have the Medicines Act drafted in such a way that it would benefit its own interests. Many companies also made sure that they had representatives present in the different committees. Usually they were heads of the research laboratories and many of the drugs they were testing for safety, quality and efficacy were their own company's drugs.

The contacts within Whitehall established so many years previously enabled Glaxo's drugs to be granted concessions that other companies’ drugs were denied. Myodil was one such drug that was not licensed through the proper procedures. All drugs on the market were given a one-year statutory period in which to register with the Medicines Commission: once registered each company’s drugs would be granted a non-transferable Product Licence of Right (PLR). The first PLR granted for Myodil was on the 19th November 1973 - one full year after its registration period had ended.

The files containing the licensing history of Myodil have been ‘mislaid’ by the Medicines Control Agency . After pressure from the Myodil Action Group, which fought for an investigation, the Parliamentary Ombudsman recommended a release of the documents. However, the Permanent Secretary to the Health Department refused to release the major part of the Myodil licensing documents.

On the 19th September 1988 Glaxo notified the Department of Health that Myodil was to be discontinued in the UK for commercial reasons, but they wished to retain the product licence issued in June 1987 as the product was not being discontinued worldwide. Myodil is thus still manufactured and sold overseas - it has found new markets in countries that are vulnerable to the marketing strategy that made Glaxo one of the largest pharmaceutical companies.

Glaxo has always maintained that the links between Myodil and adhesive arachnoiditis have not been proven. But in an out of court settlement in 1995, whilst denying liability Glaxo Laboratories Limited paid out, on average, £16,000 to each of 425 claimants suffering from Myodil Adhesive Arachnoiditis. A further 3,000 claimants had to withdraw because of what many of them felt to be Glaxo's solicitors’ bullying tactics. Settling out of court meant that Glaxo effectively closed the door on any further litigation in the UK.

Glaxo was certainly aware from an early stage that Myodil was an irritant. Equipped with that knowledge it could have investigated further given the nature of Myodil's use. It did not. If it had, it would have concluded that Myodil was toxic and should be withdrawn. It was not withdrawn until 1988, and then only for ‘commercial’ reasons.

The Board of Glaxo sits in its plush Head Office in Berkley Square planning the future of the company. The fact that one of their products has caused suffering to so many people around the world, and that many more are still being injected with this highly toxic drug, does not appear to be ranking high on the list of priorities.


Source


Fid

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Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Beware of Getting Addicted to Paxil [Seroxat]


Image: rense.com



Ironic that this recent post from a lawyers website in America caught my attention this morning.

Ironic because 4 days ago was last chance that people in the UK could join the litigation in relation to the Group Action brought by around 500 individuals alleging harm from problems withdrawing from Seroxat.

The American website professes:

"Recently, it was discovered that GlaxoSmithKline concealed important information regarding the addicting components of Paxil. Many patients who are taking Paxil to treat depression, anxiety, or other mental problems are not even aware that they are addicted to Paxil[Seroxat."

So, it would appear that it has now been discovered that Seroxat causes addiction, or at the very least, Glaxo have been hiding information regarding the addicting components of Seroxat.

Now why would they do that?

Fid

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Saturday, January 16, 2010

Making A Killing: The Untold Story Of Psychotropic Drugging

In 10 parts

Making A Killing: The Untold Story Of Psychotropic Drugging Pt 1



Making A Killing: The Untold Story Of Psychotropic Drugging Pt 2



Making A Killing: The Untold Story Of Psychotropic Drugging Pt 3




Making A Killing: The Untold Story Of Psychotropic Drugging Pt 4




Making A Killing: The Untold Story Of Psychotropic Drugging Pt 5




Making A Killing: The Untold Story Of Psychotropic Drugging Pt 6



Making A Killing: The Untold Story Of Psychotropic Drugging Pt 7



Making A Killing: The Untold Story Of Psychotropic Drugging Pt 8



Making A Killing: The Untold Story Of Psychotropic Drugging Pt 9



Making A Killing: The Untold Story Of Psychotropic Drugging Pt 10




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Thursday, January 14, 2010

Pop Star Duncan James Hooked on Seroxat


Image: dailymail.co.uk


Source: Daily Mail

Former boy band member of pop group, Blue, has told the Daily Mail that he was hooked on Seroxat for a year, adding further weight to the allegations that GlaxoSmithKline's antidepressant is indeed addictive.

Duncan James says that as he started feeling stronger he decided to come off his antidepressant, Seroxat. But the side effects of coming off made him feel worse than ever.

