Zantac Lawsuit


Researching drug company and regulatory malfeasance for over 16 years
Humanist, humorist

Tuesday, June 08, 2010

Exclusive - Sara Carlin Inquest - Day 1 June 7, 2010




June 7 2007

Yesterday saw the start of the "Death by Paxil" inquest involving Sara Carlin.

The inquest was called for after Sara, a bonny teeneager from Oakville, Toronto, took her own life by hanging herself in the basement of her parents home on Sunday, May 6, 2007.

The motto for the Office of the Chief Coroner of Ontario is "We Speak for the Dead to Protect the Living." In other words, the coroner will review the circumstances around the death of a person in hopes that similar deaths can be prevented in the future.

As events unfolded on day one of Sara's inquest, one cannot help but feel that the Office of the Chief Coroner of Ontario's motto should be changed to, "We Speak for the Defendants to Protect thier Profits."

It would appear that the Carlin’s are up against not only the might of GlaxoSmithKline's lawyers & the doctors lawyers but also the coroner’s lawyer Michael Blain.

At the start of the inquest the Carlin’s lawyer, Gary Will, made a motion asking that the family be allowed to question the coroners witnesses last, a privilege usually afforded the family in an inquest, for obvious reasons.

They were denied this motion as the coroner ruled that the doctors go last and the family first. This is the first ruling of many expected against the family.

The coroner counsel Michael Blain, when examining the pathologist Dr. Fernandez, was sure to ask the pathologist to describe in detail the stretching of Sara’s neck as a result of hanging.

This seems a strange request, and one that the Carlin's, who are still mourning the loss of their daughter, should not have to endure.

As far as I am aware this inquest is to try and determine what caused Sara to hang herself and not the state of her neck after she had tied a piece of electrical wiring around it.

One would assume that the Carlin's were already aware of the state of Sara's lifeless body, in particular Neil, her father, who found Sara's body back in May, 2007.

Quite why the Coroner Council, Michael Blain, is taking this route is unknown. As someone on the outside looking in, it would appear that it's some sort of tactic used to deter other families requesting inquests.

I think the Carlin's already have the vision and state of Sara's neck firmly implanted in their minds. To raise this again serves no purpose, as far as I can make out, particularly when the Carlin's requested the inquest to try and determine the cause of their daughter's death and not how far her neck had been stretched as a result of her hanging herself.

Two schools of thought spring to mind here. Will the Coroner Council, Michael Blain, later suggest that Sara's death was a result of an accident, a prank gone wrong?

Or, is this merely a punishment for the Carlin's? They, after all, are questioning the whole of the medical profession and regulatory authorities here. Is this some kind of payback for them daring to question authority?

Not content with this, Blain then, during a short recess in the proceedings, went in front of TV camera's and claimed that expert evidence to be given later in this case will show that Paxil was not related to Sara Carlin's suicide.

I find this utterly amazing and totally biased.

The Coroner's Office is supposed to be neutral and supposed to protect public safety. It is supposed to give the dead a 'voice'.

An inquest serves an investigative, social and preventative function. It involves public scrutiny of the conditions which may cause or contribute to the death of a member of the community.

It would appear that the Coroner's Office have already made their mind up regarding the causation of Sara Carlin's death. Day one and already they are talking to the media claiming that evidence will be shown that Paxil did not cause Sara's death.

One cannot help but feel that the jury present at this inquest will later go home, switch on their TV's and see a talk-show host look-a-like with a missing front tooth [Blain] announce that evidence [that they, the jury, shall later see] will prove that Paxil did not cause Sara's death.

I intend to write about this inquest on a daily basis. If the Coroner Council wants to stifle the voice of Sara Carlin then my intention is to allow Sara a voice, a voice that the Office of the Chief Coroner of Ontario promise if their motto is anything to go by - "We Speak for the Dead to Protect the Living."

Blain's vain attempt to sway a jury decision at this stage is not speaking for Sara Carlin. It is not serving the public interest either - Put me in front of a TV camera and I'll say the same thing.

The last witness of the day described to the jury Sara before Paxil as being brilliant in everything she did, sports, school - and loved by all who knew her.

The Carlin’s are in for a rough ride with all sides including the coroner against them. Lets hope the jury see through all of this and see how dangerous Paxil can be when prescribed to children and teenagers.

In the interest of balance... or to rebut the outlandish statement made by Michael Blain in front of the media - I would like to direct interested parties to the Paxil 329 studies. In short, these studies will show how GlaxoSmithKline knowingly manipulated the Paxil paediatric data - not only that, they also were involved in a marketing campaign to prove the safety and efficacy of Paxil in children - when they knew it wasn't safe for children and adolescents because there was a higher than normal risk of suicide in this particular age group.

There has been a lot of visitors from Canada to this blog over the last 24 hours or so. It's not as powerful as CHCH-TV, channel 11, a television station in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, whom Michael Blain spoke to during a recess. It will however create interest over the coming weeks and it will report and rebut anything that glorifies Paxil.

This family need justice. They need someone to speak for the dead to protect the living. It is abundantly clear after only one day that they are not or will not be getting this from the Office of the Chief Coroner of Ontario.

Please feel free to post or copy this article to your blogs and/or websites. Feel free to email friends, colleagues and family.

Let us be the media for Sara Carlin and her family.

Members of the jury and other interested parties may be interested to educate themselves on the Paxil 329 studies.

The blurb of which can be read on the Healthy Skepticism website:

GlaxoSmithKline’s Study 329 of medication for adolescent depression failed to demonstrate any benefit for paroxetine over placebo in adolescents and demonstrated a worrying profile of adverse events for paroxetine. The study was ultimately published in 2001 by the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry with Martin Keller as the primary author. This misleading paper has been a focus of interest for Healthy Skepticism since 2002.

In 2003 we wrote to the Editor of JAACAP raising concerns about the misleading reporting by the authors that exaggerated benefit and downplayed adverse effects. (We also questioned editorial functioning, which drew an angry response from the Editor).

In 2004 CMAJ published an Editorial which showed that in 1998 an internal GSK document clearly acknowledged that GSK were aware that 329 was negative. A subsequent law suit by New York Attorney General, Eliot Spitzer, was settled out of court.

In 2006, we wrote to the Lancet to point out that internal documents from another United States law suit (Smith versus GSK) revealed further concerns about study 329: -

The study was ghostwritten.

Misleadingly positive interpretations of the study were promoted to drug reps and other GSK staff.

An illusion of efficacy was achieved by re-inventing primary and secondary end points.

Eventually GSK had to acknowledge the failure of all three of their child and adolescent paroxetine depression studies.


All documents can be downloaded here

This, will go a long way into getting Sara's voice heard.

On May 6, 2007, Sara Carlin, a beautiful 18-year-old girl with everything to live for, grabbed a piece of electrical wiring, fashioned a crude noose and hanged herself in the basement of her parents house while under the influence of the antidepressant drug Paxil (Seroxat in the UK). Paxil/Seroxat is an antidepressant documented by international drug regulatory agencies as causing worsening depression and suicide particularly in children and young adults.

Please help inform others of the risks of these drugs. Forward this video to everyone you know.

RIP Sara Alison Carlin

Nessun Dorma



RELATED POSTS:

Sara Carlin Inquest – Latest

Sara Carlin Inquest – Failure of Oakville Medical Profession

Sara Carlin – ‘Death by Paxil’ Inquest – The ‘Expert’

Sara Carlin Inquest – Coroner’s Witness In U-Turn… And That Man Shaffer!

SARA CARLIN Ontario, Canada

Coroner’s Inquest – Glaxo & Friends Vs The Carlin Family

Sara Carlin Inquest – Local MP Slams GlaxoSmithKline

SARA CARLIN PAXIL INQUEST VIDEO FOOTAGE

SARA CARLIN PAXIL INQUEST GLOBAL TV NEWS

SARA CARLIN INQUEST - What The Jury Should Know

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'THE EVIDENCE, HOWEVER, IS CLEAR...THE SEROXAT SCANDAL' By Bob Fiddaman
SIGNED COPIES HERE OR UNSIGNED FROM CHIPMUNKA PUBLISHING

Monday, June 07, 2010

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


Image: holdregeandkull.com


Initially, this was going to be a two-parter, however, more research has led me to another witness for GlaxoSmithKline in the UK Seroxat Group Action - more about him in Part III.

Part IV will show you how another of GSK's witnesses, they are using for the up and coming UK Seroxat Group Action, works for a company who are in receipt of huge funds from The Wellcome Trust.

Following on from my previous post where I have tried to highlight instances where both GlaxoSmithKline and the MHRA either failed to spot or chose to ignore warnings about Seroxat withdrawal.

I turn my attention now to the UK Seroxat Litigation.

The defining issues of this group action are thus:

Does Seroxat have a capacity to cause adverse effects consequent upon or following discontinuance (withdrawal) such as prevent or make more difficult the ability of users to discontinue, withdrawal from or remain free from taking Seroxat to a greater extent than all other Selective Serotonin Re-uptake Inhibitors (SSRIs)

As I have said, my previous post highlighted the reasons why I think this litigation will be a failure for GlaxoSmithKline. I'm not a lawyer, nor do I work for lawyers. I can, however, determine what is wrong from right.

Before I move on to name one of the 'expert witnesses' for GlaxoSmithKline in this litigation I will recap on the evidence I have found just by searching the Internet.

In 1993, the Committee on Safety of Medicines ("CSM"), the UK's counterpart to the FDA, reported 78 cases of withdrawal after discontinuation of paroxetine, reporting that "such reactions have been reported more often with paroxetine than with other SSRI's." ("Current Problems in Pharmacovigilance" (1993; 19:1).

