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	<title>Psychiatric Drugs »» Antidepressants &#124; Antipsychotics &#124; Antianxiety &#124; Antimanic Agents &#124; Stimulants &#124; Prescription Drugs &#187; mental illness</title>
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	<description>Antidepressant, Antipsychotic, Antianxiety, Antimanic , Stimulant Drugs</description>
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		<title>COMMON PSYCHIATRIC DRUGS AND THEIR EFFECTS</title>
		<link>http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/headline/common-psychiatric-drugs-and-their-effects/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 19 Jan 2009 11:42:22 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Headline]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Brain Scans]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Causing Drug Abuse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CHEMICAL IMBALANCES]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[COMMON PSYCHIATRIC DRUGS EFFECTS]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[DRUG USAGE STATISTICS]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mental illness]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pseudoscience]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stimulants]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[


 A White Paper by Citizens Commission on Human Rights
DRUG USAGE STATISTICS
Thomas Moore, author of Prescriptions for Disaster said that the current use of drugs like Ritalin is
taking “appalling risks” with a generation of kids. The drug is given, he said, for “short-term control
of behavior—not to reduce any identifiable hazard to [children’s] health. Such large-scale chemical
control of human behavior has not been previously undertaken in our society outside of nursing homes and mental institutions.”1
More than 8.5 million American children are prescribed powerful stimulants, antidepressants and other psychotropic drugs for so-called ...]]></description>
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</script></p> <p><strong>A White Paper by Citizens Commission on Human Rights</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/drug-usage-statistics/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with DRUG USAGE STATISTICS">DRUG USAGE STATISTICS</a></p>
<p>Thomas Moore, author of Prescriptions for Disaster said that the current use of drugs like Ritalin is</p>
<p>taking “appalling risks” with a generation of kids. The drug is given, he said, for “short-term control</p>
<p>of behavior—not to reduce any identifiable hazard to [children’s] health. Such large-scale chemical</p>
<p>control of human behavior has not been previously undertaken in our society outside of nursing homes and mental institutions.”1</p>
<p>More than 8.5 million American children are prescribed powerful <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/stimulants/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Stimulants">stimulants</a>, antidepressants and other psychotropic drugs for so-called educational and behavioral problems. &#8211; 6 million are prescribed amphetamine-like <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/stimulants/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Stimulants">stimulants</a> or others, such as Ritalin, Adderall and Dexedrine.</p>
<p>- Between 1.5 and 2 million are prescribed antidepressants such as Paxil, Prozac, Celexa, Effexor, Serzone, Remeron, Zoloft, Luvox, and Wellbutrin.</p>
<p>- 500,000 children are prescribed antipsychotic drugs (also called neuroleptics, meaning “nerve seizing” or major tranquilizers).</p>
<p>- Unknown numbers of children are prescribed other psychiatric drugs, including minor tranquilizers such as Xanax, Valium and Ativan.</p>
<p>• A survey by the Partnership for a Drug-Free America, released on April 21, 2005, found 10% of</p>
<p>teens abuse the <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/stimulants/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Stimulants">stimulants</a> Ritalin and Adderall.2</p>
<p>• Children 5 years old and younger are the fastest-growing segment of the non-adult population</p>
<p>using antidepressants today.3</p>
<p>• Between 1995 and 1999, the use of antidepressants increased 580% in the under 6 population and</p>
<p>151% in the 7-12 age group.4</p>
<p>• In 2002, roughly 11 million antidepressant prescriptions were dispensed, largely to boys under the</p>
<p>age of 12 diagnosed with “conduct disorders.”5</p>
<p>• Since 1987, when Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) was added to the American</p>
<p>Psychiatric Association’s (APA) Diagnostic and Statistical Manual for Mental Disorders (DSMIV)</p>
<p>there has been a 900% increase in the number of children “diagnosed” with ADHD and a</p>
<p>665% percent increase in the production of cocaine-like <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/stimulants/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Stimulants">stimulants</a> for children.6</p>
<p>There are financial incentives behind so many children being drugged.</p>
<p>• In 2004, sales of the latest antidepressants reached more than $14 billion in the U.S. Nearly 11</p>
<p>million prescriptions were dispensed in 2002 for new antidepressants to 1- to 17-year-olds in the</p>
<p>U.S.7</p>
<p>• Sales of <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/stimulants/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Stimulants">stimulants</a> in the U.S. alone for children have reached more than $1.3 billion dollars a</p>
<p>year.8</p>
<p>• Between 1997 and 2001, prescriptions for the stimulant Adderall increased 1,017% since and</p>
<p>within a year of becoming available, Concerta captured 11% of the market.9</p>
<p>• Between 1991 and 2003, antipsychotic drug sales in the U.S. increased by 1,500%, from less than</p>
<p>$500 million to more than $8 billion. International sales reached more than $12 billion in 2002. 10</p>
<p>• In some U.S. communities, 20% of children are taking <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/stimulants/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Stimulants">stimulants</a>, according to the Drug</p>
<p>Enforcement Administration (DEA) pharmacologist Gretchen Feussner. “That should be a wakeup</p>
<p>call that something isn’t right,” Feussner said.11</p>
<p>THE TRUTH ABOUT “CHEMICAL IMBALANCES”</p>
<p>The APA’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual for Mental Disorders (DSM) is a source of scientific</p>
<p>ridicule among medical professionals. Psychologist Tana Dineen, author of Manufacturing Victims,</p>
<p>said, “Unlike medical diagnoses that convey a probable cause, appropriate treatment and likely</p>
<p>prognosis [course of a disease], the disorders listed in DSM-IV are terms arrived at through peer</p>
<p>consensus”—a vote by APA committee members—and designed largely for billing purposes.12</p>
<p>In 2001, Simon Wessley, professor of psychiatry at King’s College and the Maudsley Hospitals, South</p>
<p>London, organized a poll and vote by 150 mental health specialists from around the globe on the 10</p>
<p>worst psychiatric publications in psychiatry’s history. Among the top 10 was the fourth edition of</p>
<p>DSM. The poll determined, “If you are not in the DSM-IV, you are not ill. It has become a monster,</p>
<p>out of control.”13</p>
<p>Psychiatry: The <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/pseudoscience/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Pseudoscience">Pseudoscience</a></p>
<p>Because its diagnostic methods are based on opinion rather than scientific fact, psychiatry is a</p>
<p><a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/pseudoscience/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Pseudoscience">pseudoscience</a>. The late Dr. Sydney Walker, III, a neurologist, psychiatrist and author of A Dose of</p>
<p><a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/sanity/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Sanity">Sanity</a>, wrote, “Psychiatry has replaced the science of diagnosis with the <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/pseudoscience/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Pseudoscience">pseudoscience</a> of labeling.”14</p>
<p>Dr. Thomas Szasz, Professor of Psychiatry Emeritus of the State University Medical University in</p>
<p>Syracuse, New York, states, “Since psychiatry is a <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/pseudoscience/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Pseudoscience">pseudoscience</a>, it is not surprising that psychiatrists</p>
<p>are especially eager to be accepted as scientific experts. Since they obviously cannot bring this about</p>
<p>by discovering the causes and cures of mental diseases which-tragically for psychiatrists no less than</p>
<p>for patients—do not exist, they have to do it by producing great quantities of gibberish. That is indeed</p>
<p>the most constant and most frequent thing psychiatrists do, in speech as well as in print.”15</p>
<p>With a significant departure from medical diagnosis, psychiatric diagnoses are devoted to</p>
<p>categorization of symptoms only, not the observation of actual physical disease. None of the diagnoses</p>
<p>are supported by scientific evidence of biological disease or <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/mental-illness/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with mental illness">mental illness</a> of any kind.</p>
<p>The cornerstone of psychiatry’s disease model today is the theory that a brain-based, chemical</p>
<p>imbalance causes <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/mental-illness/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with mental illness">mental illness</a>. Popularized by marketing, the notion is no more than psychiatric</p>
<p>wishful thinking. It has been thoroughly discredited by researchers, psychiatrists, psychologists and</p>
<p>medical doctors.</p>
<p>• Dr. Joseph Glenmullen, Clinical Instructor in Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and author of</p>
<p>Prozac Backlash, states: “We do not have proof either of the cause or the physiology for any</p>
<p>psychiatric diagnosis….In the absence of any verifiable diseases, in recent decades,</p>
<p>psychopharmacology has not hesitated to construct ‘disease models’ for psychiatric diagnoses.”</p>
<p>• He warns: “Patients are often explicitly told they have such a disease, usually to justify treating</p>
<p>them with medication. But when one looks closely, all the disease models are built on three</p>
<p>pseudoscientific cornerstones: superficial checklist diagnoses, putative [supposed, reputed]</p>
<p>‘biochemical imbalances,’ and alleged genetic determinism [genes].”</p>
<p>• Psychiatrist David Kaiser points out that “&#8230;modern psychiatry has yet to convincingly prove the</p>
<p>genetic/biologic cause of any single <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/mental-illness/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with mental illness">mental illness</a>.…Patients [have] been diagnosed with</p>
<p>‘chemical imbalances’ despite the fact that no test exists to support such a claim, and…there is no</p>
<p>real conception of what a correct chemical balance would look like.”16</p>
<p>• Bruce Levine, Ph.D., psychologist and author of Commonsense Rebellion said: “Remember that</p>
<p>no biochemical, neurological, or genetic markers have been found for attention deficit disorder,</p>
<p>oppositional defiant disorder, depression, schizophrenia, anxiety, compulsive alcohol and drug</p>
