Translate

Showing posts with label suicide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label suicide. Show all posts

Thursday, 3 March 2022

The MHRA Roaccutane / isotretinoin Inquiry into harms some people suffer, is still ongoing. Plus link to Millie Kieve's newest video.

 Re the MHRA Isotretinoin expert working Group (IEWG) conclusions following  submission of evidence from Millie Kieve for APRIL charity, together with many parents tragically bereaved by the suicide of their child.

The outcome  of our written and face to face (via Zoom) submissions of evidence, is very slow to emerge and more will be posted about this at a later date.

For my part (Millie)  - News of the work for APRIL which is ongoing, even though my age tells me to slow down!

I have now given up the office as I had rarely been into the space since the Covid lockdown, so am working on books about the history of APRIL and my life in fact!

In the meantime I have updated some videos on the Vimeo web site and this one is the newest:

https://vimeo.com/683984803

It is a talk that started as a conversation between me and my long time volunteer and friend Kathy.

I decided as I was explaining some of the history of the efforts I have made to help towards greater patient safety, I may as well record this. So I added still pictures to help illustrate the information. This covers the early years around the time of the  first conference I organised.

This includes when Dr David Healy (now Professor) was rejected after having his post as Professor in Toronto, following his talk to a few doctors, I believe, about the risk of suicide for some people taking antidepressant SSRI and similar drugs. You will hear he did agree to speak at that first conference, which led to the amazing work by the BBC Panorama team in highlighting the issues around dependence and harm caused by the SSRI antidepressant Seroxat. 

The fact that dosage was licensed too high and how the CEO of MIND charity actually resigned from and committee of people working for the Medicines regulator at the time, for reasons of failure to disclose or act on harm they knew about.

Please listen to the 11 minute 'conversation' in which I do actually include Kath's contribution, but not all as it may have been unsuitable for sharing! 

There are many videos of interest I have edited and included on Vimeo and the link to them all is on the Home Page of APRIL's web site https://www.april.org.uk Talks by leading experts in adverse drug reactions (ADRs) and how clinical trials have been rigged in favour of benefits from medicines with cover up of harms. Testimonials of suffering and recovery from people who have been sectioned for psychiatric issues, some due to the ADRs they suffered.

I will do more on the blog if I can be sure some people are still reading my posts. Please enter your email to be informed of new posts. I have no access to that data so have no idea how many of you may have signed up.

Kind regards to all and stay safe from Covid - with heartfelt concern for those in Ukraine who have far more  than Covid to worry about.

Wednesday, 3 February 2021

Inquiry invites your views as concern about psychiatric and physical harm from acne drug isotretinoin / Ro - Accutane / Reticutan / Rizuderm

 Isotretinoin / Roaccutane / Reticutan / Rizuderm / Accutane 

Please submit your views for an Expert Review of your experience or your relative or friend's as to the safety or otherwise of this acne medication.

https://www.gov.uk/government/consultations/isotretinoin-call-for-information-to-be-considered-as-part-of-an-expert-review 

Closing date for submission extend to 16th February 2021 

UK and non UK submissions welcome

Concerns about suicide, depression and physical harm linked to using this acne medication are worldwide. 

EU ADR database records psychiatric Adverse Drug Reactions (ADRs) 30,295 with reported cases of completed suicide by people using the acne drug 440 by 01/02/21

The original manufacturer Roche withdrew the drug from the US market following extensive amount of litigation. The US litigation was also about the drug causing Inflammatory Bowel Disease such as Ulcerative Colitis.

Only licensed for for severe acne, yet has been given to people with mild acne. One young medical student with a few spots on his back died by suicide - you can hear his father's account here: https://vimeo.com/16759077 

 Roaccutane / isotretinoin and generic versions can cause serious adverse reactions for some people . 

Please submit your views for the Expert Review due to concerns about suicide, depression and physical harm linked to usage - date has been extended until February 16 2021.