GSK, then SKB, and the MHRA, then the MCA, did not react to this warning.

In 1997, Dr. Haddad reported that the highest incidence of discontinuation reactions among the SSRI's was paroxetine. (J Clin Psychiatry 1997; 58 Supp l7:17-1; discussion 220.)

In 1997, Young and Currie of Newcastle reported on their survey indicating that a sizeable minority of physicians were aware of the existence of antidepressant withdrawal reactions. This included psychiatrists, 28% of whom expressed no awareness that antidepressant medications could induce discontinuation reactions. The conclusion of the authors was that "education about discontinuation reactions is needed for both psychiatrists and family practice physicians." (J Clin Psychiatry 1997;58 Suppl &:28-30.)

This particular paper is of interest to me as it was co authored by Allan Young. At the time of the publication [1998] Young was Senior lecturer in psychiatry at Hadrian Clinic, Newcastle General Hospital, Newcastle upon Tyne. The conclusion of Young, along with the other two authors of the publication, Peter Haddad and Michel Lejoyeux, is evident for all to see - "education about discontinuation reactions is needed for both psychiatrists and family practice physicians."

It is interesting because Allan Young will be one of the expert witnesses on behalf of the defendants, GSK, in the UK Seroxat Group Action. It seems rather odd, to me at least, that GSK would want a witness who has in the past wrote about antidepressant withdrawal reactions.

This is just one of the witnesses for GSK. Another is Dr. Rashmi Shah.

Dr. Rashmi Shah is the owner of Rashmi Shah Consultancy Ltd, located in Slough, Berkshire, UK.

Shah's previous employment history will shock quite a few people who read this article.

Shah was employed by the MHRA between 1987 and 2004. Positions held were:

Senior Medical Officer, Senior Clinical Assessor and Senior Medical Assessor.

An employee of the MHRA for 17 years.

Now a witness for the defence [GSK] in the UK Seroxat Group Action.

Shah retired from the MHRA in 2004.

A summary of the Committee on Safety of Medicines meeting, held on the 25th of November, 2004, attests to this:


1. Apologies and Announcements

1.4 The Chairman informed the Committee that Rashmi Shah's was retiring and that this was his last meeting and on behalf of the Committee thanked Rashmi for his outstanding contributions to the work of the Committee over a 17 year period and wished him well in his retirement.



I, along with many others, have always been weary of the relationship the regulators have with the pharmaceutical industry so this revelation should come as no surprise.

It would appear that the MHRA's long standing relationship with GlaxoSmithKline will continue through the High Court in London.

For those of you that don't know, the MHRA spent four years investigating GlaxoSmithKline.

The investigation focused on whether GSK had failed to inform the agency in a timely manner of information it had on the safety of Seroxat in the under 18’s. The investigation, the largest of its kind in the UK, was undertaken with a view to a potential criminal prosecution for breach of drug safety legislation, and included the scrutiny of over 1 million pages of evidence. The decision taken by Government Prosecutors, based on the investigation findings and legal advice, is that “there is no realistic prospect of a conviction in this case, and that the case should not proceed to criminal prosecution.

The punishment for Glaxo? A "Whose been a naughty boy?" type of letter sent to the then CEO of GSK, JP Garnier. Garnier later went on record to say that GSK had been cleared and that they had done nothing wrong [See audio recording left hand sidebar of this blog]

It's also worthy to point out that the Chairman of the MHRA, Alasdair Breckenridge, is a former employee of GSK, then SmithKline Beecham [SKB] - As is the Head of Licensing at the MHRA, Dr. Ian Hudson.

Breckenridge has appeared on national TV defending Seroxat, he has also made his feelings known about Seroxat in various publications, one such being the New Statesman in 2005. Here's what the Chairman of the MHRA [and ex- SmithKline Beecham employee] had to say about Seroxat:

“If you go back – and I read this out to the Health Select Committee to the data sheet on Seroxat when it was licensed in 1991, we spelt out word for word the problems of withdrawal from Seroxat, in words that we could not improve now. This idea that the regulators have been hiding the data is just not true. The so-called scandal of Seroxat is something I want to nail every time I speak in front of compatriots because it is absolute rubbish”.


What Breckenridge 'read out' to the Health Select Committee is even more confusing:

“…What the expert working group did was to look at three issues about antidepressants: firstly, the question of withdrawal; secondly, the question of suicidal ideation; and, thirdly, the question of dose. The problem of withdrawal has been well known with antidepressants, especially Seroxat, and I happen to have before me the information sheet, the data sheet which we published, which the MCA published in 1990 when Seroxat was first licensed. If I can just read it to you, it says, ‘As with many psychoactive medicines, it may be advisable to discontinue therapy gradually as abrupt discontinuation may lead to symptoms, such as dizziness, sensory disturbances, sleep disturbances, agitation or anxiety, nausea, sweating and confusion’. That was in 1990″.


There was no mention of this on any patient information leaflet that accompanied Seroxat in 1990. There was no advice to 'discontinue therapy gradually' either.

Breckenridge further embarrassed himself and the MHRA with his performance on BBC TV's Panorama [Taken on Trust BBC TV 2004] where he was reduced to a stuttering wreck by journalist, Shelley Jofre. [A condensed version of his performance can be seen HERE - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TozBgI5LyGc

I don't know why Breckenridge remains at the MHRA, it's hard to decipher what he actually does. I can only assume that he won't ever be allowed to appear in front of a TV camera anymore defending Seroxat, not after his display of arrogance back in 2004.

The MHRA's Head of Licensing, Dr. Ian Hudson, is also a former employee of SmithKline Beecham [now GSK]. Hudson is no stranger to litigation, particularly where GlaxoSmithKline are concerned.

In the Tobin vs SmithKline Beecham trial in 2005, Hudson gave the following deposition http://www.healyprozac.com/Trials/Tobin/Depositions/hudson-depo.txt

Hudson had previously worked for GlaxoSmithKline for 11 years where he held the position of Worldwide Director of Safety.

In a public Declaration of Interests document, Hudson openly admitted that he had a significant involvement with a number of drugs during his time at Glaxo [then SKB] - one of which was Seroxat.
[Source] http://seroxatsecrets.files.wordpress.com/2007/03/dr-ian-hudsons-interests.pdf

Sarah Boseley, then health editor for The Guardian newspaper wrote in 2000, "Alarm as drug company chief joins watchdog."

A top executive at one of the world's leading pharmaceutical companies is to become director of drugs licensing at the medicines control agency, raising questions about the independence of the MCA from the industry that it is supposed to police.

Ian Hudson will take up his new job in February. He has worked in the drugs industry for the past 11 years and until recently was director and vice- president of Worldwide Clinical Safety, at SmithKline Beecham, and was to have led the worldwide drug safety group after the merger of SKB with Glaxo Wellcome, which came into effect yesterday.


Boseley also wrote in 2002, "Antidepressant Seroxat tops table of drug withdrawal symptoms."

Seroxat, the British-made antidepressant which outsells Prozac, causes more people distressing withdrawal problems when they try to stop taking it than any other drug in the UK.

Seroxat - known generically as paroxetine - leads the top 20 table of drugs causing withdrawal problems, with 1,281 complaints from doctors under the "yellow card" scheme set up for the reporting of medicines' side-effects. More reports have been filed about Seroxat than about the rest of the top 20 put together. In the top six, five of the drugs said to be causing withdrawal problems are SSRIs - second after Seroxat comes Efexor (venlafaxine), with 272 complaints.


So, now, 6 years on from Alasdair Breckenridge's embarrassing performance on BBC TV where he defended GlaxoSmithKline's Seroxat and 5 years on from Head of Licensing for the MHRA, Dr. Ian Hudson, offering his services as a witness for GSK, we have yet another MHRA connection in Rashmi Shah.

This shower of regulatory authoritarians [MHRA] have sat with Seroxat advocates, myself included. They have nodded and empathised upon hearing personal stories of withdrawal. All the time, it appears, they knew there was a withdrawal problem with Seroxat but instead of tackling it head on, they decided, like GlaxoSmithKline, to ignore the warning signs from as early as 1993 [Current Problems in Pharmacovigilance] (1993; 19:1).

It's staggering that they have the audacity to collect their wages each month from their bank accounts.

It's astounding that they failed to prosecute GlaxoSmithKline after a four year investigation.

It's appalling that they have not one but two ex-GSK employees working for them, one a Chairman who doesn't really seem to do much, the other the Head of Licensing, one who grants licenses to the drugs you and I take.

It's sickening that an ex MHRA employee, in Rashmi Shah, is now defending Seroxat by being a witness for GlaxoSmithKline in the UK Seroxat Group Action.

I cut off all communications with the MHRA last year after they failed to answer a simple question I put to them, Is Seroxat a teratogen?

It would appear that the MHRA have merely been offering token gestures to Seroxat advocates, all the time keeping a close eye on what their paymasters [GSK] might think of them discussing Seroxat with patients.

I'm not the first to pick up on the MHRA's close ties with GlaxoSmithKline. In 2004, the Daily Mail, a UK tabloid, ran with the headline, "Agency blamed for promoting Seroxat."

The mental health charity, Mind, said the MHRA were playing Russian Roulette with people's lives over the common antidepressant drug Seroxat.

Mind chief executive Richard Brook said the MHRA had not listened to the experiences of people who had taken Seroxat.

"Many of these people have suffered terrible side effects when taking or trying to come off the drug and some people, it is believed, have died," he said.