<p>abuse, overeating, gambling, or any other so-called <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/mental-illness/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with mental illness">mental illness</a>, disease, or disorder.”17</p>
<p>• Elliot Valenstein, Ph.D., author of Blaming the Brain, is unequivocal: “[T]here are no tests</p>
<p>available for assessing the chemical status of a living person’s brain.”18</p>
<p>• “In recent decades,” Dr. Glenmullen adds, “we have had no shortage of alleged biochemical</p>
<p>imbalances for psychiatric conditions. Diligent [hardworking] though these attempts have been,</p>
<p>not one has been proven. Quite the contrary. In every instance where such an imbalance was</p>
<p>thought to have been found, it was later proven false.” 19</p>
<p>• In 1998, the National Institutes of Health held an experts’ “Consensus Conference on the</p>
<p>Diagnosis and Treatment of ADHD” that concluded, “We don’t have an independent, valid test for</p>
<p>ADHD; there are no data to indicate that ADHD is due to a brain malfunction…and finally, after</p>
<p>years of clinical research and experience with ADHD, our knowledge about the cause or causes of</p>
<p>ADHD remains speculative.”20</p>
<p><a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/brain-scans/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Brain Scans">Brain Scans</a> Cannot Detect “<a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/mental-illness/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with mental illness">Mental Illness</a>”</p>
<p>While media and the general public have been fed “breakthrough” news that neuroimaging (brain</p>
<p>scans) appear to have identified <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/mental-illness/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with mental illness">mental illness</a>, Dr. Thomas Szasz, Professor of Psychiatry Emeritus of</p>
<p>the State University Medical University in Syracuse, New York, says that psychiatry’s claim that</p>
<p>mental illnesses are brain diseases is “a claim supposedly based on recent discoveries in neuroscience, made possible by [brain] imaging techniques for diagnosis and pharmacological agents for treatment. This is not true.”</p>
<p>• A study published in the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry in</p>
<p>September, 2001, noted that although gross differences in size or symmetry [arrangement of parts]</p>
<p>of brain structures can be quantified with neuroimaging, individual cells and cell layers cannot yet</p>
<p>be visualized. This means that, although the volume and shape of brain structures may be</p>
<p>determined, the underlying cause of any differences cannot.21</p>
<p>• An article published in the The Mercury News, in May 2004, stated, “Many doctors warn about</p>
<p>using [brain] imaging as a diagnostic tool, saying it is unethical—and potentially dangerous—for</p>
<p>doctors to use [it] to identify emotional, behavioral and psychiatric problems in a patient. The</p>
<p>$2,500 evaluation offers no useful or accurate information, they say.”22</p>
<p>• M. Douglas Mar, psychiatrist, says: “There is no scientific basis for these claims [of using brain</p>
<p>scans for psychiatric diagnosis].”23</p>
<p>• “An accurate diagnosis based on a scan is simply not possible,” stated Dr. Michael D. Devous,</p>
<p>Nuclear Medicine Center at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center.24</p>
<p>Further, when <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/brain-scans/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Brain Scans">brain scans</a> do indicate any changes, it is most likely drug-induced.</p>
<p>In 2003, Jonathan Leo, Professor of Anatomy at the Western University of Health Sciences and</p>
<p>Professor David Cohen of the School of Social Work at Florida International University, reviewed 33</p>
<p>of the most recent brain-imaging studies of ADHD-diagnosed subjects. They confirmed that every</p>
<p>study concerned medicated kids, a major variable because stimulant drugs “cause very persistent</p>
<p>changes in the brain.” They also reviewed a widely touted 2001 National Institute of Mental Health</p>
<p>(NIMH) study that included unmedicated subjects and had claimed that unmedicated ADHD children</p>
<p>had significantly smaller brains (and this somehow supports that ADHD exists and is a neurobiological</p>
<p>disorder). However, the comparison group was two years older, so naturally the younger children had smaller brains.25</p>
<p>Dr. Valenstein also says: “It is well established that the drugs used to treat a mental disorder, for</p>
<p>example, may induce long-lasting biochemical and even structural changes [including in the brain],</p>
<p>which in the past were claimed to be the cause of the disorder, but may actually be an effect of the</p>
<p>treatment.” 26 Further, “It is now difficult to find mental patients who have not had a history of drug</p>
<p>treatment, and as a result many of the brain abnormalities found in these patients are probably</p>
<p>iatrogenic [doctor/treatment caused], that is, produced by the treatment rather than being the cause of the disorder.”27 [Emphasis added]</p>
<p>DRUG EFFECTS</p>
<p>Dr. Mary Ann Block, author of No More ADHD, points out: “The psychiatrist does not do any testing.</p>
<p>The psychiatrist listens to the history and then prescribes a drug.”28 And these drugs are poisons.</p>
<p>Quite apart from their physically damaging effects, <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/stimulants/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Stimulants">stimulants</a> prescribed to children do not do what</p>
<p>they are promoted to. For example, parents are told children will focus more while taking a stimulant</p>
<p>and this will improve their educational outcomes. However, studies show children who take <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/stimulants/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Stimulants">stimulants</a> do not perform better academically. Evidence presented to a National Institutes of Health conference on ADHD in 1998 said that children who take these drugs fail just as many courses, and drop out of school just as often as children who do not take them.29 This confirms a 1978 review of 17 studies of stimulant drugs that concluded “stimulant drugs have little, if any, impact on…long-term academic improvement….” Their major effect seemed to be an “improvement in classroom manageability.”30</p>
<p>Psychiatrists substitute the word “medication” for drug to ease the minds of parents and teachers,</p>
<p>conjuring up images of some benign cough syrup prescribed by a kindly family doctor. However,</p>
<p><a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/psychiatric-medications/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with psychiatric medications">psychiatric medications</a> are all mind-altering drugs, many are addictive, and all have been abused.</p>
<p>The following is information about the more common drugs prescribed to children.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/stimulants/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Stimulants">Stimulants</a></p>
<p>The <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/stimulants/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Stimulants">stimulants</a> most prescribed for ADHD and other so-called learning disabilities include Ritalin,</p>
<p>Adderall, Concerta, Metadate, Focalin and Cylert. As <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/stimulants/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Stimulants">stimulants</a> or amphetamine-likei drugs, they are</p>
<p>categorized by the DEA as Schedule II drugs in the same class as morphine, opium and cocaine. 31</p>
<p>The abuse of these <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/stimulants/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Stimulants">stimulants</a> in the United States is so great that in 1995, the United Nations’</p>
<p>International Narcotics Control Board (INCB) asked governments to “exercise vigilance with regard to</p>
<p>trade in and dispensing of the substance [stimulant prescribed for ADHD] in order to prevent any</p>
<p>attempts to divert it into illicit traffic.”32</p>
<p>The same year the DEA said Ritalin could lead to addiction and that “psychotic episodes, violent</p>
<p>behavior and bizarre mannerisms had been reported” with its use.33</p>
<p>In 2000, ADHD drug manufacturers began “direct to consumer” advertising of these drugs in leading</p>
<p>women’s magazines and on television, breaking a 30 year United Nations Treaty that banned the</p>
<p>promotion of such drugs because of their high abuse potential.34</p>
<p>• The side effects of Ritalin include nervousness, insomnia, hypersensitivity, anorexia, blood</p>
<p>pressure and pulse changes, abdominal pain, weight loss and toxic psychosis. Suicide is a risk</p>
<p>during withdrawal.35 Ritalin and other <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/stimulants/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Stimulants">stimulants</a> potentially can also cause symptoms ranging</p>
<p>from thought disorder to cardiac arrhythmia (irregular heart beat), and can stunt a child’s growth.36</p>
<p>i Ritalin is amphetamine-like as it is very similar in chemical structure to amphetamine and its effects</p>
<p>on the body. An amphetamine’s chemical structure closely resembles natural <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/stimulants/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Stimulants">stimulants</a> in the body,</p>
<p>like adrenaline. It can reduce appetite and fatigue and “speed” you up. A drug of abuse, it is known as “speed,” “crystal meth” and “crank” and can cause addiction, serious bodily reactions and withdrawals. A stimulant refers to any mind-altering chemical or substance that affects the central nervous system by speeding up the body’s functions, including the heart and breathing rates. Common <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/stimulants/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Stimulants">stimulants</a> include cocaine, amphetamines, Ritalin, caffeine, and nicotine.</p>
<p>• Between 1990 and 2000, 186 deaths were linked to Ritalin. The risk is highest for abusers who</p>
<p>snort large amounts of the drug.37</p>
<p>• Dr. Walker reported in his book, The Hyperactivity Hoax, “While studies indicate that the drug is</p>
<p>probably only a weak carcinogen [cancer-causing agent], increasing the future risk of millions of</p>
<p>children—even a little bit—is not something to be done lightly.” He cited another report that</p>
<p>warned Ritalin “may have persistent, cumulative effects on the myocardium (the thick muscle</p>
<p>layer that forms most of the heart wall).”38</p>
<p>In 2005, Texas researchers warned that human studies linked Ritalin to a higher risk of cancer. The</p>
<p>study revealed that after only three months, one of a dozen children treated with Ritalin had a threefold increase in chromosome abnormalities associated with increased risks of cancer. All 12 children showed chromosomal “breaks” that are similarly associated. “This should raise a red flag,” Marvin Legator, an environmental toxicologist and principal investigator in the study, said. 39</p>
<p>Causing Drug Abuse</p>
<p>According to the DEA, the street abuse of Ritalin has become a major problem. The drug now sells for</p>
<p>$5 to $10 a pill on the black market. Known also as “Vitamin R,” “R-ball” and the “poor man’s</p>
<p>cocaine,” it is also abused by grinding up the drug and snorting or injecting it.40</p>