Worldwide - not just the UK - so please if you have any views, if you or a family member has concerns about adverse effects you may not expect, such as on libido or mood changes  or  if you were bereaved suddenly and the victim was using or had stopped using the acne drug, please access via the link below and submit your views by Feb 16 2021

https://www.gov.uk/government/consultations/isotretinoin-call-for-information-to-be-considered-as-part-of-an-expert-review 

Monday, 8 May 2017

Another tragic suicide linked to acne drug Roaccutane

http://www.eadt.co.uk/news/our-happy-go-lucky-luke-changed-after-taking-acne-drug-colchester-family-say-after-son-s-suicide-1-5005927

The tragic suicide in May 2017 of 21 year old Luke Reeves is so sad and one wonders if the consultant who prescribed the drug Roaccutane (isotretinoin) was taken in by the manufacturer's claim that suicides linked to the drug are 'rare'. The need to monitor patients on some drugs know to have psychiatric adverse effects is often not followed.

isotretinoin called Accutane in the USA and Roaccutane in the UK is a drug derived from Vitamin A with known serious adverse side effects, works for some people to reduce their acne - but for others it can lead to tragic ill health, long term depression and in some cases suicide.

I just sent the following information to a journalist:

My main comment is that parents should look a the pharmaceutical company data sheet

 which states under the heading
 4.4 Special warnings and precautions for use:

Psychiatric disorders
Depression, depression aggravated, anxiety, aggressive tendencies, mood alterations, psychotic symptoms, and very rarely, suicidal ideation, suicide attempts and suicide have been reported in patients treated with isotretinoin (see section 4.8). Particular care needs to be taken in patients with a history of depression and all patients should be monitored for signs of depression and referred for appropriate treatment if necessary. However, discontinuation of isotretinoin may be insufficient to alleviate symptoms and therefore further psychiatric or psychological evaluation may be necessary

And further, what they found in the original clinical trials is nothing to go by as the clinical trials can be rigged (talks on APRIL’ Vimeo site by Dr BenGoldacre https://vimeo.com/15986864
 
and Prof David Healy explain how this is done! Even if they reccon 1 in 10,000 dies by suicide how many millions are given the drug and how many hundred or thousands of families lose their lovely kids. – oh and the MHRA admit less than 10% of serious ADRs (Adverse drug reactions) are reported!

The data sheet also contains the following information for istotretinoin /Ro-Accutane under the heading:

4.8 Undesirable effects

Psychiatric disorders:
Rare (≥ 1/10 000,<1 o:p="">
Very Rare (≤ 1/10 000)
Depression, depression aggravated, aggressive tendencies, anxiety, mood alterations
Abnormal behaviour, psychotic disorder, suicidal ideation, suicide attempt, suicide
Nervous system disorders:
Common (≥1/100, <1 o:p="">

Very Rare (≤ 1/10 000)
Headache
Benign intracranial hypertension, convulsions, drowsiness, dizziness

Friday, 29 January 2016

Antidepressants double risk of aggression & suicide for young, according to meta analysis of data

Children and adolescents have a doubled risk of aggression and suicide when taking one of the five most commonly prescribed antidepressants, according to findings of a study published in The BMJ today. (The following is taken from the email sent to APRIL by the BMJ.)

However, the true risk for all associated serious harms, such as deaths, aggression, akathisia and suicidal thoughts and attempts, remains unknown for children, adolescents and adults, say experts.
This is because of the poor design of clinical trials that assess these antidepressants, and the misreporting of findings in published articles.

Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors antidepressants (SSRIs) and serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) are the most commonly prescribed drugs for depression.
A team of researchers from Denmark carried out a systematic review and meta-analysis of 68 clinical study reports of 70 trials with 18,526 patients to examine use of antidepressants and associated serious harms.
These included deaths, suicidal thoughts and attempts as well as aggression and akathisia, a form of restlessness that may increase suicide and violence.

They examined double blind placebo controlled trials that contained patient narratives or individual patient listings of associated harms.

Harms associated with antidepressants are often not included in published trial reports, explain the authors. This is why they analysed clinical study reports, prepared by pharmaceutical companies for market authorisation, and summary trial reports, both of which usually include more information.
In adults, they found no significant associations between antidepressants and suicide and aggression. However, a novel finding showed there was a doubling of risk for aggression and suicides in children and adolescents.