There is a terrible stench throughout the MHRA Headquarters, it reeks of back slapping and complete and utter disdain for the patient, particularly those who have ever had to experience the horrific side-effects of Seroxat.

The MHRA are not just in bed with GlaxoSmithKline - they are copulating with them.


I am not totally sure but it's my belief that the expert witness owes a duty to the court to give independent and unbiased evidence, and must avoid assuming the role of advocate for his client.

Rashmi Shah worked for the MCA/MHRA for 17 years. Shah was an employee of the MCA/MHRA when they first granted a licence for GlaxoSmithKline's Seroxat. He was also employed by them during the time when they received many adverse reaction reports about Seroxat.

I, for one, shall be looking forward to Rashmi Shah's unbiased evidence when, or if, this group action lands in the High Court later this year.

Coming up in Part III - How another of GSK's witnesses once called for the FDA to lift its black box warning on antidepressants.

Other stories of interest:

Antidepressant Seroxat tops table of drug withdrawal symptoms

Glaxo 'played down Seroxat side effects'

Agency blamed for promoting Seroxat

Antidepressant addiction warning

Alarm as drug company chief joins watchdog

DEPENDENCE ON PAROXETINE?

Drug firm issues addiction warning

Keep Seroxat dose low, doctors told

Why I resigned over 'happy pill' cover-up

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ORDER THE PAPERBACK
'THE EVIDENCE, HOWEVER, IS CLEAR...THE SEROXAT SCANDAL' By Bob Fiddaman
SIGNED COPIES HERE OR UNSIGNED FROM CHIPMUNKA PUBLISHING

Sunday, June 06, 2010

Sara Carlin - 'Death by Paxil' Inquest





Tomorrow sees the start of an inquest into the death of Canadian teenager Sara Carlin - an inquest that was at first denied but after public pressure was granted to the parents of Sara, Neil and Rhonda Carlin.

The inquest was due to begin in November last year but was postponed at the request of her family.

On May 6th 2007, 18-year-old Sara Allison Carlin, suffering from the side effects of Paxil, grabbed a piece of electrical wiring, fashioned a crude noose and hanged herself in the basement of her parents’ house.

I am very familiar with this story and feel only a small amount of pain that the Carlin's will undoubtedly feel over the coming weeks.

Sara was a beautiful young girl with her whole life in front of her.

Her life will no doubt be painted in a way that benefits GlaxoSmithKline. Of all the cases I have seen regarding death brought on by Paxil, the defence usually like to portray the victim in a bad light. I don't think this case will be any different and anticipate that the emphasis of this case will be used to target Sara rather than find her the justice that she and her family deserve.

Sara was let down by her doctor, she was let down by the Canadian Medicines regulator, Health Canada. She was also let down by the manufacturers of Paxil, GlaxoSmithKline.

Had Glaxo had been more forthcoming regarding the safety and efficacy of Paxil in children and adolescents, then Sara would probably still be alive today. If Sara's doctor's had been made aware of the Paxil 329 studies, in which Glaxo cleverly manipulated the data, then they would not have prescribed Paxil to Sara.

GlaxoSmithKline owe the Carlin's the mother of all apologies. Only trouble is, Glaxo actually believe that they have done nothing wrong.

I, for one, would have loved to have been able to sit in the public gallery tomorrow, if only to look in to the eyes of the law team representing GlaxoSmithKline.

Related stories:

Sara Carlin: A life cut way too short

Paxil Study 329: Paroxetine vs Imipramine vs Placebo in Adolescents

Critical report but no UK law suit for GSK over Seroxat/Paxil


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ORDER THE PAPERBACK
'THE EVIDENCE, HOWEVER, IS CLEAR...THE SEROXAT SCANDAL' By Bob Fiddaman
SIGNED COPIES HERE OR UNSIGNED FROM CHIPMUNKA PUBLISHING

Saturday, June 05, 2010

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


Image: filipspagnoli.files.wordpress.com



BACK STORIES

PART I

PART II

Part III of this series shows how GlaxoSmithKline are using the services of an expert statistician in the up and coming UK Seroxat Group Action.

It's a name that took me by surprise and one that has been mentioned throughout blog land on numerous occasions. The name of the witness is synonymous with names such as Joseph Biederman, David Dunner, Graham Emslie, Daniel Geller, Frederick Goodwin, Martin Keller, Andrew Leon, John Mann, John March, Charles Nemeroff, John Rush, Neal Ryan, David Shaffer and Karen Wagner.

Most of the above played a major role in the ghost written articles regarding the safety and efficacy of Paxil [Seroxat] in children.

It would appear that his views on SSRi use for children remains positive, despite much evidence to the contrary.

Step up to the witness box, Dr. Robert Gibbons, Glaxo's expert statistician they will be using in the up and coming UK Seroxat Group Action.

Gibbons pretty much wrote his own destiny when he was the co-author of a study that appeared in the American Journal of Psychiatry in 2007

Gibbons co-authored study claimed there was a correlation between a 22% decrease in SSRI prescriptions and a 14% increase in youth suicide rates between 2003 and 2004, after warnings were issued by the FDA. However, the study was criticised by many.

Respected British Columbia researcher, Jon Jureidini, said the Gibbons study "incorrectly analyzed the relationship between U.S. selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) prescription rates and suicide rates among children."

"As it turns out," Dr Jureidini wrote, "preliminary figures are now available from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), which show that fewer people under age 25 committed suicide in 2005 (when prescribing did decrease) than in 2004."

"In the year in which suicide rates rose sharply," he said, "there was no significant drop in SSRI prescribing."

Despite his critics, Gibbons said at a 2009 Medscape Continuing Medical Education seminar, sponsored by Lexapro and Celexa maker, Forest Labs, "we have seen in 2004 and 2005, the years for which CDC [Centers for Disease Control] has available data on youth suicide rates, the largest increases in youth suicide rates in history since they initially were monitored."

The disclosure section for the seminar shows Gibbons had served as an expert witness for Zoloft maker, Pfizer, and Wyeth Pharmaceuticals, maker of the antidepressants, Effexor and Pristiq.

Gibbons is a Professor of Biostatistics and Psychiatry and Director of the Center for Health Statistics at the [UIC] University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine, according to his bio on the Department of Psychiatry's webpage.

In 2007, the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, and Seroxat maker, GlaxoSmithKline, donated between $10,000 and $24,000, to UIC College of Medicine, according to the Spring 2008 "UIC Medicine," newsletter.

Gibbons study received further criticism particularly after a Newsweek article entitled "Trouble in a 'Black Box", where Gibbons stated, "I think the FDA has made a very serious mistake. It should lift its black-box warning because all it's doing is killing kids."

After reading the Newsweek article, Dr Barry Duncan, a clinical psychologist, noticed the problematic claims being made.

He wrote a letter to both the author of the article and the Newsweek editors pointing out the problems with the article.

Duncan wrote:

Dear Editor:

Please find below our letter in response to the article, “Trouble in a Black Box.”

Our examination of the study forming the basis for the article revealed a glaring inaccuracy–the study’s results do not match the findings reported in the Newsweek article. Given that very few individuals read or understand research, we believe it important for Newsweek readers to be aware of this discrepancy to evaluate the necessity of the Black Box warning:

Tony Dokoupil’s Trouble in a ‘Black Box’ (July 16) importantly addresses the risks and benefits of prescribing antidepressants to children. However, the referenced study is far from “compelling” evidence for removing the FDA Black Box warning and such an interpretation of its findings is misleading. An inspection of this industry funded study reveals that the precipitous drop in SSRI prescriptions did not occur, as reported, from 2003 to 2005 but rather from February to October of 2005 (over 85% of the drop in the last 6 months of the reported time). The so-called “parallel development” of increased suicides occurred between 2003 and 2004 and therefore had no relationship to the drop in prescription rates reported in this study. Given that the decrease in prescription rates and increase in suicides occurred in different time periods, it begs the question of how such unsubstantiated statements could be made by the experts cited in the article.

Only 3 of 15 clinical trials have shown antidepressants to be superior to a sugar pill on primary measures. Children and parents in those 15 studies reported no advantage of antidepressants over a sugar pill. Data from the FDA and its British counterpart demonstrate that children and adolescents taking antidepressants are twice as likely to experience suicide-related events. Given the meager results and increased risk for suicide-related events (as well as other serious adverse events), antidepressants are not a good first choice for youth struggling with depression a conclusion reached after an extensive risk/benefit analysis conducted by the American Psychological Association’s Work Group on Psychotropic Medication

Barry Duncan, Psy.D., Jacqueline Sparks, Ph.D. & Scott Miller, Ph.D.


It could be argued that that Glaxo's expert statistician isn't that expert after all. His study has come under fire from many, as have his statistics.

Gibbons CV can be read here.

Special thanks to investigative journalist, Evelyn Pringle, for passing on documents regarding Dr. Robert Gibbons, many of which, have been forwarded to the solicitors representing the plaintiffs in the UK Seroxat Group Action.

Coming soon: Part IV - Another Glaxo expert witnessed revealed...along with his ties to Glaxo and it's huge donations.

Related links:

Suicide Syndrome

SSRI Pushers under Fire - By Evelyn Pringle

Paxil Study 329: Paroxetine vs Imipramine vs Placebo in Adolescents - Healthy Skepticism

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ORDER THE PAPERBACK
'THE EVIDENCE, HOWEVER, IS CLEAR...THE SEROXAT SCANDAL' By Bob Fiddaman
SIGNED COPIES HERE OR UNSIGNED FROM CHIPMUNKA PUBLISHING

Friday, June 04, 2010

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




I struggled with coming up with a title for this post. Often headlines can sum up what the content of an article is - the above title could mean anything but it is one that I intend to show in this article regarding Seroxat withdrawal and the way that, for years, both GlaxoSmithKline and the Medicines Healthcare and products Regulatory Agency [MHRA] have chose to ignore the blindingly obvious.