<p>• <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/stimulants/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Stimulants">Stimulants</a>, as Schedule II narcotics, can also lead to future drug abuse and addiction. In an</p>
<p>analysis of a community based group of adults born in the 1960s, the DEA concluded:</p>
<p>“Preliminary data indicated the medicated ADHD group had a higher lifetime frequency of</p>
<p>cocaine use and a higher percentage that used cocaine more than 40 times…this preliminary data</p>
<p>suggest that stimulant treatment of ADHD in childhood may be a risk factor for cocaine abuse in</p>
<p>adults.”41</p>
<p>• A 1998 study of Californian adolescents diagnosed with “ADHD” found that, as adults, those</p>
<p>treated with the stimulant were three times more likely to use cocaine.42</p>
<p>• The Journal of Forensic Science reported in 1999 that there is increasing evidence that Ritalin is</p>
<p>being diverted to illicit use by snorting or injection, with some fatalities, at least one from</p>
<p>intranasal use.43</p>
<p>• In 2000, the DEA said studies show neither animals or humans can differentiate between cocaine</p>
<p>and Ritalin—“They produce effects that are nearly identical.”44 In 2001, officials said ADHD</p>
<p>drugs were among the most stolen and most abused prescriptions, particularly by children who</p>
<p>share or sell their own pills. “This is not something that is driven by the Mafia. It’s the kind of</p>
<p>casual distribution that goes on in high schools where kids pass it around,” said Gene R. Haislip,</p>
<p>former head of DEA’s drug diversion unit.45</p>
<p>• The same year The Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry reported</p>
<p>that psychostimulants have an abuse potential: “Very high doses of psychostimulants…may cause</p>
<p>central nervous system damage, cardiovascular damage, and hypertension. In addition, high doses</p>
<p>have been associated with compulsive behaviors, and in certain vulnerable individuals, movement</p>
<p>disorders.” A percentage of children and adults treated at high doses can also have</p>
<p>“hallucinogenic responses.”46</p>
<p>• In August 2001, The Journal of the American Medical Association reported that Ritalin is</p>
<p>chemically similar to cocaine. Injected as a liquid, it sends a jolt that “addicts like very much,”</p>
<p>said Nora Volkow, M.D., psychiatrist from Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, New York.</p>
<p>The study also admitted that although psychiatrists have used this drug to treat ADHD for 40</p>
<p>years, they and pharmacologists have never known how or why it worked.47</p>
<p>• Dr. Richard Nakamura, acting director of the National Institute of Mental Health testified before</p>
<p>the U.S. Government Reform Committee hearing into ADHD in September 2002. Under</p>
<p>questioning by Committee Chairman, Congressman Dan Burton, Dr. Nakamura said, “The</p>
<p>stimulant properties of both [Ritalin and cocaine] derive from similar chemical properties.” When</p>
<p>asked whether a person grinding up Ritalin and making it into a powder form to snort, would</p>
<p>experience the same effect on the brain as snorting cocaine, Dr. Nakamura answered: “It would</p>
<p>probably not do as much for them. However, yes, they would get a high from ground up</p>
<p>methylphenidate [Ritalin].” He also said that addiction can occur if Ritalin is snorted.48</p>
<p>COMMON PSYCHIATRIC DRUGS</p>
<p><a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/stimulants/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Stimulants">Stimulants</a></p>
<p>The Physicians’ Desk Reference lists the side effects of all <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/stimulants/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Stimulants">stimulants</a>. They are Schedule II controlled</p>
<p>substances, so categorized because of their enormous abuse potential.</p>
<p>• Adderall: This can cause mood swings, depression, weight loss, heart palpitations or irregular</p>
<p>heartbeat, involuntary muscle tics or movements, psychosis and restlessness. Adderall is an</p>
<p>amphetamine and potentially habit forming. A doctor should be contacted if a child experiences</p>
<p>vomiting, stomach pain, fever, unusual weakness or tiredness, severe headaches or mental/mood</p>
<p>changes. There is also a warning to contact a doctor immediately in the event of unusually fast</p>
<p>heartbeat, blurred vision, uncontrolled muscle movements (e.g., tics, tremors) or chest pain.49</p>
<p>Adderall, which now comprises 32% of the stimulant market for children, has also been</p>
<p>linked to violence when in 2000 a North Dakota judge acquitted 26-year-old Ray Ehlis of</p>
<p>murdering his 5-week-old daughter after two independent psychiatrists testified he was</p>
<p>suffering a severe psychosis induced by Adderall.50</p>
<p>• Concerta: Approved in 2000, this drug is chemically the same as Ritalin and can cause the same</p>
<p>side effects, such as nervousness, weight loss, stunted growth, heart palpitations, insomnia, tics,</p>
<p>psychosis, liver problems, hallucinations and depression. Withdrawal effects can include suicidal</p>
<p>thoughts.</p>
<p>• Cylert: Also known as pemoline, this is chemically different in structure to amphetamines and</p>
<p>Ritalin but is similar to them in its effects on the body. Side effects include hallucinations,</p>
<p>increased irritability, involuntary movements of the face, eyes, lips, tongue, arms and legs, liver</p>
<p>problems, loss of appetite, mild depression, seizures, tics and uncontrolled muscle spasms. There</p>
<p>have been reports of death related to liver problems in people taking Cylert. Britain and Canada</p>
<p>removed the drug from the market, but the FDA to date has allowed it to remain, despite its own</p>
<p>analysis that found Cylert increased the risk of liver failure almost 17 times. A 2002 agency</p>
<p>report found that stiffer label warnings had failed to prompt doctors to increase testing of patient’s</p>
<p>livers.51</p>
<p>In 1999, the Ontario Medical Association Committee on Drugs and Pharmacotherapy reported that</p>
<p>sales of Cylert were to be suspended in Canada, after a risk benefit assessment had been conducted</p>
<p>by Health Canada on the use of Cylert posing serious liver complications, including liver failure</p>
<p>resulting in death or liver transplantation. The findings said that the risks far outweighed the</p>
<p>benefits of continued use.52 Prescriptions of Cylert in Canada are now severely restricted and are</p>
<p>only available through Health Canada’s Special Access Program, which requires specific written</p>
<p>requests for the drug to be used.</p>
<p>• Dexedrine: This drug is chemically similar to Adderall and can cause the same side effects:</p>
<p>mood swings, depression, weight loss, heart palpitations or irregular heartbeat, involuntary muscle</p>
<p>tics or movements, psychosis and restlessness.</p>
<p>• Focalin: FDA approved in 2001, the same company that makes Ritalin manufactures Focalin. It</p>
<p>is a Schedule II controlled substance. 53 Adverse effects include decreased appetite, headache, dry</p>
<p>mouth, insomnia, irritability, stomachache, and weight loss.54</p>
<p>• Metadate: Approved by the FDA in August 2001, Metadate is a once a day [“extended release”]</p>
<p>version of Ritalin. In 2002, the FDA also approved Metadate to include the option of sprinkling it</p>
<p>onto a small amount of applesauce, making it the first once-daily methylphenidate product to</p>
<p>receive sprinkle administration approval.55 Side effects include headache, loss of appetite,</p>
<p>abdominal pain, insomnia, ticks, “zombie” demeanor, and moodiness.56</p>
<p>• Ritalin: Taken approximately every four hours, the side effects include nervousness, weight loss,</p>
<p>stunted growth, heart palpitations, insomnia, tics, psychosis, liver problems, hallucinations and</p>
<p>depression. The Physicians’ Desk Reference (PDR) warns, “frank psychotic episodes can occur”</p>
<p>with abuse. Suicide is the major complication of withdrawal from Ritalin and similar drugs.57 In</p>
<p>2002, researchers at the University of Buffalo conducted studies that showed Ritalin might cause</p>
<p>long-term changes in the brain. Conducted on rats, the study revealed the changes to the brain are</p>
<p>similar to those seen with cocaine.58</p>
<p>• Strattera (non-stimulant): The drug, which was approved in 2002, was found to potentially</p>
<p>cause severe liver problems. In December 2004, a new warning was added to Strattera packaging</p>
<p>showing that the drug should be discontinued in patients who develop jaundice [unhealthy</p>
<p>condition that causes yellowness of the skin, eyes and body fluids] or liver injury. The FDA</p>
<p>noted, “The labeling warns that severe liver damage may progress to liver failure resulting in death</p>
<p>or the need for a liver transplant in a small percentage of patients.”59 Signs of the possible liver</p>
<p>problems include jaundice, dark urine, unexplained flulike symptoms, upper right-side abdominal</p>
<p>tenderness and a form of itchy skin known as pruritus [caused by irritation of the sensory nerve</p>
<p>endings].60 Other common side effects are headache, abdominal pain, nausea and vomiting,</p>
<p>anorexia [eating “disorder”] and weight loss, nervousness, somnolence [drowsiness].61</p>
<p>• Wellbutrin: Also known as bupropion, this is an antidepressant (also prescribed for depression),</p>
<p>one of the non-stimulant drugs prescribed to the 20% who apparently don’t respond “properly” to</p>
<p><a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/stimulants/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Stimulants">stimulants</a>. Fatal heart attacks in those with a history of heart-rhythm disturbances have occurred.</p>
<p>62 It can cause seizures and at rates of four times that of other antidepressants.63 Other side effects</p>
<p>include agitation, insomnia, increased restlessness, anxiety, delusions, hallucinations, psychotic</p>
<p>episodes, confusion, weight loss, and paranoia.64 Teens have abused the drug by crushing and</p>
<p>snorting it, causing seizures.65</p>
<p>Antidepressants</p>
<p>The new generation of antidepressants [Prozac, Paxil, Zoloft, Luvox, etc.] was falsely promoted as a</p>
<p>dramatic new type of mood-altering drug, “a designer medical bullet targeting serotonin [a hormone</p>
<p>that transmits nerve impulses],” says Harvard University Dr. Glenmullen.66 “While the alleged</p>
<p>‘selectivity’ of the drugs makes good marketing copy,” he says, “implying that they target a depression center in the brain, no such center is known to exist.”67 Dr. Andrew Nierenburg, director of the depression research program at the Massachusetts General Hospital and a professor at Harvard, says, “The dark side of all this is that we have many elegant models but the reality is that [when it comes to] the exact mechanisms by which these things work, we don’t have a clue.”68</p>
<p>• In 2002, 14 years after Prozac came on the market, studies showed that up to 65% of the millions</p>
<p>who had taken these antidepressants had not been helped. People experienced emotional</p>
<p>numbing, restlessness, and memory lapses.69 Sexual dysfunction affected 60% of patients taking</p>
<p>these antidepressants.70</p>
<p>• In Britain in 2003, the medicine regulatory agency told doctors not to prescribe the drugs for this</p>
<p>reason.71 The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Public Health Advisory of March 22,</p>