This study has shown limitations in trials, not only in design, but also in reporting of clinical study reports, which may have lead to "serious under-estimation of the harms," write the authors.
They compared the results from the clinical study reports with data from individual patient listings or narratives of adverse effects. This revealed misclassification of deaths and suicidal events in people taking antidepressants.

For example, four deaths were misreported by a pharmaceutical company, in all cases favouring the antidepressant, and more than half of the suicide attempts and suicidal ideation, for example, were coded as "emotional lability" or "worsening of depression."
In the Eli Lilly summary trial reports, almost all deaths were noted, but suicidal attempts were missing in 90% of instances, and information on other outcomes was incomplete. These were "even more unreliable than we previously suspected," write the authors.

Clinical study reports for antidepressants duloxetine, fluoxetine, paroxetine, sertraline and venlafaxine were obtained from regulatory agencies in the UK and Europe. Summary trial reports for duloxetine and fluoxetine were taken from the drug company Eli Lilly's website.

However, clinical study reports could not be obtained for all trials and all antidepressants, and individual listings of adverse outcomes for all patients were available for only 32 trials.
"The true risk for serious harms is still unknown [because] the low incidence of these rare events, and the poor design and reporting of the trials, makes it difficult to get accurate effect estimates," they explain.

They recommend "minimal use of antidepressants in children, adolescents, and young adults, as the serious harms seem to be greater, and as their effect seems to be below what is clinically relevant," and suggest alternative treatments such as exercise or psychotherapy.
They also call for the need to identify "hidden information in clinical study reports to form a more accurate view of the benefits and harms of drugs."

In an accompanying editorial, Joanna Moncrieff from University College London, agrees that "regulators and the public need access to more comprehensive and reliable data", and that clinical study reports "are likely to underestimate the extent of drug related harms."
Over half the clinical study reports had no individual patient listings and "this begs the question of how many more adverse events would have been revealed if [these] were available for all trials, and raises concerns why this information is allowed to be withheld."
Link to research
Link to editorial

 

Additional information about antidepressant trial data added to this blog February 2017


Restoring Study 329 - The study that disproved anti-depressants’ efficacy

 

A major reanalysis of the infamous clinical trial, Study 329, has shown Paroxetine (also known as Paxil or Seroxat), one of the most commonly prescribed antidepressants, to be unsafe and no more effective than a placebo.

 

This new assessment directly contradicts the results of the clinical trial that claimed Seroxat to be “generally well tolerated and effective”, which was sponsored by and ghostwritten for GlaxoSmithKline, despite using the same original data.

 

The latest paper was published under the restoring invisible and abandoned trials (RIAT) initiative, in order to re-evaluate any conclusions drawn from evidence that had previously been hidden from public view.

 

Published in 2001, Study 329 generated a high level of controversy from patients and doctors after lawsuits were filed stating the side-effects were much more serious than those documented in the clinical trials.

 

Restoring Study 329, showed Paroxetine (Seroxat or Paxil) to have no significant reduction of depressive symptoms more than a placebo or previous anti-depressants, and gave users a higher chance of psychiatric side effects.

 

The original study came under intense scrutiny following revelations that it was ghost written by GSK authors and not those named on the study, and the primary data was not made publically available.

 

The findings of Study 329, originally published in 2001, was the first double blind patient study to report the efficacy of anti-depressants on adolescents.

 

It has allowed Seroxat to gain widespread approval by the healthcare industry, becoming the most widely prescribed anti-depressant in the US, with over 14 billion dolllars worth of sales between 1997 and 2004.

 

Following a decade of public and legal pressure, GSK finally released the original data to the public, making its reanalysis possible.

 

These devastating results overturning the original paper may come as no surprise to many who have already suffered loss and harm from the drug. In  2012 GSK were successfully sued $3 billion for fraudulently promoting Paroxetine to the public, and hiding key data in its study, such as reclassifying suicidal acts so that they would not count in the final analysis.

 

To this day however, GSK remain silent on the issue and continue to promote the drug to its customers, without any attempt to acknowledge the restoration of the study.

