Archive for July, 2009

Slate Exposes Psychiatry’s Billing Bible; “Bitterness, Compulsive Shopping, and Internet Addiction”

Friday, July 24th, 2009

Christopher Lane
Slate
July 24, 2009

There’s an awful lot of money to be made from compulsive shopping, judging by the career of Madeleine Wickham. Her Shopaholic series, written under the pen name Sophie Kinsella, is required reading for chick-lit enthusiasts, and the romantic comedy Confessions of a Shopaholic, the first of several planned big-screen adaptations, grossed more than $100 million worldwide. While the film, starring Isla Fisher, isn’t terribly funny, it does make the valid point that to enjoy shopping for elegant clothes isn’t a pathology.

It’s a style.The American Psychiatric Association risks losing sight of that distinction by grimly—and rather inexpertly—debating whether avid shopping should be considered a sign of mental illness. The fifth edition of the association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders is expected in 2012.

Read entire article: http://www.slate.com/id/2223479/pagenum/all/#p2

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Must Watch Video for All Parents:Critical Alert about Ritalin and Your Child

Friday, July 24th, 2009

Jenny Thompson
The Health Sciences Institute
July 22, 2009

A new study by the FDA and the National Institute of Mental Health shows that Ritalin may increase sudden death in children by 600%, yet the FDA downplayed the study’s findings.

Watch video here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9fMVUdYS0Mc

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FiercePharma: Drugmaker Eli Lilly nears another settlement over its antipsychotic drug Zyprexa

Friday, July 24th, 2009

Tracy Stanton
Fierce Pharma
July 23, 2009

Eli Lilly is close to settling another slate of Zyprexa marketing cases. According to the company’s quarterly report, it’s in “advanced discussions” with attorneys general investigating the company for off-label promotions of the antipsychotic drug. Lilly took a $105 million charge against earnings in anticipation of a settlement, the Wall Street Journal Health Blog reports.

This settlement would be the latest in a series. Lilly’s marketing practices on Zyprexa have drawn scrutiny from states and the feds. Some of those probes were settled earlier this year when Lilly agreed to pay $1.42 billion to the U.S. Justice Department and a number of states. Previously, the company had pledged to pay $1.2 billion to plaintiffs in liability suits, and another $77 million or so to 33 states, including Alaska.

Read entire article:  http://www.fiercepharma.com/story/lilly-nears-another-zyprexa-settlement/2009-07-23

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It’s Not a Mental Illness, It’s Just Life

Friday, July 24th, 2009

Helen Razer
The Age
July 23, 2009

WHEN Death of a Salesman was revived on Broadway 50 years after its celebrated debut, its director asked for help. In an effort to flesh out its frame for a contemporary audience, the play was diagnosed. Two psychiatrists offered their assessment of Willy Loman.

In each case, Loman was pronounced manic-depressive with hallucinatory aspects. Arthur Miller soon received word that this newest Loman was in therapy. The playwright was aghast. The hapless everyman, Miller said, was not a subject for psychiatric study. He was simply beaten down by life.

Loman was, and should remain, a victim of circumstances; not one of disease.

Read entire article: http://www.theage.com.au/opinion/its-not-a-mental-illness-its-just-life-20090724-dw3i.html?page=-1

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Finally! Senate orders study to find out if military suicides are result of troops taking antidepressants

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

Rick Maze
AirForceTimes
July 23, 2009

The Senate on Wednesday ordered an independent study to determine whether an increase in military suicides could be the result of sending troops into combat while they are taking antidepressants or sleeping pills.

Sen. Benjamin Cardin, D-Md., who pushed for the study, said he does not know whether there is a link, but he believes prescription drug use, especially when it is not closely supervised by medical personnel, needs a closer look.

“One thing we should all be concerned about is that there are more and more of our soldiers who are using prescription antidepressant drugs … and we are not clear as to whether they are under appropriate medical supervision,” Cardin said.

Read entire article:  http://www.airforcetimes.com/news/2009/07/military_suicides_antidepressants_072309w/

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Drugging Foster Kids

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

Brent Kallestad
Associated Press
July 22, 2009

Although there were a record number of adoptions in Florida last year, there are still problems.

Gov. Charlie Crist met with a handful of adoptive parents Wednesday at the governor’s mansion where a Wakulla County couple outlined their concerns about the number of children in foster care who are overmedicated.

Mirko and Regina Ceska from Crawfordville praised the governor for his enthusiastic backing of giving more children homes but asked for his help in keeping them safe in the foster care process.

“The foster people that are taking care of these kids, many of them that we have seen don’t want these kids to have too much to do,” Mirko Ceska said. “So they really put them asleep. They really do.”

Regina Ceska, a nurse, said the 12-year-old twin girls they adopted a year ago were on 11 separate medications, some she considered highly unsafe. She said one of the pills prescribed by a psychiatrist for the girls was a psychotropic drug called Seroquel, which is used for the treatment of schizophrenia.

“When we saw them the first time and they were on all those medications,” she said. “Their behavior was absolutely terrible and you could almost not control them.”

Read entire article: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/florida/AP/story/1152626.html

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Attorney asks, Is there more to Virginia Tech shooters mental health history than we’ve been told?