<p>2004, stated, “Anxiety, agitation, panic attacks, insomnia, irritability, hostility, impulsivity,</p>
<p>akathisia [severe restlessness], hypomania [abnormal excitement, mild mania] and mania</p>
<p>[psychosis characterized by exalted feelings, delusions of grandeur and overproduction of ideas],</p>
<p>have been reported in adult and pediatric patients being treated with [Paxil-like]</p>
<p>antidepressants…both psychiatric and non-psychiatric.”72 Bizarre dreams and violent behavior</p>
<p>have also been reported.73</p>
<p>• The FDA also said these antidepressants have the potential to cause suicidal behavior. In Britain</p>
<p>in 2003, the medicine regulatory agency told doctors not to prescribe the drugs for this reason.74</p>
<p>• On 20 August 2004, the FDA announced that a Columbia University review of the pediatric</p>
<p>[child] clinical trials of Zoloft, Celexa, Effexor, Wellbutrin, Paxil and Prozac, found that young</p>
<p>people who took the antidepressants were more likely than those taking a placebo [sugar or fake</p>
<p>pills] to experience suicidal thoughts or actions.75</p>
<p>• An FDA official, Dr. Andrew D. Mosholder, found that most antidepressants are too dangerous</p>
<p>for children because of a suicide risk. He reviewed 22 studies, which showed that children were</p>
<p>nearly twice as likely to become suicidal as those given placebos.76</p>
<p>• On 15 October 2004, the FDA ordered pharmaceutical companies to add a “black box” warning to</p>
<p>antidepressants, saying the drugs could cause suicidal thoughts and actions in some children and</p>
<p>teenagers. The agency also directed the manufacturers to print and distribute medication guides</p>
<p>with every antidepressant prescription and to inform patients of the risks.77</p>
<p>• On December 9, 2004, ABC’s Prime Time Live exposed that at least 100 children in the United</p>
<p>States had committed suicide while taking these types of antidepressants and many others had</p>
<p>attempted it.78 The precise numbers are unknown.</p>
<p>• According to a report in 2005, the manufacturer of Prozac has settled at least 30 Prozac lawsuits</p>
<p>since 1990 for at least $50 million. It also agreed to pay $2.3 million in cash in 2000 to settle a</p>
<p>class-action lawsuit by California drug consumers.79</p>
<p>Violence and Antidepressants</p>
<p>• In November 2002, FOX National News reported that teenagers either taking antidepressants or</p>
<p><a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/stimulants/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Stimulants">stimulants</a> or experiencing the withdrawal effects of them committed 7 out of 12 school shootings</p>
<p>in the United States. One of these was Eric Harris, one of the teenagers responsible for the</p>
<p>Columbine school shooting in 1999. He had been taking Luvox, which lists mania as a side effect.</p>
<p>[The possible drug use by the remaining five school shooters is unknown as their medical records</p>
<p>are sealed.]</p>
<p>• The Physicians’ Desk Reference reports that during clinical trials of Luvox manic reactions</p>
<p>developed in 4% of children. Mania is defined as “a form of psychosis characterized by exalted</p>
<p>feelings, delusions of grandeur and overproduction of ideas.” Applying that figure to the number</p>
<p>of children on these types of antidepressants, that’s about 80,000 time bombs waiting to go off.</p>
<p>• Dr. Glenmullen says antidepressants could explain the rash of school shootings and mass-suicides</p>
<p>over the last decade. People who take antidepressants, he said, could “become very</p>
<p>distraught….They feel like jumping out of their skin. The irritability and impulsivity can make</p>
<p>people suicidal or homicidal.”80</p>
<p>• Dr. David Healy, director of the North Wales Department of Psychological Medicine stated:</p>
<p>“What is very, very clear is that people do become hostile on the drugs.”81</p>
<p>Withdrawal Symptoms</p>
<p>• Withdrawal symptoms associated with SSRIs include deeper depression, which is why a person</p>
<p>needs to gradually stop taking them under a physician’s supervision.82</p>
<p>• Internal pharmaceutical company documents from 1997 show that in some studies, the number of</p>
<p>people taking Paxil who experienced withdrawal symptoms was shockingly high—up to 62%.</p>
<p>Documents directed sales reps to minimize concerns about discontinuation and avoid using the</p>
<p>word “withdrawal.” Forced to testify before Congress in October 2004, manufacturer</p>
<p>representatives admitted their own studies showed as many as 21% of people taking Paxil</p>
<p>experience withdrawal symptoms. Yet the drug packaging only reports a risk of 2%.83</p>
<p>Antipsychotics (Major Tranquilizers)</p>
<p>Approximately 500,000 American children are prescribed powerful antipsychotic drugs, also called</p>
<p>neuroleptics [meaning nerve seizing], for so-called “schizophrenic” behavior or conduct “disorders.”</p>
<p>The older neuroleptics—first introduced in the 1950s—are more commonly known as Thorazine and</p>
<p>Haldol. The current ones are Risperdal, Clozaril, Zyprexa, and an even newer one called Abilify.</p>
<p>Psychiatrists learned very early on that neuroleptics cause Parkinsonian [nervous system damage</p>
<p>resulting in tremor and weakness in muscles] and encephalitis lethargica [brain inflammation]</p>
<p>symptoms.84</p>
<p>• The drugs damage the extrapyramidal system (EPS)—the extensive complex network of nerve</p>
<p>fibers that moderate motor control—resulting in muscle rigidity, spasms, and various involuntary</p>
<p>movements.85</p>
<p>• The drug-induced side effect, Tardive dyskinesia [Tardive, meaning “late” and dyskinesia</p>
<p>meaning, “abnormal movement of muscles”], is a permanent impairment of the power of</p>
<p>voluntary movement of the lips, tongue, jaw, fingers, toes, and other body parts.86 Individuals</p>
<p>you see walking the streets grimacing, shuffling and shaking are suffering, not from their “mental</p>
<p>disorder,” but from the damage induced by psychotropic drugs.</p>
<p>• Since the drugs’ introduction, researchers and psychiatrists have known the risk of neuroleptic</p>
<p>malignant syndrome, a potentially fatal toxic reaction where patients break into fevers and become</p>
<p>confused, agitated and extremely rigid. An estimated 100,000 Americans have died from it.87</p>
<p>• The latest antipsychotic drugs were introduced when the older ones stopped making manufacturers</p>
<p>sufficient profits and their damaging side effects could no longer be ignored. They are sold at</p>
<p>significantly higher prices, in one case at 30 times the price of the older drugs.88 One new</p>
<p>neuroleptic costs $3,000 to $9,000 more per patient, with no benefits to symptoms, side effects or</p>
<p>overall quality of life. 89</p>
<p>• One in every 145 patients who entered the drug trials for Risperdal, Zyprexa, Seroquel, and a</p>
<p>fourth atypical [new] called Serdolect died, and yet those deaths were never mentioned in the</p>
<p>scientific literature.90</p>
<p>• In 2003, The New York Times effectively retracted its earlier high praise for these antipsychotics</p>
<p>stating, “They were billed as near wonder drugs, much safer and more effective in treating</p>
<p>schizophrenia than anything that had come before.” However, now “there is increasing suspicion</p>
<p>that they may cause serious side effects, notably diabetes, in some cases leading to death.”91</p>
<p>Between 1994 and 2002, 288 patients taking the new antipsychotics developed diabetes; 75 became</p>
<p>severely ill and 23 died.</p>
<p>• Some of the newer drugs may be linked to pancreatitis [inflammation of the pancreas, the gland</p>
<p>that breaks down protein, fats and carbohydrates]. Weight gain is a problem, with some patients</p>
<p>gaining up to 65 pounds.92</p>
<p>• Rather than fewer side effects, the newer antipsychotics have more severe ones. These include</p>
<p>blindness, fatal blood clots, heart arrhythmia [irregularity], heat stroke, swollen and leaking</p>
<p>breasts, impotence and sexual dysfunction, blood disorders, painful skin rashes, seizures, birth</p>
<p>defects, extreme inner-anxiety and restlessness, death from liver failure, suicide rates two to five</p>
<p>times more frequent than for the general “schizophrenic” population, and violence and mayhem,</p>
<p>especially in young patients.</p>
<p>• The New York Times also referred to what had been known for more than 20 years—that one of</p>
<p>these drugs had a record of causing a life-threatening blood disorder, and that patients required</p>
<p>regular blood tests to monitor this side effect, also adding to its expense.</p>
<p>• In June 2005, the manufacturer of Zyprexa agreed to pay $690 million to settle 8,000 claims</p>
<p>against the drug. The drug accounts for one-third of the company’s annual drugs sales, generating</p>
<p>$4.4 billion in 2004 alone.93</p>
<p>• Nor are physical effects the full extent of the problem. Many patients complain that the drugs are</p>
<p>spiritually deadening, robbing them of any sense of joy, of their willpower, and of their sense of</p>
<p>being. While the exact danger and side effect profiles have changed, the atypical neuroleptics still</p>
<p>operate as a “chemical lobotomy.”94</p>
<p>Abilify [brand name for the chemical aripiprazole] has been on the market since November 2002 and</p>
<p>has been marketed as safe and effective with less side effects than earlier neuroleptics.</p>
<p>• Abilify has the following side effects: Blurred vision, headache, insomnia, light-headedness,</p>
<p>nausea, restlessness, sleepiness, tremors, vomiting, weakness, tachycardia [heart irregularity], heart</p>
<p>palpitation, hemorrhage [heavy, uncontrollable bleeding], cardiac arrest, heart failure, seizures and</p>
<p>weight gain. Nervous system side effects include depression, nervousness, hostility, suicidal</p>
<p>thoughts, manic reaction, abnormal gait [manner of walking] and confusion.95 Abilify can also</p>
<p>cause tardive dyskinesia.96</p>
<p>• In September 2003, the FDA requested the makers of six atypical antipsychotic drugs, including</p>
<p>Abilify, add a caution to their labeling language about the potential risk of diabetes and bloodsugar</p>
<p>abnormalities.97 Today, the information insert on Abilify lists hyperglycemia [abnormally</p>
<p>high blood sugar—usually associated with diabetes], hypoglycemia [abnormally low blood sugar]</p>
<p>and diabetes. 98</p>
<p>• In April 2003, the consumer advocacy group Public Citizen conducted their own review of</p>
<p>information published on Abilify. They based their evaluation primarily on publicly available</p>
<p>FDA reviews of information submitted by the manufacturer of Abilify in gaining FDA approval for</p>
<p>the drug. FDA approval was based on just five trials lasting four to six weeks. According to</p>
<p>Public Citizen, “…nothing in these five trials can lead one to believe that aripiprazole (Abilify) is a</p>
<p>meaningful advancement in the treatment of schizophrenia.”99</p>
<p>Essentially, all antipsychotics damage the nervous system, which affects the brain and, therefore, the</p>
<p>communication system within the body. Studies also show that when patients stopped taking these</p>
<p>drugs, they improved. 100</p>
<p>All psychiatric drugs are dangerous. Neurologist Sydney Walker, III, wrote in A Dose of <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/sanity/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Sanity">Sanity</a>, “In</p>
<p>short, virtually every ‘safe’ or ‘harmless’ psychotropic drug introduced on the market was later found</p>
<p>to have serious or even fatal side effects.”101</p>
<p>DO PSYCHIATRIC DRUGS “HELP”?</p>