 

A personal note to our readers:

 

As we reveal these facts about Seroxat, we do not wish to condemn all use of anti-depressants nor encourage the immediate withdrawal from the medication.  It is important to obtain advice from responsible health professionals who can help to plan any reduction in drugs that may cause dependence. It is also important to inform those close to you when you plan to start, reduce or stop taking antidepressants.

 

We wish to highlight the potential dangers and risks of Paroxetine and similar medication, and let readers understand that medical information to support the drug can be unreliable or biased.

 

Both starting and coming off anti-depressants is a serious undertaking and we strongly advise that users seek professional medical help as well as inform either close friends or family when doing so, as it can be a tough process which needs careful monitoring and support.

 

We recommend considering talking therapy and CBT to those who have access to these services, as these have been shown to provide beneficial reductions of depression and anxiety with fewer and less serious side effects.

 

©JBforAPRIL

 

Further Reading

 

Article on Study 329


British Medical Journal Analysis of Study 329


David Healy’s website on the controversy of Study 329


Restored Study 329



 

Thursday, 16 October 2014

Non-psychiatric drugs linked to suicidal behaviour and depression in new study

Adverse side effects of medicines can be underestimated and often not recognised as such. 110 drugs prescribed on the NHS have been linked to depression, self-harm and suicidal behaviour in a scientific study of patient Yellow Cards drug reaction reports sent to the Medicine’s Regulatory agency, the MHRA.

The paper published this September 2014 in the journal BMC Pharmacology & Toxicology is believed to be the first UK systematic review of psychiatric side-effects. Researchers found reports of 11,000 cases of depression, self injurious and suicidal behaviour following prescribed drug use between 1964 and 2011. This number covered 1.65% of all reports received in this time period.

Anti-depressants, acne, smoking cessation and weight-loss drugs were most frequently linked with serious psychiatric adverse drug reactions (ADRs). Clozapine, the anti-psychotic drug, had the highest reporting rate of suicide, with 78 reports between 1998 and 2011 linking the fatality to the drug.

Both nervous system and non-nervous system drugs met the study’s thresholds of at least 20 reports for depression, 10 for non-fatal suicide and 5 for fatal suicide between 1998 and 2011. Topping the charts with most frequent reports of depression were smoking cessation medicine, varenicline (Champix / Chantix) and bupriopion (Wellbutrin / Zyban), followed by paroxetine (Seroxat or Paxil), the SSRI antidepressant. Also high on the list of drugs linked to depression were the acne treatment, isotretinoin (Roaccutane / Accutane), and rimonabant (Acomplia), a drug for weight loss. For suicidal and self injurious behaviour, SSRIs, varenicline and clozapine occurred most often.

Figures found in the study are likely to underrepresent the true count of iatrogenic effects (drug-induced side effects) as the Yellow Card reporting system remains relatively underused by both patients and healthcare professionals.

The paper recommends the drugs most commonly arising in patient reports for grave psychiatric conditions need further analysis to understand the reasons why these drugs might be causing undue harm.

When a drug is licensed for prescription, pre-market trials do not undergo full powered studies into adverse drug reactions (ADRs) as this would require larger numbers of participants. Post-marketing pharmacovigilance using the Yellow Card reporting system and its careful analysis is therefore one of the main ways we can achieve a fuller picture into the neglected area of patient experience with medication.
Due to poor publicity and the underpowered studies of iatrogenic effects, psychiatric drug reactions and withdrawal effects are neither sufficiently well recognised nor analysed in the medical community. A study published in 2004 found that fewer than half of pharmacy programmes and medical schools provided students with a guide to reporting ADRs. Yet NHS Education for Scotland (NES), in a press release published in June 2014, stated that 7% of acute hospital admissions were due to ADRs. The NES have thus launched six new e-learning modules to support healthcare professionals identifying and reporting iatrogenic symptoms. Clinical pharmacologist Dr Simon Maxwell published an article reporting that undergraduate study is in urgent need of review to improve the safe and effective use of drugs in patients. 74% of medical students felt the amount of teaching in this area of safe prescribing  was ‘too little’ or ‘far too little’, and most disagreed that their assessment ‘thoroughly tested knowledge and skills’.