I can only draw opinions as to why they have both chose to ignore. In Glaxo's case, I am of the opinion that they wished to play down that there was a problem with Seroxat withdrawal because it would affect sales - I cannot think of any other reason why?

Regarding the ignorance of the MHRA on the Seroxat withdrawal issue, my opinion remains the same as it has always been. They allowed a drug on the market, they have stood by and watched people take it, they have sat with Seroxat patients and advocates and listened - They have done nothing. Two schools of thought here;

[1] The MHRA are wholly funded by the pharmaceutical industry, GlaxoSmithKline included - so, why bite the hand that feeds you?

[2] To admit they were wrong would create quite a stir. People, myself included, would ask, at what point they realised they were wrong?

I tend to lean toward point [2] where the MHRA are concerned. An admittance of 'We messed up', would make them look incompetent and calls would be made for a restructure of the whole medicines regulatory system.

I am in no doubt that the MHRA are in bed with the pharmaceutical industry, in particular GlaxoSmithKline.

For a while they convinced me that they were actually on the side of the patient - until I started asking them 'awkward questions', questions that they chose not to answer. I think I know why they chose that route and recent evidence I have obtained has made my skin crawl, so much so that I intend to take a shower after finishing this article.

When Seroxat patients have turned toward the MHRA for support, they have listened. When Glaxo turn toward ex-employees of the MHRA for support, they get unequivocal loyalty.

All will be revealed in Part II of GlaxoSmithKline/MHRA - When Ignorance Turns To Bliss.

It should be noted at this point that there is an up and coming lawsuit in the UK with regard to Seroxat withdrawal, a lawsuit that I am part of - this, I suppose, could be deemed as a possible conflict of interest. However, it needs someone to point out the failings of GlaxoSmithKline and the MHRA where Seroxat withdrawal is concerned - if only for the future safety of patients and/or to educate those who blindly prescribe Seroxat because both Glaxo and the MHRA have told them that it is safe to do so.

I may also add this article [and Part II] to my book just before it is edited for publication as a paperback later this year. It's important that people who do not have access to the Internet know all the facts regarding Seroxat withdrawal.

Discontinuation vs Withdrawal

Both GlaxoSmithKline and the MHRA prefer to use the term 'discontinuation reactions' rather than 'withdrawal reactions.'

Withdrawal reactions would imply that there is an addiction problem with Seroxat. The word 'Withdrawal' is defined on Wikipedia as thus:

Withdrawal can refer to any sort of separation, is most commonly used to describe the group of symptoms that occurs upon the abrupt discontinuation/separation or a decrease in dosage of the intake of medications, recreational drugs, and/or alcohol. In order to experience the symptoms of withdrawal, one must have first developed a physical dependence (often referred to as chemical dependency).


Whereas 'Discontinuation' is defined on Wikipedia as thus:

Discontinuation is to quit a procedure, and has different meanings for a treatment of an individual and a whole brand of a drug product:

Discontinuation of a treatment is to stop taking a drug. There are several reasons for discontinuation, e.g.:

The ailment or reason it was taken has disappeared.

The adverse effects overweight the desired effects.

Other, better, alternatives are available.


However, 'SSRi Discontinuation syndrome' is defined on Wikipedia as:

SSRI discontinuation syndrome (also known as SSRI withdrawal syndrome or SSRI cessation syndrome, colloquially called the zaps) is a syndrome that can occur following the interruption, dose reduction, or discontinuation of SSRI (selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitor) or SNRI antidepressant medications. The condition often begins between 24 hours to 10 days after reduction in dosage or complete discontinuation, depending on the elimination half-life of the drug and the patient's metabolism. The prescribing labels of some SSRIs note the possibility of "intolerable" discontinuation reactions. Some patients have extreme difficulty discontinuing use of SSRI drugs.


Without sounding patronising to those reading this, I feel it important that those reading fully understand withdrawal vs discontinuation.

As Wikipedia points out when referring to SSRI discontinuation syndrome, it is also known as SSRI withdrawal syndrome.

So, according to Wikipedia, withdrawal and discontinuation pretty much amount to the same thing.

I understand that Wikipedia is not the be and end all of word definitions so let's look elsewhere.

A. http://www.thefreedictionary.com/discontinue

discontinue

1. to come or bring to an end; interrupt or be interrupted; stop

discontinuation n

----

B. http://www.yourdictionary.com/discontinuation

discontinuation

noun

A cessation; a discontinuance.

----

C. http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/discontinuation

discontinue

1 : to break the continuity of : cease to operate, administer, use, produce, or take

dis·con·tin·u·a·tion noun

----

D. http://www.ldoceonline.com/dictionary/discontinue

discontinue

to stop doing, producing, or providing something:

discontinuation noun [uncountable]

----

E. http://www.askoxford.com/concise_oed/discontinue?view=uk

discontinue

verb (discontinues, discontinued, discontinuing) stop doing, providing, or making.

DERIVATIVES discontinuation noun

----

Five examples of the word discontinuation and we can basically see that it means STOP.

Now, I'm a question asker. I have been for much of my life. My school years were cut short after I was expelled in my final year. I missed all of my exams. This does not mean that I am an uneducated imbecile from Birmingham.

Discontinuation when used on a patient information leaflet [PIL] is misleading to the consumer. It's a word designed to camouflage the withdrawal symptoms that exist when one tries to discontinue/withdraw from Seroxat. Some of the symptoms are extreme, although many such as suicidal thoughts, disabling brain zaps, intolerance to sudden loud noises, short term memory are not mentioned on the PIL. Instead Glaxo opt for the obligatory side effects such as nausea, dizziness, diarrhea - the three standard side effects that appear on most PIL's.

I have educated myself regarding Seroxat because there is not one body that can give me answers - not GlaxoSmithKline, not the MHRA and certainly not a doctor from the local community health centre.

My research has taken me on a journey. My withdrawal from Seroxat is well documented both on the Internet and in my book, The Evidence, However, Is Clear...The Seroxat Scandal - Chipmunka Publishing - ISBN: 978-1-84991-120-7

This research has led me to various publications that show that there has been a withdrawal problem with Seroxat for many years, a problem that both GlaxoSmithKline and the MHRA have, it would appear, chosen to ignore.

Combine this with the yellow card reports the MHRA have received regarding adverse reactions to Seroxat and one can only be of the opinion that they [GSK & The MHRA] have known for years about this problem but have done nothing to eradicate it... or at least help those who have had to endure Seroxat's withdrawal problems.

The current Drug Analysis Print for paroxetine [Seroxat] is hosted on the MHRA web site.

It shows that there have been 32,625 reactions to paroxetine. There have been 10,518 adverse drug reactions and 175 fatalaties. The earliest reaction date is noted as being 1st January 1990.


An important titbit of information before you continue to read the evidence.

GlaxoSmithKline have never carried out any studies regarding Seroxat withdrawal - at least not to my knowledge?

I find this utterly staggering particularly when Glaxo's employees have, in the past, made bold statements regarding Seroxat withdrawal.

In 2000, Dr. David Wheadon, Senior Vice President for GlaxoSmithKline Regulatory Affairs and Product Professional Services, went on record with the following statement:

"There have been a number of systematic studies in humans looking at the potential for Paxil for abuse, tolerance and physical dependence. So actually, there is data to date to negate the statement that it has not been systematically studied, because, in fact, it has been."


I have never seen any such study, in fact I know of no one who has...apart from Dr. David Wheadon!

In 2001, the Independent, a popular UK newspaper, ran with an article entitled, 'Serotonin Syndrome – the price of a good mood'

In short, it was an article regarding a woman called Louise Anderson [not her real name] who had came off her medication [Seroxat] and 12 months later was still experiencing "withdrawal symptoms."

Alan Chandler, spokesman for GSK, had this to say:

"There's no reliable scientific evidence to show they cause withdrawal symptoms or dependency."


If, as he claimed, there was no reliable scientific evidence to show they cause withdrawal symptoms or dependency, then could he or GlaxoSmithKline provide any reliable scientific evidence to show that Seroxat DOES NOT cause withdrawal symptoms or dependency?

In 2002 Dr. Alastair Benbow, Head of European Psychiatry for GlaxoSmithKline, had this to say:

"Seroxat does have side effects, but these are clearly stated in the information that’s made available to doctors and to patients."


To make such a vague statement when Seroxat withdrawal has never been studied by GlaxoSmithKline is, I believe, very unprofessional and misleading.

In 2005, Mary Anne Rhyne, GlaxoSmithKline spokesperson, had this to say about 'discontinuation'

"If ‘discontinuation reactions’ occur in patients stopping [Paxil], the majority will experience symptoms that are mild to moderate in intensity, and are usually limited to two weeks."


Question:

How did Mary Anne Rhyne know this if no study had ever been done regarding Seroxat withdrawal?

Again, I believe, this statement is very unprofessional and misleading.

These are just a few of the statements made over the years by GlaxoSmithKline employees in defence of Seroxat.

The Evidence

Glaxo and the MHRA are always asking for evidence. They have, for years, dismissed the thousands of anecdotal reports via online forums, and petitions.

I know the MHRA regularly read my blog, I also know that GlaxoSmithKline employees and their solicitors, Addleshaw Goddard, read it too.