<p>Richard Hughes and Robert Brewin, authors The Tranquilizing of America, warned that although</p>
<p>psychotropic drugs may appear “to ‘take the edge off’ anxiety, pain, and stress, they also take the edge off life itself…these pills not only numb the pain but numb the whole mind.”102 In fact close study reveals that none of them can cure, all have side effects, some horrific, and due to their addictive and psychotropic properties, many believe that they cannot deal with life without them.</p>
<p>Peter Schrag and Diane Divoky, authors of The Myth of the Hyperactive Child, say that dozens of drug</p>
<p>experiments have been founded on the “dubious premise: that if the drug worked, or seemed to work, the subject must be suffering from the ailment for which drug was administered.”103 Because the person’s emotional state, behavior or outlook changes, there is a belief that the drugs are helping. However, a person could drink alcohol or take cocaine and may think they “feel better.” It doesn’t make it right and, in the case of psychiatric drugs, it is potentially very dangerous because the drugs mask physical conditions, which left untreated, can be catastrophic.</p>
<p>Because of the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic &amp; Statistical Manual of Mental for</p>
<p>Mental Disorders, psychiatrists have deceived millions into thinking that the best answer to life’s</p>
<p>many routine problems and challenges lies with the “latest and greatest” psychiatric drug.</p>
<p>However, Dr. Walker said that the DSM has “led to the unnecessary drugging of millions of Americans</p>
<p>who could be diagnosed, treated, and cured without the use of toxic and potentially lethal</p>
<p>medications.”104</p>
<p>Imagine, he says, what would happen if a physician “simply gave patients symptom-masking drugs</p>
<p>instead of diagnosing and treating them.” He gave the example of a patient visiting a general</p>
<p>practitioner with a swollen hand that is twice its normal size, feels hot and is turning an unpleasant</p>
<p>color. “Now suppose, the physician—instead instead of diagnosing the patient’s life-threatening</p>
<p>infection and treating the infection with antibiotics—simply prescribes pain-killing drugs and sends the patient home! Treating a patient’s behavioral symptoms with Prozac and Ritalin is no different.”</p>
<p>While the patient may be lulled into a temporary sense of wellness, whatever condition has caused the symptom is still present and often growing worse.</p>
<p>Professors Herb Kutchins and Stuart A. Kirk, authors of Making Us Crazy, say: “The public at large</p>
<p>may gain false comfort from a diagnostic psychiatric manual that encourages belief in the illusion that the harshness, brutality and pain in their lives and in their communities can be explained by a</p>
<p>psychiatric label and eradicated by a pill. Certainly, there are plenty of problems that we all have and a myriad [great number] of peculiar ways that we struggle…to cope with them. But could life be any</p>
<p>different? Far too often, the psychiatric bible [DSM] has been making us crazy—when we are just</p>
<p>human.”105</p>
<p>SUMMARY</p>
<p>The repercussions are telling. Hundreds of children have committed suicide while taking the latest</p>
<p>antidepressants. Millions more are prescribed “kiddy cocaine” [<a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/stimulants/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Stimulants">stimulants</a>] for “disorders” that don’t</p>
<p>exist and put at risk of addiction and worse. Children diagnosed with “ADHD” and prescribed</p>
<p><a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/stimulants/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Stimulants">stimulants</a> can be later ineligible to serve in the U.S. Armed Forces. In 1998, the military discharged</p>
<p>more than 3,100 recruits with psychiatric histories, pointing to a rise in “medication” and treatment of ADHD and other “behavioral disorders” as a reason for discharge.106</p>
<p>Parents must be better informed. Few, if any, parents faced with the school situation of their child</p>
<p>being labeled as “mentally” or “learning disordered” and coerced into taking psychiatric drugs, are told that there are many other factors that could be causing the child’s inattention, behavior problems or learning difficulties.</p>
<p>Common causes are poor reading and math skills requiring tutoring, environmental toxins, allergies,</p>
<p>nutritional deficiencies, and other easily detectable and treatable physical conditions. Special medical</p>
<p>doctors can do tests to determine if a person is experiencing an allergic reaction. Diet can also help.</p>
<p>In a study of 803 New York public schools and nine juvenile correction facilities, researchers increased fruits and vegetables and whole grains and decreased fats and sugars over a couple of years. No other changes were made in the schools or correctional facilities. Consequently, the academic performance of 1.1 million children rose 16% and learning disabilities fell 40%. In the juvenile correction facilities violent and non-violent antisocial behavior fell 48%.107</p>
<p>The Washington D.C.-based Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI) cited 17 controlled</p>
<p>studies in a 1999 report that found diet adversely affects children’s behavior, sometimes</p>
<p>dramatically.108</p>
<p>Dr. Walker emphatically stated: “Physicians who skip the work of making an accurate diagnosis, and</p>
<p>cavalierly [casually] prescribe dangerous psychotropic drugs based solely on labels picked out of the</p>
<p>DSM are violating one of the most basic principles of medicine: to do no harm. And physicians who</p>
<p>prescribe drugs to perfectly normal, healthy patients looking for a magic pill to make them more</p>
<p>popular, or less sensitive to life’s ups and downs, are even more misguided: they are actually creating</p>
<p>brain dysfunction where none existed, and stunting their patients’ emotional growth as well.”</p>
<p>“A patient’s health is his or her most prized possession,” he added. “To prescribe medicines known to</p>
<p>cause grave risk to a patient’s health, and known to have few beneficial effects, is a perversion of the</p>
<p>physician’s duty and a violation of the Hippocratic Oath. To prescribe such drugs as a means of</p>
<p>helping patients shirk responsibility or avoid life’s tough knocks is simply unconscionable. These</p>
<p>practices should be strongly condemned—not actively encouraged—by the American Psychiatric</p>
<p>Association.”109</p>
<p>RECOMMENDATIONS</p>
<p>1. If you are concerned about a psychiatric drug that you or another is taking, seek medical attention.</p>
<p>No one should stop taking a psychiatric drug without the advice or assistant of a competent, nonpsychiatric</p>
<p>medical doctor.</p>
<p>2. Any diagnosis of a “mental disorder” is not based on a test or any physical means to scientifically</p>
<p>substantiate it. It is important to find a medical doctor that will conduct a thorough physical</p>
<p>examination to first determine what underlying physical condition may be causing any unwanted</p>
<p>behavior or emotion, including, but not limited to testing for:</p>
<p>• lead- or pesticide-poisoning</p>
<p>• thyroid conditions</p>
<p>• early-onset diabetes</p>
<p>• heart disease</p>
<p>• viral or bacterial infections</p>
<p>• malnutrition</p>
<p>• head injuries or tumors</p>
<p>• allergies</p>
<p>• vitamin and/or mineral deficiencies</p>
<p>• mercury exposure</p>
<p>Often a child, for example, may act up or not focus because he or she is experiencing the effects of</p>
<p>such undiagnosed and, therefore, untreated conditions.</p>
<p>3. Concurrently, parents should also ensure that the child fully understands what he or she is learning</p>
<p>in school to determine whether he or she should see a competent tutor who acknowledges the value of phonics and the value of defining key words. There are educational solutions for behavioral and</p>
<p>classroom problems.</p>
<p>4. Any person or any parent whose child has been falsely diagnosed as mentally disordered which</p>
<p>results in treatment that harms should file a complaint with the police and professional licensing bodies and have this investigated. They should seek legal advice about filing a civil suit against any offending psychiatrist and his or her hospital, associations and teaching institutions seeking compensation.</p>
<p>CITIZENS COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS</p>
<p>The Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR®) was co-founded in 1969 by the Church</p>
<p>of Scientology and Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry, Thomas Szasz, to investigate and expose</p>
<p>psychiatric violations of human rights and to clean up the field of mental healing. Today, it</p>
<p>has more than 130 chapters in 34 countries. Its board of advisors includes doctors, lawyers,</p>
<p>educators, artists, business professionals and civil and human rights representatives.</p>
<p>CCHR has inspired and contributed to many hundreds of reforms by testifying before</p>
<p>legislative hearings and conducting public hearings into psychiatric abuse, as well as by</p>
<p>working with media, law enforcement and public officials the world over.</p>
<p>For further information:</p>
<p>CCHR International</p>
<p>6616 Sunset Boulevard</p>
<p>Los Angeles, California 90028, USA</p>
<p>(323) 467-4242</p>
<p>(800) 869-2247</p>
<p>http://www.cchr.org</p>
<p>http://www.fightforkids.com</p>
<p>http://www.psychcrime.org</p>
<p>e-mail: humanrights@cchr.org</p>
<p>REFERENCES</p>
<p>1 Jeanie Russell, “The Pill That Teachers Push,” Good Housekeeping, Dec. 1997.</p>
<p>2 “Survey: 1 in 5 Teens Getting High on Medications, Over-Counter Drugs,” NewsItem.com, 2 June 2005.</p>
<p>3 Joyce Howard Price, “Antidepressant Use by Preschoolers Rising,” The Washington Times, 3 Apr. 2004.</p>
<p>4 Jacqueline A. Sparks, Ph.D. &amp; Barry L. Duncan, Psy.D., “The Ethics and Science of Medicating Children,” Center for Family Services, Palm Beach County &amp; Florida Institute for the Study of Therapeutic Change.</p>
<p>5 Jennifer Washburn, “Tainted to the Core: Why Conflicts of Interest are Hazardous to Your Health,” Institute for Public Affairs, In These Times, 20 June 2005.</p>
<p>6 Fred Baughman Jr., M.D, “Transcript: Calls for Investigation into Diagnosis of ADHD,” ABC Australia Online, 23 Mar. 2000, Internet URL: http://www.abc.net.au; “The White House on Ritalin,” New York Press, 29 Mar. &#8211; 4 Apr. 2000.</p>
<p>7 Department of Health and Human Services, FDA, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, “Psychopharmacologic Drugs Advisory Committee With the Pediatric Subcommittee of the Anti-Infective Drugs Advisory Committee,” Testimony of Dr. Gianna Rigoni from the Office of Drug Safety of the FDA, 2 Feb. 2004.</p>
<p>8 Kate Zernike and Melody Petersen, “Schools’ Backing of Behavior Drugs Comes Under Fire,” The New York Times, 19 Aug. 2001.</p>
<p>9 Karen Thomas, “Back to School for ADHD Drugs,” USA Today, 28 Aug. 2001.</p>
<p>10 “Leading Therapy Classes by Global Pharmaceutical Sales, 2003,” IMSHealth.com, 2004.</p>
<p>11 Op. cit., Karen Thomas.</p>
<p>12 Dr. Tana Dineen, Ph.D., Manufacturing Victims, Third Edition, (Robert Davies Multimedia Publishing, Montreal, 2001), p. 86.</p>
<p>13 “Ten Things That Drive Psychiatrists To Distraction,” The Independent, (United Kingdom), 19 Mar. 2001.</p>
<p>14 Sydney Walker, III, M.D., A Dose of <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/sanity/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Sanity">Sanity</a>: Mind, Medicine and Misdiagnosis, (John Wiley &amp; Sons, Inc, New York, 1996), p. 5.</p>