If we are to reduce the effect of ADRs on the population, and their economic impact that costs the NHS an estimated £2 billion each year, healthcare professionals and pharmaceutical companies need to make best use of new information made available by patient reporting.

Jacqueline Bond blogging for APRIL

Tuesday, 5 August 2014

Contraceptive Pill links to Depression on BBC radio 4 Woman's Hour Today


Contraceptive Pill links to Depression

Today on BBC Radio 4 in the excellent programme Woman's Hour, I heard a discussion about the contraceptive pill and links to depression.

I would like to congratulate the presenter, Emma Barnett for her enlightened attention to what is a serious problem for many women. Sadly so many women do not link their mood swings, depression and failure to cope, with prescribed medication including the Pill. Many women are prescribed antidepressants to help them deal with depression that may not be a problem once they stop taking a particular contraceptive or other medication.

Please refer to my campaign about Dianette ( click Dianette to link to Guardian article) as the doctor on the programme seemed to promote the fact that skin and other problems can improve with certain contraceptives.

He failed to mention that Dianette, the drug promoted for acne is the one that is not actually licensed for contraception (though it has a contraceptive action) due to higher risk of dvt, blood clots. Banned for a while by the EU this comes with warnings. It may be valuable for women considering this drug, to have their blood clotting factor checked before embarking on using Dianette (also known as Diane 35 and many other generic names.). The doctor did mention that loss of libido as a possible adverse drug reaction (ADR).

We will never know how many suicides are linked to prescribed drugs that cause depression - in other words, are not tolerated, with the addition drugs prescribed for the depression, that are also not tolerated.

You can hear the radio 4 programme on BBC iplayer Contraceptive Pill links to Depression

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b04cbv9g

Tuesday, 29 April 2014

A small victory for families who have campaigned since tragic suicides linked to Roaccutane.


A small victory for families who have campaigned since tragic suicides linked to Roaccutane

The article in Mail on Line states there will be a review of Roaccutane (isotretinoin) by the Commission on Human Medicines. 

We have tried for years to persuade a Professor of pharmacogenetics to do a study to find a genetic test and discover why a drug, so popular with those it has helped with acne problems, yet has a devastating adverse effects for those it harms and for their families.

We even went so far, with the help of the Medland family who are featured in the article, as to have a meeting in Liverpool with dermatologists, the professor and others about how to go about this study.

We found family members where one had a severe adverse reaction and the other did not. In the case of twins, one rushed to hospital in a life threatening condition and the other not after taking Roaccutane.

The drug is derived from vitamin A which is a linked to severe psychiatric and other reactions in high doses. The fact that some people may be slow metabolisers and therefore may have toxic levels of Roaccuane due to the drug not dispersing quickly, seems to be seldom considered.

Please read the article and take into account that in the case of Jon Medland, his problem was not a severe case of acne and he was not really a person who should have been prescribed the drug. He was however a medical student at the time and therefore slipped through the net.

Others who have been prescribed were also not classic severe cases where many other treatments had failed. In some dermatology clinics, there is careful monitoring. In some cases no monitoring of the patient's mood. 

I was at an  inquest where the dermatologist not only shrugged off his responsibility and even prescribed Dianette to a depressed girl who was deeply concerned about the harm Roaccutane was doing by seriously drying up her skin. 

I asked him why he prescribed Dianette and he responded " I couldn't risk her getting pregnant on Roaccutane" (the drug is known to cause deformity in foetus). I said to him " but Dianette is not licensed as a contraceptive" to which he did not respond. This man runs a private practice in Harley Street and did not know Dianette is linked to depression and not licensed for contraception due to higher risk of blood clots than other drugs for this purpose. It is licensed for acne. 
The poor girl who died was also prescribed by other doctors = Prozac and Zopiclone...a potent cocktail for a deeply depressed vulnerable girl - her name was Angela Lee and the coroner just brushed asside the cocktail of drugs in the jury inquest I attended.