Perhaps, all of them then can explain the following publications where Seroxat withdrawal has been mentioned, perhaps they can all explain why they have ignored these publications?

In 1993, the Committee on Safety of Medicines [CSM], reported 78 cases of withdrawal after 'discontinuation' of paroxetine, reporting that "such reactions have been reported more often with paroxetine than with other SSRI's." [Current Problems in Pharmacovigilance (1993; 19:1).

1993?

Now forgive me for my flippancy here but 1993 was long before Panorama came on the scene with it's 4 programmes regarding Seroxat.

Any individual who uses the media interest [Panorama] as an argument is clearly delusional.

Here we have an instance of Seroxat withdrawal that was put before the CSM. I cannot for the life of me grasp why this did not raise alarm bells, particularly as it is categorically plain and simple - "such reactions have been reported more often with paroxetine than with other SSRI's."

No Panorama programme, no bloggers, no activists, no lawyers threatening legal action - so why was this ignored?

In 1996, Nuss and Kinkaid, studied serotonin discontinuation syndrome, and paroxetine patients in particular. The authors concluded that "with the advent of the..(SSRI), there is now growing evidence to support a 'discontinuation syndrome' associated with withdrawal of therapy." (W V Med J 2000 Mar-Apr;96(2):405-7.)

and

In 1997, Dr. Haddad reported that the highest incidence of discontinuation reactions among the SSRI's was paroxetine. (J Clin Psychiatry 1997; 58 Supp l7:17-1; discussion 220.)

and

In 1998, Dr. Roger Lane's article, Withdrawal symptoms after discontinuation of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), was published in the Journal of Serotonin Research (1996, 3, 75-83). After listing the physical symptoms caused by withdrawal, Dr. Lane observed that of all the SSRIs, paroxetine caused severe withdrawal symptoms the most often.

Again, no intervention by the UK medicines regulator. No offer to carry out a study regarding Seroxat withdrawal by GlaxoSmithKline. No demands from the MHRA that Glaxo should carry out such a study.

I'll offer an opinion here.

I believe that both GlaxoSmithKline and the MHRA, the then MCA, totally underestimated the growth of the Internet. They totally disregarded the above publications because, at the time, they were seen by so few.

Sadly, for GlaxoSmithKline and the MHRA, the Internet is a mass of footprints that eventually lead to startling revelations.

It cannot be disputed that the MHRA or Glaxo have never been made aware of Seroxat withdrawal - the papers above prove this as do the number of yellow cards sent to the MHRA.

There are many more publications that, for now, I shall zip up and send on to the solicitors acting for the plaintiffs in the current UK Seroxat Group Action.

They probably already have them, if they don't, then their thanks should go to former Paxil activist, Rob Robinson, who made these publications available on his website, PaxilProtest, some years ago. A website that Rob removed after allegedly being paid a handsome sum by GlaxoSmithKline.

Part II is coming soon. I will show you how GlaxoSmithKline have called upon the services of a former MHRA employee to act as a witness for them in the up and coming UK Seroxat Group Action.

It's an exclusive and after reading, you may want to scrub yourself in the shower as it is likely to make you squirm and feel dirty.

My loofah awaits.

Fid

ORDER THE PAPERBACK
'THE EVIDENCE, HOWEVER, IS CLEAR...THE SEROXAT SCANDAL' By Bob Fiddaman
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Wednesday, June 02, 2010

Tracking the American Epidemic of Mental Illness - Part II - By Evelyn Pringle

Part I HERE

Part II of a 5 part series

Investigated and written by Evelyn Pringle.

Reproduced with kind permission from the author, Evelyn Pringle




Tracking the American Epidemic of Mental Illness - Part II



Tax dollars are being used to fuel the American epidemic of mental illness by promoting the preemptive drugging of persons supposedly at risk of developing mental disorders, to the great benefit of the pharmaceutical industry.


In March 2010, the US Department of Health & Human Services Substance Abuse & Mental Health Service Administration Center for Mental Health Services announced $16.5 million in funding for "Mental Health Transformation Grants," one of SAMHSA's services grant programs.

"In order to complement but not duplicate the efforts of other CMHS programs, FY 2010 funding for MHTG will focus on services for adults with or at-risk for serious mental illnesses," the agency noted. Applications were required to implement evidence-based or best practices that would create or expand capacity to address one or more of five Strategic Initiatives, including: "Prevent mental illness through outreach, screening, and early interventions for adults with early signs of mental illness or who are at risk, and promote wellness through holistic treatment approaches."
An evidence-based practice, or EBP, refers to approaches to prevention or treatment that are validated by some form of documented research evidence. As an example of a practice that could be implemented, SAMHSA listed under "Prevention and Wellness: Early Intervention," the "Early Detection and Intervention for the Prevention of Psychosis Program (EDIPPP)," along with a link to its website http://www.changemymind.org/.


EDIPPP is a national program replicating the "Portland Identification and Early Referral," or "PIER," a treatment research program at the Main Medical Center, in Portland, Maine.


On a webpage for PIER on the Center's Website, under "Project Overview," it states: "The goals are to improve outcomes and prevent the onset of the psychotic phase of illnesses like Bipolar Disorder, Major Depression, and Schizophrenia."


"This is the first program in the United States to identify the entire population of at risk young persons and offer them treatment," PIER said in a September 26, 2005 press release.


EDIPPP was funded through a $14.4 million million grant for the "National Demonstration of Early Detection, Intervention and Prevention of Psychosis in Adolescents and Young Adults," from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and is "designed to prevent psychosis in teens and young adults," according to an April 10, 2007, announcement on RWJF's launch of the program.


"The national program is expanding PIER's success during the past seven years in identifying and treating young people experiencing subtle and early symptoms that herald the onset of serious mental illness," a November 2007 report in Behavioral Healthcare, by Dr James Maier, a research psychiatrist with PIER, notes.


EDIPPP works with people between the ages of 12 and 25, with an average age of persons entering the program between 15 and 16.


"Widespread dissemination of this early intervention model throughout the United States offers tremendous hope and optimism for combating some of the most devastating and costly illnesses that can afflict young people and their families," Maier claims.


The RWJF grant set up additional EDIPPP sites in Sacramento, California; Salem, Oregon; Ypsilanti, Michigan; and Glen Oaks, New York. A site in Albuquerque, New Mexico was added in 2008.


RWJF also funds a booklet for professionals, on how to prevent mental illness with early detection titled, "Recognizing and Helping Young People at Risk for Psychosis: A Professional’s Guide," which can be downloaded free off the internet.


From the start, PIER has always been primarily funded by RWJF, according to its website. However, on October 13, 2003, Mental Health Weekly reported that the program had received a $3.9 million grant from the National Institute of Mental Health, and a parallel $2 million grant from the Center for Mental Health Services intended for a related program in early identification of non-psychotic disabilities.


In Portland, young people typically are referred to PIER by high school guidance counselors, pediatricians, or other clinicians who attended presentations about PIER's work, visited the PIER Website (http://www.preventmentalillness.org), and are familiar with the early warning symptoms that suggest the onset of a psychotic illness, according to the report in Behavioral Healthcare.




Mental Illness According to PIER


In a fact sheet posted to "Dispel the Myths," the PIER website claims that, "Mental disorders are as easy to diagnose as asthma, diabetes, and cancer."


"Treatments are effective 60%-80% of the time, success rates that meet or exceed success rates for cutting edge treatment for heart disease," the sheet states.


"In many cases, PIER does use medications," the Websites says. "We believe that some of the newer medications effectively improve thinking and combat early symptoms."


"Research suggests these medications may have a protective effect against changes in the brain that cause mental illness," it reports.


Under costs, it reads: "For now, services provided by PIER staff are supported by grants. However, if certain medications, medical tests, or neurological assessments are ordered, there will be a charge."


The PIER program was founded in 2000, by Dr William McFarlane, and after 10 years in operation, on May 28, 2010, the ChangeMyMind website listed only two "case studies and impact stories that illustrate the effectiveness of the Early Detection and Intervention for the Prevention of Psychosis Program."



Medicated for Life


Virtually every person entering the PIER program is prescribed antipsychotics, such as Risperdal or Invega, marketed by Johnson & Johnson, the parent company of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. These prescriptions are off-label because antipsychotics are not FDA approved to "prevent" mental illness in any age group.


An August 2008 article, by Charles Schmidt in Discover Magazine, highlighted the PIER program with a byline that stated: "A new mix of therapy and medication may stave off psychosis among teens at risk."


Schmidt discussed the case of Camila (not her real name), who entered the program in September 2001, when she was 14. "Camila and her family stuck with PIER for the four-year treatment program, which ended formally in 2005, and still keep in touch with counselors there," he reports.


However, "Camila’s health still hinges on antipsychotic medication," Schmidt says. "In the summer of 2007 she went off the drugs for a spell and her strange feelings returned."


He notes that her reliance on antipsychotics raises issues. "On the one hand, it shows that the threat of psychosis hasn’t really been removed, it’s just been held in check."


"What we hope is that the benefits of treatment will be lifelong," McFarlane says in the article. "We don’t have any empirical evidence to support that yet, but what we’ve seen is that young people who still haven’t converted to psychosis after about three years of our treatment don’t seem to be at much risk."


While he suggests that over time, some patients may be able to go off medications, McFarlane acknowledges that PIER hasn’t developed a plan for managing that process, Schmidt reports.


"As to when or if they can go off medication, that’s hard to say," he told Schmidt. "I think many of our patients don’t feel a need to stop; they certainly don’t feel oppressed by it. At a certain point it becomes a personal choice."


