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Health/Medical Title: Psychiatric Drugs Kill 500k+ Western Adults Annually, Few Positive Benefits (Yet Drug Warriors Call Pot "Dangerous") Psychiatric drugs lead to the deaths of over 500,000 people aged 65 and over annually in the West, a Danish scientist says. He warns the benefits of these drugs are minimal, and have been vastly overstated. Research director at Denmarks Nordic Cochrane Centre, Professor Peter Gøtzsche, says the use of most antidepressants and dementia drugs could be halted without inflicting harm on patients. The Danish scientists views were published in the British Medical Journal on Tuesday. His scathing analysis will likely prove controversial among traditional medics. However, concern is mounting among doctors and scientists worldwide that psychiatric medication is doing more harm than good. In particular, they say antipsychotic drugs have been overprescribed to many dementia patients in a bid to calm agitated behavior. Gøtzsche warns psychiatric drugs kill patients year in year out, and hold few positive benefits. He says in excess of half a million citizens across the Western world aged 65 and over die annually as a result of taking these drugs. Their benefits would need to be colossal to justify this, but they are minimal, he writes. Given their lack of benefit, I estimate we could stop almost all psychotropic drugs without causing harm. Gøtzsche, who is also a clinical trials expert, says drug trials funded by big pharmaceutical companies tend to produce biased results because many patients took other medication prior to the tests. He says patients cease taking the old drugs and then experience a phase of withdrawal prior to taking the trial pharmaceuticals, which appear highly beneficial at first. The Danish professor also warns fatalities from suicides in clinical trials are significantly under-reported. In the case of antidepressants venlafaxine and fluoxetine, Gøtzsche casts doubt over their efficacy. He said depression lifts in placebo groups given fake tablets almost as promptly as groups who partake in official clinical tests. He also stressed the results of trials of drugs used to treat schizophrenia are disconcerting, while those for ADHD are ambiguous. Commenting on the negative side effects of such pharmaceutical drugs, Gøtzsche argued the short-term relief appears to be replaced by long term harm. Animal studies strongly suggest that these drugs can produce brain damage, which is probably the case for all psychotropic drugs,he said. Given their lack of benefit, I estimate we could stop almost all psychotropic drugs without causing harm by dropping all antidepressants, ADHD drugs and dementia drugs
and using only a fraction of the antipsychotics and benzodiazepines we currently use. This would lead to healthier and more long-lived populations. Gøtzsche says psychotropic drugs are immensely harmful if used for prolonged periods. They should almost exclusively be used in acute situations and always with a firm plan for tapering off, which can be difficult for many patients, he adds. Gøtzsches views are sharply contradicted by many experts in the field of mental health. But others, including a diverse group of medical experts and institutions affiliated with the Nordic Cochrane Centre, argue otherwise. The Nordic Cochrane Centre is an independent research hub dedicated to scrutinizing and monitoring the effects of health care. The debate on psychiatric drugs has gathered momentum in recent times. In the discussion, published in the British Medical Journal (BMJ), Gøtzsches arguments are contradicted by Professor of Mood Disorders Allan Young and John Crace. Crace, himself a psychiatric patient, writes for the Guardian. Crace and Young say a broad body of research indicates the drugs are effective and that they are just as helpful as drugs for other ailments. They also argue mental health conditions are the fifth most significant contributor to disabilities worldwide. While Gøtzsche stresses clinical trials bankrolled by pharma giants churn out skewered results, Young and Crace say the efficacy and safety of psychiatric medication continues to be monitored after research trials come to a close. However, both Young and Crace acknowledge concern over the side effects and effectiveness of psychiatric medication. For some critics, the onus often seems to be on the drug needing to prove innocence from causing harm rather than a balanced approach to evaluating the available evidence, they write. Whether concerns are genuine or an expression of prejudice is not clear, but over time many concerns have been found to be overinflated. The BMJ discussion is a preamble to the Maudsley debate at Kings College London on Wednesday. The debate takes place three times a year at the universitys Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience (IoPPN). Wednesdays debate focuses on the impacts of psychiatric medications, and poses the question of whether they prove more destructive for patients than beneficial. Reprinted from Russia Today.
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#1. To: Deckard (#0)
How do these psychiatric drugs kill patients? How does he know it wasn't the underlying depression that killed them? What a crock of shit article.
here http://ssristories.org/old/index1.php This has been pointed out to you before but you keep ignoring it. Why is that? You and Gatlin need to understand that the war on cannabis is over and you lost
No, America has lost. We are now stuck with an extensive population of debilitated mental vegetables who say, "What, me worry" and light up a joint for a feeling of security. They are not dependable for anything except drug use.
America didn't lose because some people (like Carl Sagan) were puffing on joints. It lost because the Government turned and sold out the people for money and power. You really should worry about the real drug problem that is getting worse every day and really does cause violence and mayhem: ssristories
#26. To: Operation 40 (#23)
I stand with my original statement.
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