I personally know a young man who was an A grade student, he dropped out and later told me he thought Roaccutane had caused his depression. Sadly his family shunned his concerns and considered him a failure. Tragic and it still upsets me to think he understood the cause of his problems and yet got no support from his family. He is not the only person in this situation and many others have written to me with similar stories.

I just want to say how strongly I support the Medland family and all those family members who do not give up in their efforts to save other lives. We do understand why some families shut themselves away in their grief but if we all did that there would be no changes in patient safety issues. 

Saturday, 7 April 2012

Millie's comment following Margaret's story on Dr David Healy's Blog

Margaret's story on Dr David Healy's blog about the tragic death of her son following prescription of SSRI antidepressant, resulted in many comments - mine is below.

http://davidhealy.org/platonic-lies


All the statistics you quote, do not alter our own personal experiences. The facts also speak for themselves. We should take into account the concerns of eminent clinical pharmacologist Dr Andrew Herxheimer that emphasis in research is on benefits and not harms of treatment.
10 years of UK hospital admission statistics, show that the largest increase is due to adverse drug reactions (ADRs) which has risen by 76.8% – analysis done by Imperial College.
Iatrogenic (treatment induced) illness is a public health crisis. Professor Munir Pirmohamed’s well known study of hospital admissions, that excluded psychiatric, paediatric admissions, showed 1 in 16 were due to ADRs.
A study in Liverpool of children who die or suffer ADRs has already found serious problems, not least of which is how unaware the parents are of the possibility of ADRs.
Awareness a drug is linked to suicide will not stop someone who needs it from taking it. However forearmed is forewarned and knowledge may reduce the number of avoidable deaths.
All kinds of medication can cause mental changes. The manufacturers are aware of this. Sadly in the UK, since the General Medical Council guidelines for medical education were changed in 1993 – to exclude Pharmacology and Therapeutics, doctors have qualified without having to prove competence to prescribe. The do not have to know about psychiatric adverse side-effects. Most have never read the data sheets produced by the manufacturers. Everyone should see these, they clearly state the psychological risks that are well known. Professor Simon Maxwell asked medical students if they felt competent to prescribe and most said ‘no’.
The British Industry web site has data sheets which are called SPCs http://www.medicines.org.uk
Today would have been my daughter Karen’s birthday. Her death in an avoidable accident was preceded by.
Psychosis and Stevens Johnson’s skin adverse reactions to a sulphonamide drug (all known adverse side effects but not always clearly indicated on patient information).
Depression following taking a drug for hormonal problem, well known to cause depression.
Akathisia – extreme agitation preceded by a headache following taking just one tablet of fluanxol an antidepressant.
She went to see the doctor but was turned away as she had no appointment. Came home and took some sleeping pills to ‘calm herself down’ …a typical reaction to akathisia is to self harm to let out the painful agitation ‘ like wanting to jump out of my skin’ one person explained.
For the rest of this list of adverse drug reactions Karen suffered, see the web site for APRIL, the charity I founded http://www.april.org.uk
Once I put up the web site – the personal stories started to come in. Shocking details of how people were adversely affected mentally by drugs.
A man wrote to me ‘ I dreamed I was hitting my wife and when I awoke, I was’. another said ‘ I tried to push my wife out of the car – I don’t know why’ . Both men had just started taking the antidepressant Seroxat.
A headmaster fell on to a motorway, he could not remember what happened, he ended up in a wheelchair.
He had been prescribed an antidepressant, Mirtazapine, not for depression but for re occurring sore throat!
The Drug Safety Research Unit did a PEM study – post marketing study – on Mirtazapine, they found serious ‘unlabeled’ adverse reactions reported by patients who were taking the drug. I asked the Director Professor Saad Shakir, why he did not insist the regulator (MHRA) took action to add the agitation, aggression etc to the patient information and he said ” I am an academic scientist and I published the paper, that is all I have to do”.
I found a similar attitude when I spoke to Professor Louis Appleby and asked why in the Suicide Prevention Strategy for England, there is no mention of medicication causing akathisia and suicidal feelings and actions. He told me he woud ” address this”. If there were warnings about the possibility that sudden changes in a person, either becoming high, manic, or very down, could be due to the treatment, lives could be saved.
I have been communicating with Professor Appleby for 10 years, to try to have the well recorded risk of suicidal feelings due to prescribed drugs or withdrawal effects, recorded in the Suicide Prevention Strategy. So far to no avail.
He admits in the letter to Margaret on this blog, that more education is needed, well he is head of mental health, so how about it Professor Appleby? Awareness among health professionals could save lives.
Apart from my daughter, I know of several instances where people feeling suicidal or agitated have been turned away by GPs or from the A & E departments instead of action being taken to care for them in this vulnerable state. One young man, a medical student, Jon Medland, had been to his GP, another, James, son of Clare Milford-Haven who told her tragic story at our last conference, had been to a walk-in clinic and then to A&E where he was graded 4 and told to wait. Tragic consequences could have been avoided.
A & E personel, GPs and medical receptionists should be trained to recognise those at risk of suicide, as being people recently prescribed SSRIs, corticosteroids or following surgery. Addiction to codeine benzoidiazepines and sleeping pills are other areas where improved medical education and availability of withdrawal protocols could prevent suffering and tragic consequences of too sudden withdrawal.