A fortune can be made from these life-long antipsychotic customers. In April 2010, the price for one box of Invega, at a middle dose, was $1,373 at DrugStore.com. Risperdal went for $788 per 90 pills. The cost was $1,395 for 100 tablets of Abilify. Seroquel cost $997 per 100. One-hundred capsules of Geodon sold for $918 and Zyprexa cost $1,523 for a hundred 10mg pills.


In 2003, McFarlane told Mental Health Weekly that with about 3% of the population at risk for a serious mental illness, Greater Portland could expect about 75 young people to develop a disorder each year.



RWJF Front Group


The founder of RWJF, Robert Wood Johnson, was chairman of Johnson & Johnson for over 30 years, from 1932 to 1963, as a member of the drug maker's founding family. Throughout the years, the majority of the Foundation's money has come from investments in J&J stock. RWJF's board of trustees has always been stacked with the drug company's executives. For instance, current and past trustees have held positions at J&J such as President, CEO, Vice President, Chairman of the Board, and Treasurer, and have served along side another family heir on the board, Robert Wood Johnson IV.


RWJF is listed in a Medicaid fraud lawsuit, filed against J&J by whistleblower, Allen Jones, a former federal fraud investigator, and joined by the Texas attorney general, as providing funding for illegal marketing schemes to increase the off-label sales of Risperdal, including funding the development of the "Texas Medication Algorithm Project (TMAP)," which required doctors to prescribe the newest, most expensive antipsychotics, antidepressants, anticonvulsants, and ADHD drugs to patients covered by public programs, like Medicaid and Medicare, who were diagnosed with mental disorders, and a nearly identical set of child drugging guidelines known as the "Texas Children's Medication Algorithm Project (CMAP)."


In addition to Risperdal and Invega, J&J also markets the ADHD drug Concerta, and Topamax, an anticonvulsant.


A May 11, 2005, report by RWJF on the results of the funding of TMAP grants totaling $2,389,581 to the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas and a grant of $353,747 to the Texas Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation, describes the supposed "Problem," that led to the creation of the TMAP drugging guidelines as:


"In the 1980's and 1990's, as pharmaceutical companies began producing new and more efficacious medications to treat people with serious mental disorders such as depression, bipolar disorder, and schizophrenia, the question arose of how to choose the most appropriate treatment options. Concerns about wide variation in prescribing practices by physicians and complaints from consumer advocates about the negative consequences of this variation spurred the creation of evidence-based guidelines and medication treatment algorithms."


The "Contacts" for the grants listed in the report, were Dr A John Rush, for the University, and Dr Steven Shon for the state of Texas. Shon was fired in October 2006, after the Texas attorney general determined that J&J had improperly influenced him to make Risperdal a preferred drug on TMAP. In 2008, Rush was added to a list of psychiatric academics who failed to disclose all the payments they received from drug companies, by Senator Charles Grassley, as part of an investigation conducted on behalf of the US Senate Finance Committee, which oversees Medicaid and Medicare spending.


As a main component of the off-label marketing schemes, the lawsuits against the antipsychotic makers allege that the drug companies “seeded” the medical literature with reports and papers purporting to be written by "experts" when they were actually ghostwritten with the names of experts attached after the fact.


In its report on the TMAP grant results, RWJF boasts that: "More than 50 articles on the Texas Medication Algorithm Project have appeared in the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, Psychiatry Research, Managed Care, Health Services Research, Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and other peer-reviewed journals."


"Over the next two years, Project Directors Rush and Shon and their colleagues plan to publish additional articles on other areas of interest," the report said.


On August 18, 2008, a Dallas Morning News headline read: "Conflict of interest fears halt children's mental health project," in reference to the Children's Medication Algorithm Project. "A state mental health plan naming the preferred psychiatric drugs for children has been quietly put on hold over fears drug companies may have given researchers consulting contracts, speakers fees or other perks to help get their products on the list," the News wrote.


To date, four of the five atypical makers have settled fraud charges involving the illegal off-label marketing of antipsychotics, including for use with children. Eli Lilly paid $1.4 billion for Zyprexa, Bristol-Myers Squibb's fine was $515 million for Abilify, Pfizer paid $301 for Geodon, and AstraZeneca just forked out $520 million for Seroquel.


But the fines are merely chocked up to the cost of doing business. For instance, although AstraZeneca paid a whopping $520 million fine, Seroquel had sales of $4.9 billion in 2009, with more than half coming from the US. Overall, antipsychotics were the top-earning class of drugs in the US, in both 2008 and 2009, with sales of $14.6 billion in 2009, according to IMS Health.


J&J is the only atypical maker that has not settled the off-label marketing charges against it - yet. However, two units of J&J "will pay more than $81 million to resolve criminal and civil claims over illegal promotion of the epilepsy drug Topamax," according to Bloomberg news on April 29, 2010.


Also, over the past 2 months, J&J's McNeil division has recalled over 40 varieties of child and baby medications after the FDA found massive safety and manufacturing violations at a plant in Fort Washington, Pennsylvania, including formulations of Tylenol, Motrin, Zyrtec and Benadryl. The FDA also found problems with "strength, quality and purity."


The FDA's inspection report notes that J&J received about 46 consumer complaints “regarding foreign materials, black or dark specks [in their drugs] from June 2009 to April 2010.” J&J had knowledge of problems since May 2009, which means it was allowing children and infants to ingest potentially poisonous drugs for a year before the product recall took place.


Time Magazine as Promoter


On June 22, 2009, the RWJF website posted a link to download the full text of an article in Time Magazine, by John Cloud titled, "Staying Sane May Be Easier Than You Think," who reported: "The most exciting research in mental health today involves not how to treat mental illness but how to prevent it in the first place."


"In fact," Cloud said, "many mental illnesses — even those like schizophrenia that have demonstrable genetic origins — can be stopped or at least contained before they start."


"This isn't wishful thinking but hard science," he claimed.


The article discussed a report by the National Academics, "an organization of experts who investigate science for the Federal Government," nearly two years in the making, "on how to prevent mental, emotional and behavioral disorders." A quick check found one of the sponsors of the National Academies to be RWJF.


"The report concludes that pre-empting such disorders requires two kinds of interventions," Cloud said, "first, because genes play so important a role in mental illness, we need to ensure that close relatives (particularly children) of those with mental disorders have access to rigorous screening programs."


"Second," he noted, "we must offer treatment to people who have already shown symptoms of illness (say, a tendency to brood and see the world without optimism) but don't meet the diagnostic criteria for a full-scale mental illness (in this case, depression)."


"Some prevention programs even prescribe psychiatric medications, including antipsychotics and antidepressants, to people who aren't technically psychotic or depressed," Time reported.


"This is a big concern," Joseph Rogers, founder of the Philadelphia-based National Mental Health Consumers' Self-Help Clearinghouse told Cloud. "Because, gee, if you miss, you can really do more harm with some of these drugs than good."


"But those who contributed to the National Academies report say preventing the suffering of people with mental illness is worth the risk of some false positives, partly because of the enormous cost of treating mental illness after it's struck," Cloud reported.


The article profiled PIER and McFarlane, who was described as "one of the world's top authorities on preventing mental illness."


According to Time, the "National Institute of Mental Health is funding a trial of McFarlane's work, and while he is still writing up his data for publication, his anecdotal results are promising: most of the kids are so far avoiding a first psychotic episode."



Preemptive Drugging Unsupported


In a 2008 paper titled, Atypical Antipsychotic Agents For the Schizophrenia Prodrome: Not a Clear First Choice," published in the "International Journal of Risk & Safety in Medicine," Dr Stefan Kruszewski, a psychiatrist, and Dr Richard Paczynski, a neurologist, both from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, explain that, "Pharmacologic intervention at the earliest stages of suspected psychotic illness is an intuitively appealing concept and a logical extension of the current approach to many other diseases of the central nervous system."


"However," they report, "a critical analysis of the results of structured clinical investigations which have explored the use of ATAPs for new-onset psychotic symptoms raises safety concerns and does not support pre-medication in this setting as a preventive strategy."


"Over the past several years," the paper states, "a voice has emerged in the international psychiatric community recommending early prescription of the atypical antipsychotic agents (ATAPs) for adolescents and young adults who appear to show signs consistent with a schizophrenia prodrome. Early use is predicated on the possibility that ATAPs may prevent progression to full-blown psychotic illness in this high-risk population. "


"This trend has been encouraged despite a paucity of data which clearly support the effectiveness of these agents for this indication, and despite evidence of adverse side effects including," the authors note.


These circumstances prompted their literature review, "focusing on the five published studies that have explicitly addressed the preventative efficacy of the most widely prescribed ATAPs in structured (i.e., non-anecdotal) clinical settings."


In the summary and conclusion section of the paper, the authors report that the results from the available controlled trials reviewed are in line with several of the conclusions of the naturalistic study by Cornblatt et al. "That is, early prescription of ATAPs to adolescents and young adults seeking medical attention for prodromal psychotic symptoms is associated with high rates of medication non-adherence."


"Additionally," they say, "the introduction of ATAPs was not associated with reduction in the rate of conversion to formal psychosis beyond that explainable by chance and/or the introduction of bias secondary to baseline imbalances, inadequate blinding or even differential psychosocial supports."


"We suggest caution in making any assumptions that justify changes in prescription-writing behavior when it involves patients who are at high risk for developing long-term psychotic illnesses but have never demonstrated sustained psychosis (psychotic illness by DSM-IV criteria)," Kruszewski and Paczynski advise.