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

Sue Lindsey
Associated Press
July 22, 2009

The Virginia Tech gunman’s missing mental-health records have been found at the home of a former university counseling official more than two years after the bloodbath — a discovery that angered victims’ families struggling to understand how the killer fell through the cracks so disastrously.

The belated emergence of Seung-Hui Cho’s file, a development disclosed in a memo obtained Wednesday by The Associated Press, represents another embarrassing lapse in the case and raises questions about how such potentially explosive evidence could be lost for so long.

“Deception comes to my mind in my first response,” said Suzanne Grimes, whose son Kevin Sterne was wounded. “It gives me the impression, `What else are they hiding?’”

Read entire article:  http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2009/07/22/national/a065514D72.DTL&type=business

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Doctors shouldn’t work for drug companies; Promoting drugs for kids to make money is absolutely criminal

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

The Alligator Editorial Board
The Independent Florida Alligator
July 21, 2009

Ritalin. Concerta. Vyvanse. Adderall. The Editorial Board is willing to bet that you know at least one person who has been prescribed one of them.

These drugs have been championed by well-known Harvard psychologist Joseph Biederman for decades. As a result, doctors have increasingly prescribed the medicines to those who may or may not need them.

Sen. Chuck Grassley, a Republican from Iowa, investigated Biederman’s drug company affiliations. It turns out Biederman worked as a private consultant for some drug companies, earning at least $1.6 million in the past seven years for his “advice,” according to The Boston Globe.

Grassley identified the conflict of interest that arises when the person who sets the precedent for how psychotropic drugs are dispensed is connected to drug companies. Both the companies and Biederman make bank as the drugs are dispersed.

Read entire article:  http://www.alligator.org/articles/2009/07/21/opinion/editorials/090721_eddy1.txt

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Bitter Pill: How the Pharmaceutical Industry Turned a Flawed & Dangerous Drug (Zyprexa) Into a $16 Billion Bonanza

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

Ben Wallace-Wells
Rolling Stone
February 5, 2009

Created to treat schizophrenia, Zyprexa wound up being used on misbehaving kids. How the pharmaceutical industry turned a flawed and dangerous drug into a $16 billion bonanza.

In June 1992, not long after the place closed down, a Harvard-trained psychologist named Sergio Pirrotta walked out of Danvers State Hospital for the last time. The psychiatric facility, at this late date, was a baggy old thing, rectangled into a field just north of Boston; whole wings were barely occupied, and vandals had already begun to rip out the mantelpieces and furniture. The hospital had been slowly, incrementally shutting down for a decade, and the patients that remained were the hardest cases, mostly schizophrenics and those with disorders too dense and weird to classify. But now, as Pirrotta took a walk around the campus, even those patients were gone: released into the larger world to fend for themselves or bused to hospitals where the staffs had little psychiatric training.

Pirrotta had come to Danvers in the mid-1970s to rehabilitate children whom the courts had declared insane. Back then the place was overpopulated, the halls packed with madmen who would wander around smoking cigarettes, leering and lunging at the kids. In those days, the drugs used to treat mental illness were crude and ugly things. Thorazine was the best, and it made you into a ghouled and lifeless ogre — your face seized up involuntarily, you kept shuffling around, you were an emotional drone. But gradually the medications got a little bit better, the pharmacology more precise. First there was haloperidol, similar to Thorazine but with less-vivid side effects. Then clozapine, which had at first seemed a wonder drug, before it turned out to trigger a potentially fatal immune deficiency in two cases out of a hundred.

The patients at Danvers, their symptoms softened by the new medications, began to venture forth, almost miraculously, into the world beyond the hospital. Pirrotta took a group that included schizophrenics to a children’s camp in New Hampshire, off-season, where they spent a week cleaning and grooming the grounds. “For most of them, it was the first time they’d been out of an institution in their adult lives,” he recalls. But the state’s budget crunchers had wanted to close places like Danvers for years — pills, after all, were far cheaper than hospitals — and the new drugs made the move clinically defensible. To the staff at Danvers, it seemed as if the state had abandoned its responsibilities to the mentally ill. “It felt like we’d been sold a bill of goods,” Pirrotta says. “It felt like a betrayal.”

Read entire article:  http://mostlywater.org/bitter_pill_how_pharmaceutical_industry_turned_flawed_dangerous_drug_16_billion_bonanza

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Psychiatrist Joseph Biederman comes under fire for fueling child drugging epidemic while being funded by Pharma

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

Paul Solomon
Digital Journal
July 18, 2009

Harvard child psychiatrist Joseph Biederman, whose work has helped fuel an explosion in the use of powerful antipsychotic drugs in children, has been caught up in controversy since a Congressional inquiry by Senator Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) in 2008.

Biederman has been criticized for being an advocate of diagnosing Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and bipolar disorder in even the youngest of children, and using antipsychotic medicines to treat them. Pharmaceutical companies are continuing to profit from the sale of these powerful and sometimes unnecessary drugs. The problem was that much of Biederman’s work was underwritten by drug makers for whom he was a private consultant. He was caught with his hand in the cookie jar.

The Congressional inquiry revealed last year that Biederman earned at least $1.6 million in consulting fees from drug makers from 2000 to 2007, but failed to report all but $200,000 to Harvard officials. This constituted a major conflict of interest.

Read entire article:  http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/276135

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