<p>15 Thomas S. Szasz, M.D., The Therapeutic State, Psychiatry in the Mirror of Current Events, (Prometheus Books, New York, 1984), p. 32.</p>
<p>16 David Kaiser, M.D., “Commentary: Against Biologic Psychiatry,” Psychiatric Times, Dec. 1996,</p>
<p>http://www.mhsource.com/edu/psytimes/p961242.html.</p>
<p>17 Bruce D. Levine, Ph.D., Commonsense Rebellion: Debunking Psychiatry, Confronting Society, (Continuum, New York, 2001), p. 277.</p>
<p>18 Elliot S. Valenstein, Ph.D., Blaming the Brain, (The Free Press, New York, 1998), p. 4.</p>
<p>19 Joseph Glenmullen, M.D., Prozac Backlash, (Simon &amp; Schuster, NY, 2000), pp. 193, 196.</p>
<p>20 Diagnosis and Treatment of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, National Institutes of Health Consensus Statement Online, 16-18 Nov. 1998.</p>
<p>21 “Anatomical MRI of the Developing Human Brain: What Have We Learned? Magnetic resonance imaging; Statistical Data Included. Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 1 Sept. 2001.</p>
<p>22 Lisa M. Krieger, “Some Question Value of Brain Scan; Untested Tool Belongs in Lab Only, Experts Say,” The Mercury News, 4 May 2004.</p>
<p>23 Ibid.</p>
<p>24 Ibid.</p>
<p>25 Kelly Patricia O’Meara, “In ADHD Studies, Pictures May Lie,” Insight on the News, 19 Aug, 2003.</p>
<p>26 Elliot S. Valenstein, Ph.D., Blaming the Brain (The Free Press, New York, 1998), p. 126.</p>
<p>27 Ibid.</p>
<p>28 Dr. Mary Ann Block, No More ADHD, (Block Books, Texas, 2001), p.30.</p>
<p>29 “National Institutes of Health Consensus Development Conference: Diagnosis and Treatment of Attention- Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder,” Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, No. 2, Vol. 39, p.</p>
<p>182; Op. cit., Dr. Mary Ann Block, p. 53.</p>
<p>30 Jan Strydom, Susan du Plessis, The Myth of ADHD and Other Learning Disabilities, (Huntington House Publishers, Louisiana, 2001), p. 43.</p>
<p>31 “Drug Scheduling,” U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration Online, Internet URL: http://www.dea.gov.</p>
<p>32 Report of the International Narcotics Control Board for 1995, United Nations Publication, ISSN 0257-3717.</p>
<p>33 “Methylphenidate (A Background Paper),” U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, Oct. 1995, p.</p>
<p>34 Jim Rosack, “Controversy Erupts Over Ads for ADHD Drugs,” Psychiatric News, 2 Nov. 2001.</p>
<p>35 Physicians Desk Reference, 1998, (Medical Economics Company, New Jersey, 1998), pp. 1896-1897. 36 Ibid., p. 1897.</p>
<p>37 Adrainne Jeffries, “Some Teens Abuse ADD/ADHD Drugs,” The Virginian-Pilot, 29 Mar. 2004.</p>
<p>38 Sydney Walker, III, M.D., The Hyperactivity Hoax, (St. Martin’s Press, New York, 1998), p. 47.</p>
<p>39 Paul Wenske, “Small Study Links Ritalin, Cancer Risk,” The Kansas City Star, 17 Mar. 2005.</p>
<p>40 Kathleen Fackelmann, “Health campaign Takes Aim at Prescription Drug Abuse,” USA Today, 10 Apr., 2001; Nicole Ziegler, “Recreational Ritalin,” The Associated Press, 5 May 2000; Christine Langdon, “Tired? Pop your Pal’s Ritalin: Students Using RX Drug as Study Aid,” The New York Post, 28 May 2000; Kelly Trahan, “U. Michigan Study Finds More Adolescents Using Ritalin Recreationally,” Michigan Daily, Mar. 2001; Peter Maller, Laura Lynch-German, “Adults are Becoming Hooked on Ritalin’s Caffeine-Like Jolt,” The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 12 Feb. 2001; Paul Zielbauer, New</p>
<p>York Times Service, International Herald Tribune, 25 Mar. 2000, p. 3.</p>
<p>41 DEA 1996 report, p. 29.</p>
<p>42 Nadine Lambert, “Stimulant Treatment as a Risk Factor for Nicotine Use and Substance Abuse,” National Institutes of Health Consensus Conference on Diagnosis and Treatment of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, 16-18 Nov. 1998.</p>
<p>43 “A Drug Disaster?” Doctors for Disaster Preparedness Newsletter September 2001 Vol. XVIII, No. 5, citing Journal of Forensic Science, 1999, Vol. 44, pp. 220-221.</p>
<p>44 DEA Congressional Testimony, Statement by Terrance Woodworth, Deputy Director, Office of Diversion Control, before the Committee on Education and the Workforce: Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Youth and Families, 16 May 2000.</p>
<p>45 Kay Lazar, “School Daze &#8211; Kid-Drug Ads Spark Concern,” Boston Globe, 2 Sept. 2001.</p>
<p>46 Op. cit. National Institutes of Health Consensus Development Conference Statement, p. 5.</p>
<p>47 Brian Vastig, “Pay Attention: Ritalin Acts Much Like Cocaine,” Journal of the American Medical Association, Aug. 22/29, 2001, Vol. 286, No. 8, p. 905.</p>
<p>48 Dr. Richard Nakamura, Evidence Before the U.S. Government Reform Committee Hearing on the Over Medication of Hyperactive Children, 26 Sept. 2002.</p>
<p>49 “Adderall,” DrugStore.com, Internet URL: http://www.drugstore.com.</p>
<p>50 Brian Witte, “Slaying blamed on reaction to hyperactivity drug,” Associated Press Wire, 25 Oct. 1999.</p>
<p>51 Gardiner Harris, “Citizens’ Group Wants Hyperactivity Drug Taken Off the Market,” The New York Times, 25 Mar. 2005.</p>
<p>52 “Drug Report,” Quarterly Report, Ontario Medical Association Committee on Drugs and Pharmacotherapy, 1 Dec. 1999.</p>
<p>53 Jim Rosack, “ADHD Treatment Arsenal Increasing Rapidly,” Psychiatric News, 21 Dec. 2001.</p>
<p>54 “Study Suggests Focalin (TM) LA Capsules (d-MPH-ER) Are Safe and Effective for ADHD in Adults,” PR Newswire, 5 May 2004; A.D.D. Warehouse website.</p>
<p>55 “ATTENTION DEFICIT HYPERACTIVITY DISORDER: FDA Approves Sprinkle Administration for Once-Daily ADHD Treatment,” Pain &amp; Central Nervous System Week, 6 May 2002. 56 ADHDHelp, Internet URL: http://www.adhdhelp.org/metadate.htm.</p>
<p>57 Ibid.; Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (Third Edition–Revised) DSM-III-R, (American Psychiatric Association, Washington D.C., 1987) pp. 136, 175.</p>
<p>58 Kelly Patricia O’Meara, “Ritalin Could Cause ‘Long-Lasting Changes,’” Insight Magazine, 12 Dec. 2002.</p>
<p>59 “Attention Drug to Get New Warning,” Los Angeles Times, 18 Dec. 2004.</p>
<p>60 “Strattera to Get New Risk Label,” The Washington Post, 18 Dec. 2004.</p>
<p>61 “New Drugs in Pipeline,” Psychiatric News, 21 Dec. 2001.</p>
<p>62 Alice Park, “More Drugs To Treat Hyperactivity,” Time, 10 Sept. 2001.</p>
<p>63 Bupropion Wellbutrin, Prozac Truth website.</p>
<p>64 Ibid.</p>
<p>65 “Teen Suffers Seizure After Snorting Antidepressant,” HealthScoutNews Reporter, 23 Apr. 2003.</p>
<p>66 Joseph Glenmullen, M.D., Prozac Backlash, (Simon &amp; Schuster, New York, 2000), p. 13.</p>
<p>67 Ibid., p. 203.</p>
<p>68 Ibid.</p>
<p>69 “Antidepressants Lift Clouds, But Lost ‘Miracle Drug’ Label,” The New York Times, 30 June 2002.</p>
<p>70 Op. cit., Joseph Glenmullen, p. 8.</p>
<p>71 “Worsening Depression and Suicidality in Patients Being Treated with Antidepressant Medications,” US Food and Drug Administration Public Health Advisory, 22 Mar. 2004.</p>
<p>72 Ibid.</p>
<p>73 “Adverse SSRI Reactions,” International Coalition For Drug Awareness website, Internet URL:</p>
<p>http://www.drugawareness.org; “Medication Profiles: Serotonin Reuptake Blocking Agents (SSRIs),” Anxieties.com website, Internet URL: http://www.anxieties.com; Karen Thomas, USA Today, 14 July 2002.</p>
<p>74 Op. cit., FDA Public Health Advisory, 22 Mar. 2004.</p>
<p>75 Anna Wilde Mathews, “FDA Will Seek to Revise Antidepressant Labels for Youth,” The Wall Street Journal, 20 Aug.</p>
<p>20, 2004; Gardiner Harris, “Antidepressant Study Seen to Back Expert,” The New York Times, 20 Aug. 2004.</p>
<p>76 Ibid.</p>
<p>77 Labeling Change Request Letter for Antidepressant Medications – FDA Letter, 15 Oct. 2004; “FDA orders strong ‘black box’ warnings on antidepressants used by children,” Associated Press Worldstream, 15 Oct. 2004.</p>
<p>78 Chris Cuomo, “DRUG DANGER COVER-UP? EVIDENCE OF SUPPRESSED INFORMATION,” Prime Time Live, ABC News, 9 Dec. 2004.</p>
<p>79 Jeff Swiatek, “Uncertainty was Driver in Zyprexa Deal,” IndianapolisStar.com, 11 June 2005.</p>
<p>80 “FDA Mulls Antidepressant Warnings,” Daily Press, 21 Mar. 2004.</p>
<p>81 Ibid.</p>
<p>82 Kevin Lamb, “Increased Fears Over Side Effects Concern Antidepressant Users, Medical Experts,” Cox News, 26 Mar. 2004.</p>
<p>83 Op. cit., Chris Cuomo, Prime Time Live.</p>
<p>84 Robert Whitaker, Mad in America: Bad Science, Bad Medicine, and the Enduring Mistreatment of the Mentally Ill, (Perseus Publishing, New York, 2002), p. 203.</p>
<p>85 Ibid., pp. 253-254; Ty C. Colbert, Rape of the Soul, How the Chemical Imbalance Model of Modern Psychiatry has Failed its Patients, (Kevco Publishing, California, 2001), p. 106.</p>
<p>86 George Crane, “Tardive Dyskinesia in Patients Treated with Major Neuroleptics: A Review of the Literature,” American Journal of Psychiatry, Vol. 124, Supplement, 1968, pp. 40-47.</p>
<p>87 Op. cit., Robert Whitaker, p. 208.</p>
<p>88 Ibid., p. 286.</p>
<p>89 “Leading Therapy Classes by Global Pharmaceutical Sales, 2003,” IMSHealth.com, 2004.</p>
<p>90 Op. cit., Robert Whitaker, p. 269.</p>
<p>91 Erica Goode, “Leading Drugs for Psychosis Come Under New Scrutiny,” The New York Times, 20 May 2003.</p>
<p>92 Ibid.</p>
<p>93 Op. cit., Jeff Swiatek, IndianapolisStar.com.</p>
<p>94 Robert Whitaker, “Forced medication is inhumane&#8230;,” The Boston Globe, 9 June 2002.</p>
<p>95 “ABILIFY Rx Only (aripiprazole) Tablets,” Package Insert, revised Mar. 2004; “GENERIC NAME: Aripiprazole</p>
<p>BRAND NAME: Abilify,” Internet URL: http://www.MedicineNet.com, Last Editorial Review: 9/8/04; “Aripiprazole</p>
<p>Brand Name: Abilify,” Internet URL: http://www.HealthyPlace.com, Last updated 3/04.</p>
<p>96 Ibid.</p>
<p>97 “FDA: Antipsychotic Drugs, Diabetes Linked,” Associated Press Online, 18 Sept. 2003.</p>
<p>98 Op. cit., “ABILIFY Rx Only (aripiprazole) Tablets.”</p>
<p>99 “The New Anti-Psychotic Drug Aripiprazole (ABILIFY),” Public Citizen’s eLetter, Apr. 2003.</p>
<p>100 Op. Cit., Erica Goode.</p>
<p>101 Op. cit., Sydney Walker, A Dose of <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/sanity/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Sanity">Sanity</a>, p. 67.</p>
<p>102 Richard Hughs and Robert Brewin, The Tranquilizing of America (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Inc., New York, 1979), p. 15.</p>
<p>103 Schrag and Diane Divoky, The Myth of the Hyperactive Child, (Pantheon Books, New York, 1975), pp. 56-57.</p>
<p>104 Ibid., p. 51.</p>
<p>105 Herb Kutchins, Stuart A. Kirk, Making Us Crazy, (The Free Press, NY, 1997), p. 265.</p>
<p>106 Dave Moniz, “Thousands of Troops Let Go for Psychiatric Troubles,” The Indianapolis Star, 28 Sept. 1999.</p>
<p>107 Op. cit., Dr. Mary Ann Block, p. 84.</p>
<p>108 Raymond M. Lombardi, N.D., D.C., C.C.N., “ADHD, A Modern Malady,” Nutrition Science News, Aug. 2000.</p>
<p>109 Op. cit., Sydney Walker, pp. 73-74.</p>
<p>Source: http://h11.protectedsite.net/files/10891/drug_effects0626.pdf</p>

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		<title>What You Should Know About Psychiatry and Psychiatric Drugs</title>
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		<description><![CDATA[


 Prozac: PANACEA OR PANDORA?, by Ann Blake Tracy, Ph.D.
Prozac: PANACEA OR PANDORA?, by Ann Blake Tracy, Ph.D., is the product of five years of research, and the study of the cases of approximately 1,000 patients on a long-term basis. The author holds a Doctorate in Biological Psychology, and heads the only support group in the state of Utah for those who have suffered adverse reactions to the SSRI drugs such as prozac, paxil, zoloft, luvox, effexor, serzone, anafranil &#38; the diet pills &#8211; fenfluramine, fen-phen &#38; redux.