"This would include but is not limited to persons with suspected schizophrenia prodrome," they add.


"Even in the hands of experienced investigators using detailed screening protocols in controlled settings, only one-quarter to one-third of high-risk patients converted to full-blown psychosis," they report.


"Consequently," they warn, "if early use of ATAPs continues as a quasi-standard of care for new-onset psychotic symptoms, a large majority of these often young individuals will be exposed unnecessarily to poorly defined but likely substantial risks, including but not limited to obesity, hyperlipidemia, metabolic syndrome, increased rates of type II diabetes mellitus and extrapyramidal syndromes, both acute and chronic."


"Considerations of safety must come first when the preventative efficacy of these agents remains so poorly defined," they conclude.


(Part III of this series will highlight the Psychiatric Industrial Complex as the driving force behind the American Epidemic of Mental Illness)


Evelyn Pringle


This series is sponsored by the International Center for the Study of Psychiatry and Psychology

Fid

ORDER THE PAPERBACK
'THE EVIDENCE, HOWEVER, IS CLEAR...THE SEROXAT SCANDAL' By Bob Fiddaman
SIGNED COPIES HERE OR UNSIGNED FROM CHIPMUNKA PUBLISHING

Tracking the American Epidemic of Mental Illness - Part I by Evelyn Pringle


Image: canadiansovereignty.files.wordpress.com


This article is Part I of a 5 Part Series.

Investigated and written by Evelyn Pringle.

Reproduced with kind permission from the author, Evelyn Pringle



Tracking the American Epidemic of Mental Illness - Part I




Over a twenty year span, starting when Prozac came on the market in 1987, the number of people on government disability due to mental illness went from 1.25 million to more than 4 million today. There has been a 35-fold increase in the number of children disabled by mental illness who receive federal disability payments, rising from 16,200 in 1987, to 561,569 in 2007.


These statistics come from a new book titled, "Anatomy of an Epidemic: Magic Bullets, Psychiatric Drugs, and the Astonishing Rise of Mental Illness, in America," by award winning journalist, Robert Whitaker, who also authored "Mad in America."


For the book, Whitaker reviewed 50 years of outcomes in the medical literature, for adults with schizophrenia, anxiety, depression, and bipolar illness, and the childhood disorders of ADHD, depression and juvenile bipolar disorder, to see whether medications had altered the long-term course of the disorders and whether drugs could bring on new or more severe psychiatric symptoms.


His intent was to assess whether this paradigm of care increased the risk that a person would become chronically ill, or ill with disabling symptoms, he reports in his "Mad in America" blog, on the Psychology Today website.


"Although we, as a society, believe that psychiatric medications have "revolutionized" the treatment of mental illness, the disability numbers suggest a very different possibility," he wrote in the April 28, 2010, Huffington Post.


On April 29, 2010, Alternet published an interview with Whitaker by Dr Bruce Levine, with the headline question of, "Are Prozac and Other Psychiatric Drugs Causing the Astonishing Rise of Mental Illness in America?"


The "literature is remarkably consistent in the story it tells," Whitaker told Levine. "Although psychiatric medications may be effective over the short term, they increase the likelihood that a person will become chronically ill over the long term."


"In addition, the scientific literature shows that many patients treated for a milder problem will worsen in response to a drug-- say have a manic episode after taking an antidepressant -- and that can lead to a new and more severe diagnosis like bipolar disorder," he said. "That is a well-documented iatrogenic pathway that is helping to fuel the increase in the disability numbers."


During the interview, Whitaker discusses his research on the increase of juvenile bipolar disorder in the US, as an example of how prescribing psychiatric drugs to children can actually cause mental illness.


"When you research the rise of juvenile bipolar illness in this country, you see that it appears in lockstep with the prescribing of stimulants for ADHD and antidepressants for depression," he reports.


"Prior to the use of those medications, you find that researchers reported that manic-depressive illness, which is what bipolar illness was called at the time, virtually never occurred in prepubertal children," he explains.


"But once psychiatrists started putting “hyperactive” children on Ritalin, they started to see prepubertal children with manic symptoms," he reports.


"Same thing happened when psychiatrists started prescribing antidepressants to children and teenagers," Whitaker says. "A significant percentage had manic or hypomanic reactions to the antidepressants. "


"Thus, we see these two iatrogenic pathways to a juvenile bipolar diagnosis documented in the medical literature," he states.


The bipolar kids often end up on cocktails of heavy-duty drugs, including antipsychotics such as Zyprexa, Risperdal, Invega, Seroquel, Abilify and Geodon, which cause a host of physical problems and possible cognitive decline over the long term, he told Levine.


"When you add up all this information, you end up documenting a story of how the lives of hundreds of thousands of children in the United States have been destroyed in this way," Whitaker says.


In fact, he thinks that "the number of children and teenagers that have ended up “bipolar” after being treated with a stimulant or an antidepressant is now well over one million."


"This is a story of harm done on an unimaginable scale," he told Levine.


Levine, an author himself of "Surviving America's Depression Epidemic," describes "Anatomy of an Epidemic," as the "most important book on psychiatric treatment in a generation."




Role of American Psychiatric Association


In 2006, the 38,000 member strong, American Psychiatric Association, received 30% of their funding, or more than $20 million, from the pharmaceutical industry.


This year's attendees at the group's annual meeting last month in New Orleans "had to brave 200 protestors chanting "no drugging kids for money" and "no conflicts of interest" to get into the convention hall," according to Martha Rosenberg's May 30, 2010 report in OpEd News.


"If there were a take home message at the APA meeting about the blizzard of ADHD, bipolar and personality disorders threatening adults and children, it was don't wait," Rosenberg says. "These dangerous conditions, likened to cancer and diabetes, won't go away."


"Thanks to genetic advancements, psychiatric disease risks can now be detected and treated before symptoms surface, said presenters, fostering early treatment paradigms that are pretty Brave New World: People being told they have a disease they can't feel that needs immediate and lifelong treatment at hundreds of dollars a month or their health will suffer," she reports.


"Preemptive psychiatric drugging is likely the most dangerous idea that has come along since lobotomy," warns the prolific anti-drugging activist, Vince Boehm.


As far as drugs, there was no star of the show, Rosenberg says. "The Next Big Thing was not a new drug at all but adjunctive therapy also known as adding existing drugs to existing drugs because they don't work right."


"Throwing good drugs after bad, popularized with the antipsychotic Abilify," she explains, "has only been enhanced by a study in the January JAMA that found antidepressants don't work for mild depression at all."


"Antipsychotics are also being "enhanced" by adding drugs to offset weight gain and lethargic side effects," she reports.


"The pharmaco-fraudulence which has taken over psychiatry today is absolutely breathtaking," says Dr Nathaniel Lehrman, former Clinical Director of Kingsboro Psychiatric Center, Brooklyn NY.


"There is absolutely no rationale for adding antipsychotics to antidepressants in the treatment of depression other than the hope that somehow the patient will feel better when new medication is added when the old is not enough," he reports.


Lehrman can think of no medication "which is really specific for anything in psychiatry."


"The effect of all these medications is largely happenstance," he says. "If something happens to make the patient feel better while taking a particular medication, the latter will be credited."



Catalog of Mental Disorders


In January 2010, the APA released a draft for the 5th edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, or DSM-V, also known as the Billing Bible of psychiatry, with the official definitions of normal and abnormal. Criticisms of the revisions and the task force have been non-stop.


In a March, 2010, analysis in Psychiatric Times, Lisa Cosgrove and Harold Bursztajn reported that approximately 68% of the members of the DSM5 task force had financial ties to the pharmaceutical industry, a 2% increase over the task force members of the DSM4 with such ties.


The draft criteria for "Temper Dysregulation Disorder with Dysphoria," has specifically come under attack as "one of the most dangerous and poorly conceived suggestions for DSM5," by Dr Allen Frances, who was chairman of the DSM-IV Task Force, in his "DSM5 in Distress" blog on the Psychology Today Website.


"Apparently, the Work Group was trying to correct excessive diagnosis of childhood bipolar disorder—but its suggestion is so poorly written that it could not possibly accomplish this goal and instead would it would create a new monster," he advises.


"The “diagnosis” would be very common at every age in the general population and would promote a large expansion in the use of antipsychotic medications, with all of the serious attendant risks," he warns.


"While trying to rescue kids who are now misdiagnosed as bipolar," Frances says, "it will undoubtedly open the door to the misdiagnosis of normal kids who happen to be temperamental or in difficult family circumstances."


The syndrome was first called "severe mood dysregulation (SMD)," but the Childhood Disorders Work Group decided to rename it "temper dysregulation with dysphoria (TDD)," because (a) the new name is more descriptive; and (b) the name of DSM diagnoses does not typically include a denotation of severity, according to the group's report.


In any event, the prescribing of psychiatric drug cocktails will continue no matter what they end up calling the new disorder. If TDD is a form of BD, "first-line treatment would consist of atypical antipsychotic medication and/or mood stabilizers," the group states in the report. "On the other hand, if TDD is on a continuum with unipolar depressive disorders, anxiety disorders, and ADHD, first-line treatment would consist of serotonergic reuptake inhibitor antidepressants (SSRI’s) and stimulants."


In a March 8, 2010 article in Skeptic Magazine, Dr John Sorboro warned that the "folks writing the new DSM-V are even considering a new classification of “prodromal” disorders, which means you may qualify for diagnosis of a mental disorder just based on the hunch of your psychiatrist. "


"Psychiatrists get paid for treating mental illness," he says. "There is a strong motivation for them to look at things they used to attribute to chronic personality, or just life, and see them as psychiatric illness. "


"These changes have nothing to do with any real definitive science or specific tests that can effectively demonstrate who has a disorder," Sorbora notes. "It’s little more than psychiatry repackaging people with different labels."