Duncan says: ‘I was on something like 40 milligrams a day and the doctor said you can’t just stop them.

FULL STORY

Later this year patients injured by Seroxat will be facing GlaxoSmithKline in the High Court in London. They claim that Seroxat has propensity to cause withdrawal reactions.

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Swine flu taskforce's links to vaccine giant, Glaxo!


Image: dailymail.co.uk


This from the Mail Online

More than half the scientists on the swine flu taskforce advising the Government have ties to drug companies.

Eleven of the 20 members of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (SAGE) have done work for the pharmaceutical industry or are linked to it through their universities.

Many have declared interests in GlaxoSmithKline, the vaccine maker expected to be the biggest beneficiary of the pandemic.

The disclosure of the register of interests comes just days after a health expert branded the swine flu outbreak a 'false pandemic' driven by the drug companies which stood to profit.

The Government is now trying to offload up to £1billion worth of unwanted swine flu vaccine.

Story continues




Fid

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By Bob Fiddaman

ISBN: 978-1-84991-120-7
CHIPMUNKA PUBLISHING

AVAILABLE FOR DOWNLOAD HERE


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Wednesday, January 13, 2010

TV's Dr Hilary's "Stoneage" Advice on Seroxat Withdrawal


Photo: images.dailyexpress.co.uk



This has to be seen to be believed. I'm left scratching my head after reading the advice given online to a woman asking TV's Dr Hilary about withdrawing from Seroxat. [Thanks to Ruth for sending this to me]

Dr Hilary is famous for his breakfast TV stints on GMTV where he offers advice to callers suffering from an array of illnesses.

First, here's the email he received from a 29 year old woman known as Jemma.

Should I stop my antidepressants?

Q: After losing my job last year I was diagnosed with mild depression and prescribed Seroxat. I've been on the tablets for a few months and feel much better now. Is it OK to just stop taking them? Jemma, 29

Dr Hilary's reply is, for want of a better word, astonishing!

A: The symptoms of depression vary but can include feeling exhausted, tearful, guilty, worthless, and being unable to sleep or eat. When you lost your job you probably experienced some of these symptoms.

It's great that you feel better now, but do you know what has brought about this change? Hopefully you have overcome the problems you suffered when you lost your job, but the Seroxat you've been taking will have boosted the serotonin levels in your brain, making you feel happier.

Your body is used to the effects of the pills, so if you stop taking them suddenly you can experience side effects such as disturbed sleep and flu-like symptoms. Talk to your GP - he may suggest you wean yourself off the pills gradually. Stop taking a tablet every third day for a fortnight, then every other day for a fortnight. Then you should be ready to stop altogether. If the depression returns, go back to your GP for guidance.


----

A few points here.

Firstly, Dr Hilary fails to acknowledge that Jemma should not have even been prescribed Seroxat if her depression had only been deemed as 'mild' by her doctor. In fact this applies to the majority of SSRi/SNRi type drugs. [See HERE]

Let's look at the advice he offers:

...the Seroxat you've been taking will have boosted the serotonin levels in your brain, making you feel happier

Not according to a study carried out by Irving Kirsch whereby it was "suggested that, compared with placebo, the new-generation antidepressants do not produce clinically significant improvements in depression in patients who initially have moderate or even very severe depression, but show significant effects only in the most severely depressed patients." - [1]

Dr Hilary continued with...

Stop taking a tablet every third day for a fortnight, then every other day for a fortnight. Then you should be ready to stop altogether.

Can you believe that a Dr with such influence and standing as Dr Hilary can be so naive?

The advice offered to Jemma is, at best, ludicrous.

If Jemma acts upon this advice given by Dr Hilary then she may be in for one hell of a withdrawal journey. You DO NOT taper at such an increase, this is advice that is liable to cause you severe withdrawal problems. He continues by saying that after two weeks Jemma should be able to stop taking Seroxat?

Where did he dream this up?

I'd like to point Dr Hilary to the Paxil Progress forums. If he doesn't know, Paxil is the brand name given to Seroxat in the US.

I'd like him to visit the forum and offer this same advice to the thousands of members who have been struggling for years to withdraw from Seroxat.

With the greatest respect Dr Hilary, you have just given Jemma a loaded gun! - The bullets, it would appear, were provided by her doctor.


[1] Initial Severity and Antidepressant Benefits: A Meta-Analysis of Data Submitted to the Food and Drug Administration.


Fid

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