&#8220;Brain wave patterns ...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Prozac: PANACEA OR PANDORA?, by Ann Blake Tracy, Ph.D.<br />
Prozac: PANACEA OR PANDORA?, by Ann Blake Tracy, Ph.D., is the product of five years of research, and the study of the cases of approximately 1,000 patients on a long-term basis. The author holds a Doctorate in Biological Psychology, and heads the only support group in the state of Utah for those who have suffered adverse reactions to the SSRI drugs such as prozac, paxil, zoloft, luvox, effexor, serzone, anafranil &amp; the diet pills &#8211; fenfluramine, fen-phen &amp; redux.<br />
&#8220;Brain wave patterns indicate patients [taking psychiatric drugs such as prozac, paxil, zoloft, luvox, effexor, serzone, anafranil &amp; the diet pills - fenfluramine, fen-phen &amp; redux] are in a total anesthetic sleep state while appearing awake and functioning. Increasing serotonin &#8211; exactly what these drugs are designed to do &#8211; induces both nightmares and sleepwalk. Patients report over and over again that they have lived out their worst nightmare. And as with sleepwalk episodes, many have no recall or little recall of what they have done. Often someone must prove to them what they have done while they where under the influence of these drugs before they will believe it to be true. One patient stated that he could not detect during his two year use of Prozac what was real or what was a dream.&#8221;<br />
&#8220;Although initially increasing concentration and energy, patients [on drugs such as prozac, paxil, zoloft, luvox, effexor, serzone, anafranil &amp; the diet pills - fenfluramine, fen-phen &amp; redux] report long-term effects of impaired memory and concentration and mental disability. Learn the reasons why large numbers of Prozac patients report FALSE memories of ABUSE. As disruption of serotonin alters perception, reality and dreams SEEM one and the same, creating a STRONGER hypersuggestable state than hypnotism.&#8221;<br />
&#8220;Elevated levels of serotonin (5HT) &#8211; exactly the chemical these [SSRI] drugs do increase &#8211; is the same chemical that LSD, PCP and other psychedelic drugs mimic in order to produce their hallucinogenic effects. Have these drugs turned the 90&#8242;s upside down for us to relive the 60&#8242;s? Learn that elevated levels of serotonin are found in schizophrenia, mood disorders, organic brain disease, Alzheimer&#8217;s, anorexia, autism, bronchial constriction, etc.&#8221;<br />
&#8220;As our latest panacea, Prozac and its analogues [such as paxil, zoloft, luvox, effexor, serzone, anafranil &amp; the diet pills - fenfluramine, fen-phen &amp; redux] are being prescribed for everything from headaches and flu to acne and home sickness. Yet, according to FDA spokespersons, there have been more adverse reaction reports on Prozac than any other medical product. As of October, 1993, a total of 28,623 complaints of adverse side effects had been filed with the FDA, including 1,885 suicide attempts and 1,349 deaths. The FDA&#8217;s general rule of thumb for estimating the true figures is that these reports represent only one to ten percent of the actual figures. This would indicate the staggering amount of 286,230 &#8211; 2,862,300 actual adverse reactions, 18,850 &#8211; 188,500 actual suicide attempts and 13,490 &#8211; 134,900 actual deaths attributed to Prozac by the end of 1993.&#8221;<br />
The Myth of <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/mental-illness/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with mental illness">Mental Illness</a>, By Thomas S. Szasz, M.D.<br />
Thomas S. Szasz, M.D. demonstrates that what is nowadays accepted as <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/mental-illness/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with mental illness">mental illness</a> is whatever psychiatrists say it is-and that psychiatry has-with increasing zeal, defined more and more kinds of behavior as &#8220;<a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/mental-illness/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with mental illness">mental illness</a>.&#8221; What is termed &#8220;<a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/mental-illness/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with mental illness">mental illness</a>&#8221; is in fact behavior disapproved of by the speaker. This is a stigmatizing moral judgment, not a medical diagnosis.<br />
If there is no <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/mental-illness/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with mental illness">mental illness</a>, there can be no &#8220;treatment&#8221; or &#8220;cure&#8221; for it. When personal problems are seen for what they are-helplessness and fear, envy and rage, and the many other miseries that beset man-and are not masked under the guise of illness, being &#8220;mentally ill&#8221; ceases to be a refuge from personal accountability, and the individual&#8217;s responsibility for his own conduct can then be faced.<br />
&#8220;It is customary to define psychiatry as a medical specialty concerned with the study, diagnosis, and treatment of <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/mental-illness/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with mental illness">mental illness</a>. This is a worthless and misleading definition. <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/mental-illness/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with mental illness">Mental illness</a> is a myth. Psychiatrists are not concerned with mental illnesses and their treatments. In actual practice they deal with personal, social, and ethical problems in living.&#8221;<br />
A Dose of <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/sanity/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Sanity">Sanity</a>, by Sydney Walker III, M.D.<br />
If you are currently being treated for depression, anxiety or panic disorder, attention deficit disorder, a sleeping disorder, or any of a wide array of common behavioral disorders, this book could save your life. If you are being given psychiatric SSRI drugs such as prozac, paxil, zoloft, luvox, effexor, serzone, anafranil, fenfluramine, fen-phen &amp; redux, you must read this book.<br />
In A Dose of <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/sanity/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Sanity">Sanity</a>, Sydney Walker III, M.D. takes us inside the big business of contemporary psychiatry and reveals how, by sacrificing sound medical principals in favor of labeling-by-convenience and brain-damaging quick-fixes like prozac, paxil, zoloft, luvox, effexor, serzone, anafranil, fenfluramine, fen-phen, redux, and ritalin, psychiatrists cause untold suffering and destroy the physical and mental health of millions of people.<br />
Reading like a detective novel, A Dose of <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/sanity/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Sanity">Sanity</a>, tells the story of dozens of men and women, many of whom suffered needlessly for years, simply for lack of a sound medical diagnosis. You&#8217;ll meet the concert musician whose lifelong bouts with &#8220;psychosis&#8221; were actually due to undiagnosed typhus; the widow who was treated for &#8220;panic attacks&#8221; that turned out to be a thyroid dysfunction; the &#8220;hyperactive&#8221; boy whose symptoms were caused by exposure to carbon monoxide; and many others saved by the intervention of Dr. Walker and like-minded colleagues.<br />
They Say You&#8217;re Crazy, By Paula J. Caplan, Ph.D.<br />
A shocking expose of the process by which the mental-health elite judges us all.<br />
How are decisions made about who is normal? Why are people being given psychiatric drugs such as ssri&#8217;s, prozac, paxil, zoloft, luvox, effexor, serzone, anafranil, fenfluramine, fen-phen and redux? As a former consultant to those who construct the &#8220;bible of the mental health professions,&#8221; the DSM (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders), Paula Caplan, Ph.D., offers an insider&#8217;s look at the process by which decisions about abnormality are made. A longtime specialist in teaching and writing about research methods, Caplan assesses the astonishing extent to which scientific methods and evidence are disregarded as the DSM is developed and revised.<br />
The DSM is the guide that most psychiatrists, therapists, and social workers use to determine not only what care will be covered by insurers, but who will be hospitalized against their will and who may be judged incompetent or too disturbed to rear their own children. On a more day-to-day level, the DSM determines how millions of people feel about themselves once they are labeled psychologically &#8220;abnormal.&#8221; And yet this powerful manual, recently released in its fourth edition, is constructed by a tiny clique in the powerful psychiatric establishment, dominated by conservative white males.<br />
In They Say You&#8217;re Crazy, Paula Caplan demonstrated that much of what are labeled &#8220;mental disorders&#8221; are actually common life problems or the effects of social injustice-and not signs of illness.<br />
&#8220;Paula Caplan has written a lively, marvelous insider&#8217;s story of how psychiatric diagnoses are invented-how subjective, political, and personal agendas are dressed up in the lab coats of science and offered to the public as &#8216;truth&#8217;. Mental health professionals need to read this book to cure themselves of Delusional Scientific Diagnosing Disorder, and the public needs to read it for self protection.&#8221;, Carol Tavris, Ph.D.<br />
Cruel Compassion, By Thomas Szasz, M.D.<br />
&#8220;The truth is that after treatment with neuroleptic drugs, mental patients tend to be sicker and more disabled than before. Many exhibit the toxic effects of the drugs, suffering from a disfiguring neurological disturbance called &#8216;tardive dyskinesia.&#8217;&#8221;<br />
Millions of Americans, diagnosed as mentally ill, are drugged with ssri&#8217;s, prozac, paxil, zoloft, luvox, effexor, serzone, anafranil, fenfluramine, fen-phen and redux and are confined by doctors for noncriminal conduct, go legally unpunished for the crimes they commit, and are supported by the state-not because they are sick, but because they are unproductive, unwanted, and &#8220;mentally ill&#8221;. While psychiatrists are obsessed with the false ideas that misbehavior is a medical disorder and that the duty of the state is to protect adults from themselves, we have replaced criminal-punitive sentences with civil-therapeutic &#8220;programs.&#8221; The result is the relentless loss of individual liberty, erosion of personal responsibility, and destruction of the security or persons and property.<br />
Few contemporary thinkers have done more than Dr. Szasz to expose the myths and misconceptions surrounding insanity and the practice of psychiatry.<br />
Thomas Szasz: Primary Values and Major Contentions, By Thomas S. Szasz, M.D.<br />
In the Myth of <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/mental-illness/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with mental illness">Mental Illness</a> Thomas S. Szasz, M.D. exposed and critically evaluated the cherished assumptions and misconceptions at the heart of psychiatry. In Thomas Szasz: Primary Values and Major Contentions he successfully isolates his basic claims and the arguments he offers in their behalf.<br />