"Who gets what label has a lot more to do with politics and the economics of psychiatry than it does with any true understanding of the developmental or biologic underpinnings of specific behavior let alone whether we choose to see "different" as "disordered," he points out.


Sorboro says following the money has led many people to seriously question "the motivations of some of psychiatry’s most prolific researchers who shape how people get diagnosed, what disorder label they are given, and what drugs they are prescribed."


He notes Senator Charles Grassley's ongoing investigation to determine the full extent of industry fees paid to psychiatric researchers, and that "some of the biggest names in the business have been accused of misconduct."


The "biggest names in the business," identified by Grassley thus far, include Harvard University's Joseph Biederman, Thomas Spencer and Timothy Wilens; Charles Nemeroff and Zachery Stowe from Emory University; Melissa DelBello at the University of Cincinnati; Alan Schatzberg, the president of the American Psychiatric Association from Stanford University; Martin Keller at Brown University; Karen Wagner and A John Rush from the University of Texas; and Fredrick Goodwin, the former host of a radio show called "Infinite Minds," broadcast for years by National Pubic Radio.


"Among all the problematic suggestions for DSM5, the proposal for a " Psychosis Risk Syndrome" stands out as the most ill conceived and potentially harmful," according to Dr Frances, in his "DSM5 in Distress" blog on the Psychology Today Website.


"This is a clearly the prescription for an iatrogenic public health disaster," he warns.


"The whole concept of early intervention rests on three fundamental pillars- being able to diagnose the right people and then providing them with a treatment that is effective and safe," he explains. "Psychosis Risk Syndrome" fails badly on all three counts, he warns.


"The false positive rate would be alarming," he says, "70% to 75% in the most careful studies and likely to be much higher once the diagnosis is official, in general use, and becomes a target for drug companies."


"Hundreds of thousands of teenagers and young adults (especially, it turns out, those on Medicaid) would receive the unnecessary prescription of atypical antipsychotic drugs," he warns.


"There is no proof that the atypical antipsychotics prevent psychotic episodes," he says, "but they do most certainly cause large and rapid weight gains (see the recent FDA warning) and are associated with reduced life expectancy—to say nothing about their high cost, other side effects, and stigma."


"Imagine the human tragedies that follow the mislabeling of 70% of children as severely mentally ill, who are then exposed to extremely toxic drugs that induce diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and a host of other severe adverse effects," warned Vera Hassner Sharav, founder and president of the Alliance for Human Research Protection, in a February 10, 2010 Infomail.




Unnecessary Drugging


"We are going to have an epidemic of young adults with yet-to-be-determined neurological problems due to the long term use of psychotropic drugs," warns Washington DC psychiatrist Dr Joseph Tarantolo, Board Chairperson of the International Center for the Study of Psychiatry and Psychology.


An epidemic is defined as 1% of the population and there will be far more than 1% injured by these drugs, he says.


Every human being is at risk of becoming "psychotic," he states. "It has been said that in the Nazi Germany concentration camps psychosis was 100%."


"Once one agrees that something is universal, one is simply trying to describe the human condition, not make a medical diagnosis," Tarantolo advises.


Dr Stefan Kruszewski, a graduate of Princeton University and Harvard Medical School, has seen many patients who experienced one or more episodes of psychosis from medications, illicit drug withdrawal, acute stress, metabolic conditions, PTSD or other psychiatric diagnoses, "who recovered and did not re-experience problems later in life."


In his extensive clinical experience with psychotic individuals, "recovery after psychosis has been the "norm," not the exception," he says


"More significantly, and somewhat contrary to the prevailing psychiatric professional view," he notes, "the overwhelming majority of my clients in who I observed this ‘norm’ did NOT require psychiatric medicines to sustain them."


"And, many of them who were prescribed antipsychotic medications to ‘thwart’ another psychotic episode fared somewhat worse than those who were not prescribed any combination of antipsychotics and mood stabilizers," he adds.


Dr Thomas Edward Bratter is president and founder of the John Dewey Academy in Massachusetts, a residential, voluntary, educational-treatment school for gifted but self-destructive adolescents. This drug and medicine-free facility uses compassionate psychotherapy.


Most students arrive at the Academy with multi DSM-IV labels to justify prescribing psychotropic poisons and receiving third party payments, Bratter says, and have been "raped by the pejorative psychiatric cartel."


He calls the "Psychosis Risk Syndrome" criminal because "such a diagnosis ignores the awesome toxic power of a negative self-fulfilling prophesy which maximizes failure by perpetrating the unproven myth of mental illness."


"There needs to be a class action against those who would endorse this movement," he says, and Bratter would gladly testify on behalf of children and adolescents who need to be protected from such a toxic and damaging conspiracy.


Toxicology expert, Dr Lawrence Plumlee, is president of the Chemical Sensitivities Disorders Association, and editor of, "The Environmental Physician of the American Academy of Environmental Medicine."


The Chemical Sensitivity Disorders Association was established to provide information and support to chemically sensitive people; to disseminate information to physicians, scientists and other interested persons; and to encourage research on chemical sensitivity disorders and minimizing hazards to human health.


Plumlee is concerned about the DSM5 proposal by the Somatic Symptom Disorders Work Group, to change the name of the category "Somatic Symptom Disorders," to "Complex Somatic Symptom Disorder."


"The new draft DSM manual proposes that chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, and multiple chemical sensitivity are "somatiform" disorders requiring psychiatric consultation," he says. "It's the same old story of Psychiatry trying to extend its diagnostic labels and drug treatments to new populations."


This is "an effort by psychiatry to psychiatrize physical illnesses and to try to suppress the complaints of these patients by prescribing psychiatric drugs," Plumlee says.


"But experience is showing that the psychiatric procedures and drugs are making patients worse," he advises.


Using psychiatric diagnoses and drugs on diseases of neurotoxicity helps the chemical companies in two ways, he reports. "It fools some people into thinking that poisoned people are crazy, thus getting the poisoners (chemical companies) off the hook," and two, "it sells more chemicals (psychiatric drugs) to treat those who really need detoxification, not more chemicals in their bodies. "



(Part II of this series with show how tax dollars are being used to fuel the American Epidemic of Mental Illness)




Evelyn Pringle



This series is sponsored by the International Center for the Study of Psychiatry and Psychology



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Glaxo settles more Avandia lawsuits in U.S.


Image: localtechwire.com

(Reuters) - GlaxoSmithKline Plc has settled thousands more lawsuits brought by patients alleging its Avandia diabetes drug caused heart attacks, in a move that may defuse potentially massive claims over the medicine.

A company spokeswoman said on Tuesday that consolidated cases which had been due to come to court in Philadelphia this month had been settled. She declined to give further details and said the terms remained confidential.

The first product liability case involving Avandia will now go to court in the United States in October, she added.

The move follows the separate settlement of some 700 cases last month for about $60 million.

Analysts estimate Glaxo had faced a total of 13,000 claims for damages involving Avandia, of which around 5,000 were consolidated in Philadelphia, and there had been fears it could face damages of up to $6 billion.

However, last month's relative modest settlement deal and the latest settlement in Philadelphia suggests the amount paid out by the British-based drugmaker is likely to be a lot lower.


Glaxo are in the high court in the UK later this year defending their antidepressant drug, Seroxat.

The High Court in England made a Group Litigation Order in relation to the Group Action brought by around 500 individuals alleging harm from problems withdrawing from Seroxat.

GlaxoSmithKline's corporate motto is 'committed to improving the quality of human life'

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Tuesday, June 01, 2010

UK GOVERNMENT ACCUSED OF VACCINES COVER-UP


Image: thenhf.com

Journalist Christina England's latest article should shock. Sadly, this story of the UK government's close relationship to pharmaceutical companies is now all too familiar.

Christina has recently interviewed Professor Gordon T Stewart, a professional who has been speaking out on the adverse reactions to vaccines since 1950’s.

She writes:

Prof Stewart who was 91 at the time of the interview, wanted the truth to be told, about what really goes on when it comes to the Department of Health agreeing to a vaccine being given to the general public. To back up his evidence he gave me the unique experience of examining with him an array of letters, documents and papers that he had kept over many years, some of which have still never been seen by the public today. He explained exactly what evidence he had, the in depth studies that he had carried out and about his research. He explained about how shocked he had been about the attitudes of the Department of Health, the Joint Committee of Vaccine and Immunization and the Committee on the Safety of Medicines, when he presented them with his evidence and how they chose the ignore the facts in favour of mass vaccination.


Her article shows how Professor Stewart provided the UK Government with evidence that he had researched, evidence that the authorities completely ignored.

In one of his letters, regarding the whooping cough vaccine, to Dr John Badenoch, who was the then Chairman of the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation [JCVI], Stewart writes:

The problem I see with all this, is that many thousands of children suffered permanent disability and death through having the whooping cough vaccine and the Government sat back with their fat cigars and allowed this to happen.


It's a fascinating article and ends with a chilling message from Christina England:

It is a fact that the Governments do lie and hide facts in a bid to push parents into vaccinating their children as my evidence has shown. Next time you open your newspaper and read about a vaccine and how ‘perfectly safe’ it is, please think twice, it might not be as safe as the Government lead us to believe.


The article plus Professors Stewart’s letters to the authorities can be read HERE

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