Saturday, 17 March 2012

David Healy Pharmageddon & Suicide Prevention

David Healy has used Charles Medawar's research and his own experience and research for his new book
Pharmageddon. Not yet available in UK but can be purchased from Amazon. Also sections available to read on Amazon web site. An important contribution to creating awareness of psychiatric adverse reactions to medicines and suicide risk for some people who take SSRI antidepressants and other drugs.
With added information about the way medicines are licensed and the secrecy that covers up deception.


Patients are entitled to know the risk and be allowed to decide for themselves whether the benefits outweigh the possible harm of accepting any treatment offered by doctors who may have no knowledge of how drugs work. (Pharmacology was removed from curriculum requirement in 1993 by the GMC in their guidelines called 'Tomorrow's Doctors'.

Unfortunately in the UK a senior policy maker at the head of D of H Mental Health,  Professor Louis Appleby,  has decided not to inform doctors to be aware that akathisia (extreme agitation) an adverse side-effect, can lead to suicide. He believes information about medication induced suicide may cause harm.
To whom I wonder? See blog: http://davidhealy.org/platonic-lies http://davidhealy.org/

The Suicide Prevention Strategy for England

The Suicide Prevention Strategy for England contains no mention of suicide triggered by adverse drug reactions (ADR) or the adverse side-effect caused by many psychotropic medicines including SSRI and similar antidepressants  akathisia. The current consultation being reviewed now, was under the auspices of a person who was sympathetic to this being included. He has been removed from his post!

http://davidhealy.org/

Tuesday, 6 October 2009

Angela Lee suicide

Angela Lee 'staggered' and fell in front of a train according to the shocked female train driver of a train travelling at 90 miles per hour. Angela had left a note and felt that the acne drug ro-accutane (isotretionoin) had caused lasting problems. I can confirm that many people who contact me say depression, which they believe was caused by roaccutane lasts for months and years after they stop taking the drug. Angela was prescribed fluoxetine (Prozac) and Zopiclone which she was taking at the time of her death.

I sat in the Walthamstow Coroner's court and heard the evidence given to the jury and was also shocked to hear that Angela was given Dianette at the same time as she was prescribed Roaccutane. None of the journalists commented on this cocktail of drugs - all linked to causing suicidal feelings.

Another problem was the failure of health professionals who cared for Angela, to communicate by picking up a telephone to speak to each other and discuss how best to protect her from harm.

Saturday, 5 September 2009

Medication-Induced Violence: Homicide and Suicide

8 October 2010 (Conference date changed to next year)

Chicago, Illinois, United States

Contact name: Donald H. Marks, M.D., Ph.D.

The first conference concentrating on the potential of therapeutic medications to induce a violent state: anxiety, agitation, aggression, irritability, violent thoughts, hostility, homicidal and suicidal thoughts.

Organized by: Rush University, Department of Pharmacology
Deadline for abstracts/proposals: Not available.

Check the event website for latest details.




Share on Facebook