&#8220;By historical and traditional criteria, &#8216;<a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/mental-illness/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with mental illness">mental illness</a>&#8217; is not an illness but a bogus invention that allows behavior, any behavior, to be categorized as &#8216;disease.&#8217; Psychiatry is conventionally defined as a medical specialty concerned with the diagnosis and treatment of mental diseases. I submit that this definition, which is widely accepted, places psychiatry in the company of alchemy and astronomy and commits to the category of <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/pseudoscience/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with Pseudoscience">pseudoscience</a>. The reason for this is that there is no such thing as &#8216;<a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/mental-illness/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with mental illness">mental illness</a>&#8217;.&#8221;<br />
&#8220;In the history of science, thinking in terms of entities has always tended to precede thinking in terms of processes. Alchemists and astrologers thus spoke of mysterious substances and concealed their methods from public scrutiny. Psychiatrists have similarly persisted in speaking of mysterious maladies and have continued to refrain from disclosing fully and frankly what they do.&#8221; &#8211; Thomas Szasz M.D., Primary Values and Major Contentions<br />
Beyond Bedlam, By Jeanine Grobe<br />
In Beyond Bedlam, more than two dozen contemporary women write about their experiences with psychiatry: how they were mistreated, how they escaped, how they live now, and what can be done to change the system that abused them. Their voices rise above the clamor of psychiatric jargon, &#8220;treatment&#8221;, and &#8220;therapy.&#8221;<br />
&#8220;Society blindly regards psychiatry as safe medicine. I found out that the psychiatric institution was not about healing but about the oppression of the human spirit. It taught me to accept being terrorized, tortured, and traumatized because these were &#8216;medicine&#8217; and I was &#8216;sick&#8217;.&#8221;<br />
The Tranquilizing of America: Pill Popping and the American Way of Life, By Richard Hughes and Robert Brewin<br />
Dr. Louis Gottschalk states, &#8220;We have enough data here that certain of the benzodiazepines [sedatives and tranquilizers] are capable, after a single dose, of significantly disrupting certain kinds of cognitive and/or intellectual functions. Furthermore, this phenomenon outlasts the antianxiety effect of these drugs.<br />
&#8220;..People are seeking an easy way out, looking for shortcuts on a path of life that has none; in the end not only will they be disappointed but they will end up by diminishing their humanness, the essence that separates man from animals.&#8221;<br />
The Myth of the Hyperactive Child &amp; Other Means of Child Control, By Peter Schrag and Diane Divoky<br />
Millions of children have been &#8220;diagnosed&#8221; as &#8220;hyperactive&#8221; or having &#8220;attention deficit disorder&#8221; and millions are now taking amphetamine-type medication, in many cases by order of school officials. Millions of other children have been labeled predelinquent, found to have &#8220;deviant&#8221; tendencies, or said to exhibit &#8220;maladaptive behavior.&#8221; Can these illnesses be in fact so widespread, or is this a new way the schools have found to deal with healthy children who seem, to parents or teachers, to present some form of difficulty?<br />
This shocking and meticulously documented book covers all aspects of the rapidly spreading ideology of &#8220;early intervention,&#8221; demonstrates how common problems become medical ones, and exposes the shoddy research that underlies those practices. Examining the &#8220;scientific&#8221; literature as well as searching out the underlying causes of this new and frightening trend, Peter Schrag and Diane Divoky document in telling detail the ways in which old-fashioned punishment and control are being replaced by new forms of medical and social treatment, teaching the younger generation that it must trust the state and its new &#8220;science&#8221; to define and manage the ways it grows up. The information and ideas they examine are critically important and profoundly disturbing.<br />
The Myth of the A.D.D. Child, by Thomas Armstrong, Ph.D.<br />
The Myth of the A.D.D. Child squarely challenges the mislabeling of millions of children as A.D.D., and questions the overuse of powerful mind-altering drugs in treating children&#8217;s hyperactivity. Not long ago, children who behaved in certain ways were called &#8220;bundles of energy&#8221;, &#8220;daydreamers,&#8221; or &#8220;fireballs.&#8221; Now they&#8217;re considered &#8220;hyperactive,&#8221; &#8220;distractible,&#8221; or &#8220;impulsive&#8221;-victims of the ubiquitous Attention Deficit Disorder. Tragically, such labeling can follow a child through life. Worse, the mind-altering drugs prescribed for A.D.D. are unnecessary-and they are harmful.<br />
And They Call It Help, By Louise Armstong<br />
From the best-selling author of Kiss Daddy Goodnight, comes this investigative journey into a multibillion-dollar industry that imprisons America&#8217;s children-for profit. Here and now, every year, thousands of kids are transported to a locked world where strange rules prevail and language is without meaning. Those in authority are empowered to administer brain-damaging drugs to children, forcibly restrain them, and lock them in isolation. Yet it is the children who are told over and over that they are the weird ones, the psychiatrically incorrect.<br />
Important note: When trying to withdraw from many psychiatric drugs, patients can develop serious and even life-threatening emotional and physical reactions. It is dangerous not only to start taking psychiatric drugs, but also it can be dangerous to stop taking them. Withdrawal from psychiatric drugs should be done gradually and under medical and clinical supervision.<br />
Source: http://outlookcities.com/psych/</p>

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		<title>List of Psychiatric Medications</title>
		<link>http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/featured/list-of-psychiatric-medications/</link>
		<comments>http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/featured/list-of-psychiatric-medications/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 14 Sep 2008 18:05:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[distress]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mental illness]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[psychiatric medications]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[psychiatrists]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/?p=46</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This is an alphabetical list of psychiatric medications used by psychiatrists to treat&#8230; mental illness or distress.
Please note:
The list is not exhaustive.
Names in italics are brand-names.
Not all drugs listed are used regularly in all countries.
A
Abilify, Adapin, Adderall, Alepam, Alertec, Aloperidin, Alplax, Alprax, Alprazolam, Alviz, Alzolam, Amantadine, Ambien, Amisulpride, Amitriptyline, Amoxapine, Anafranil, Anatensol, Ansial, Ansiced, Antabus, Antabuse, Antideprin, Anxiron, Apo-Alpraz, Apo-Primidone, Apo-Sertral, Aponal, Apozepam, Aripiprazole, Aropax, Artane, Asendin, Asendis, Asentra, Ativan, Atomoxetine, Aurorix, Aventyl, Axoren
B
Beneficat, Bimaran, Bioperidolo, Biston, Brotopon, Bespar, Bupropion, Buspar, Buspimen, Buspinol, Buspirone, Buspisal
C
Calepsin, Calcium carbonate, Calcium carbimide, Calmax, ...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This is an alphabetical list of <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/psychiatric-medications/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with psychiatric medications">psychiatric medications</a> used by psychiatrists to treat&#8230;<span id="more-46"></span> <a href="http://www.psychiatricdrugs.net/tag/mental-illness/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with mental illness">mental illness</a> or distress.<br />
Please note:<br />
The list is not exhaustive.<br />
Names in italics are brand-names.<br />
Not all drugs listed are used regularly in all countries.<br />
A</p>
<p>Abilify, Adapin, Adderall, Alepam, Alertec, Aloperidin, Alplax, Alprax, Alprazolam, Alviz, Alzolam, Amantadine, Ambien, Amisulpride, Amitriptyline, Amoxapine, Anafranil, Anatensol, Ansial, Ansiced, Antabus, Antabuse, Antideprin, Anxiron, Apo-Alpraz, Apo-Primidone, Apo-Sertral, Aponal, Apozepam, Aripiprazole, Aropax, Artane, Asendin, Asendis, Asentra, Ativan, Atomoxetine, Aurorix, Aventyl, Axoren<br />
B</p>
<p>Beneficat, Bimaran, Bioperidolo, Biston, Brotopon, Bespar, Bupropion, Buspar, Buspimen, Buspinol, Buspirone, Buspisal<br />
C</p>
<p>Calepsin, Calcium carbonate, Calcium carbimide, Calmax, Carbamazepine, Carbatrol, Carbolith, Celexa, Chlordiazepoxide, Chlorpromazine, Cibalith-S, Cipralex, Citalopram, Clomipramine, Clonazepam, Clozapine, Clozaril, Concerta, Constan, Convulex, Cylert<br />
D</p>
<p>Dalmane, Dapotum, Defanyl, Demolox, Depakene, Depakote, Deprax, Deprilept, Deroxat, Desipramine, Desirel, Desoxyn, Desyrel, Dexedrine, Dextroamphetamine, Dextrostat, Diapam, Diazepam, Dilantin, Disulfiram, Divalproex, Dogmatil, Doxepin, Dozic, Duralith<br />
E</p>
<p>Edronax, Efectin, Effexor (Efexor), Eglonyl, Einalon S, Elavil, Endep, Epanutin, Epitol, Equetro, Escitalopram, Eskalith, Eskazinyl, Eskazine, Etrafon, Eukystol<br />
F</p>
<p>Faverin, Fazaclo, Fevarin, Finlepsin, Fludecate, Flunanthate, Fluoxetine, Fluphenazine, Flurazepam, Fluvoxamine, Focalin<br />
G</p>
<p>Geodon, Gladem<br />
H</p>
<p>Halcion, Halomonth, Haldol, Haloperidol, Halosten<br />
I</p>
<p>Imipramine, Imovane<br />
J</p>
<p>Janimine, Jatroneural<br />
K</p>
<p>Kalma, Keselan, Klonopin<br />
L</p>
<p>Lamotrigine, Largactil, Levomepromazine, Levoprome, Leponex, Lexapro, Libritabs, Librium, Linton, Liskantin, Lithane, Lithium, Lithizine, Lithobid, Lithonate, Lithotabs, Lorazepam, Loxapac, Loxapine, Loxitane, Ludiomil, Lunesta, Lustral, Luvox, Lyogen, Lecital<br />
M</p>
<p>Manegan, Manerix, Maprotiline, Mellaril, Melleretten, Melleril, Meresa, Mesoridazine, Metadate, Methamphetamine, Methotrimeprazine, Methylin, Methylphenidate, Minitran, Moclobemide, Modafinil, Modalina, Modecate, Moditen, Molipaxin, Moxadil, Murelax, Myidone, Mylepsinum, Mysoline<br />
N</p>
<p>Nardil, Narol, Navane, Nefazodone, Neoperidol, Norebox, Normison, Norpramine, Nortriptyline, Novodorm<br />
O</p>
<p>Olanzapine, Omca, Orap, Oxazepam<br />
P</p>
<p>Pamelor, Parnate, Paroxetine, Paxil, Peluces, Pemoline, Permitil, Perphenazine, Pertofrane, Phenelzine, Phenytoin, Pimozide, Piportil, Pipotiazine, Pragmarel, Primidone, Prolift, Prolixin, Protriptyline, Provigil, Prozac, Prysoline, Psymion<br />
Q</p>
<p>Quetiapine<br />
R</p>
<p>Ralozam, Reboxetine, Resimatil, Restoril, Restyl, Rhotrimine, Risperdal, Risperidone, Rispolept, Ritalin, Rivotril, Rubifen<br />
S</p>
<p>Sediten, Seduxen, Selecten, Serax, Serenace, Serepax, Serenase, Serentil, Seresta, Serlain, Serlift, Seroquel, Seroxat, Sertan, Sertraline, Serzone, Sevinol, Sideril, Sigaperidol, Sinequan, Sinqualone, Sinquan, Sirtal, Solanax, Solian, Solvex, Songar, Stazepin, Stelazine, Stilnox, Stimuloton, Strattera, Sulpiride, Sulpiride Ratiopharm, Sulpiride Neurazpharm, Surmontil, Symbyax, Symmetrel<br />
T</p>
<p>Tafil, Tavor, Taxagon, Tegretol, Telesmin, Temazepam, Temesta, Temposil, Terfluzine, Thioridazine, Thiothixene, Thombran, Thorazine, Timonil, Tofranil, Trancin, Tranax, Trankimazin, Tranquinal, Tranylcypromine, Trazalon, Trazodone, Trazonil, Trialodine, Triazolam, Trifluoperazine, Trihexane, Trihexyphenidyl, Trilafon, Trimipramine, Triptil, Trittico, Tryptanol<br />
U<br />
V</p>
<p>Valium, Valproate, Valproic acid, Valrelease, Venlafaxine, Vestra, Vigicer, Vivactil<br />
W</p>
<p>Wellbutrin<br />
X</p>
<p>Xanax, Xanor, Xydep<br />
Z</p>
<p>Zamhexal, Zeldox, Zimovane, Zispin, Ziprasidone, Zolarem, Zoldac, Zoloft, Zolpidem, Zonalon, Zopiclone, Zydis, Zyprexa</p>
<p>Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_psychiatric_medications</p>

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