Artikel über Gefahren und Langzeit-Entzug von Psychopharmaka
Verfasst: 07.05.2014 13:00
Liebe ADFDler,
hier ein aufrüttelnder Artikel des britischen Telegraph über die Gefahren von Psychopharmaka (protrahierte Entzüge von AD, aber auch Benzos) und deren explosionsartig zunehmende Verordnung:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/feature ... drugs.html
Titel und Vorspann:
http://beyondmeds.com/2014/04/27/antidepressant-drugs/
Liebe Grüße
Carlotta
hier ein aufrüttelnder Artikel des britischen Telegraph über die Gefahren von Psychopharmaka (protrahierte Entzüge von AD, aber auch Benzos) und deren explosionsartig zunehmende Verordnung:
Titel und Vorspann:
Und noch einige Auszüge:Lives 'left in ruin’ by rising tide of depression drugs
More people are being put on the pills but some experts are now warning they do more harm than good. Julia Llewellyn Smith reports
More than a decade later, Henry was far from cured and still taking antidepressants. “None of the drugs I was prescribed made me feel better, and most made me considerably worse. But every time I stopped them, the symptoms of what I thought was depression — but now know were of withdrawal — returned even more strongly, so I went back to the pills.”
By 2009, he was so unwell that he had to give up work. Finally, suspecting the drugs were the cause of his problems, he quit them, only to enter a new hell.
“It was torture. I thought I was going to die, and I didn’t care. For two years, I was in severe physical pain and so weak I lay all day on the sofa. My cognition was severely affected, I was dizzy, with blurred vision, I couldn’t read a bedtime story to my son and couldn’t remember things that had happened just a few seconds previously.”
Prof Gøtzsche, author of Deadly Medicines and Organised Crime: How Big Pharma has Corrupted Healthcare, believes that some drug companies have obfuscated the truth about antidepressants, much as tobacco firms attempted to hide the dangers of cigarettes.
“My research has led me to the uncomfortable conclusions that these drugs help very few people. They are often being taken needlessly and, in many cases, ruining lives.
“GPs and psychiatrists hand out these drugs for the most unbelievable reasons — when patients are having marital problems, have failed exams, split up with their boyfriends — occasions that would make anyone feel sad and stressed but don’t indicate clinical depression.
“In such cases, and also in truly depressed patients, the patients will feel better anyway with the passing of time, but doctors and patients attribute their recovery to the antidepressants. When they stop the drugs, withdrawal symptoms will often make them feel bad. This is often misdiagnosed as the depression not being cured, so they are told to continue taking the pills, sometimes for life.”
“It’s cheaper and quicker to prescribe antidepressants than investigate the root cause of sadness,” says Dr Davies. “The other problem is mental health practitioners aren’t introduced during training to the growing body of critical research on the drugs.”
Und hier noch eine lesenswerte Einschätzung dazu von Monica Cassani, selbst Langzeit-Betroffene (Entzug von AD, Benzo, NL) und Betreiberin des empfehlenswerten Blogs Beyond Meds:Over the following decades, drug companies explained that depression was caused by a chemical imbalance that drugs could cure. But this theory has never been proven. “These drugs create a chemical imbalance, which is why it is so difficult for patients to get off them,” says Prof Gøtzsche.
In fact, he says, there’s little evidence that antidepressants help anyone. “In cases of mild depression, their effect is small. Nice [the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence] recommends that antidepressants are not routinely prescribed for people with mild depression. But even in severe cases, research shows only 10 per cent of people will feel better than if they used a placebo.
Liebe Grüße
Carlotta