Psychiatric News

A chronicle of human rights violations and crimes by the psychiatric industry

Use of Antipsychotics in Children Criticized

Only 44 More Signatures Needed to reach 28,000 Against TeenScreen!  

New York Times
Use of Antipsychotics in Children Is Criticized
By GARDINER HARRIS 
November 18, 2008

WASHINGTON — Powerful antipsychotic medicines are being used far too cavalierly in children, and federal drug regulators must do more to warn doctors of their substantial risks, a panel of federal drug experts said Tuesday.

More than 389,000 children and teenagers were treated last year with Risperdal, one of five popular medicines known as atypical antipsychotics. Of those patients, 240,000 were 12 or younger, according to data presented to the committee. In many cases, the drug was prescribed to treat attention deficit disorders.

But Risperdal is not approved for attention deficit problems, and its risks — which include substantial weight gain, metabolic disorders and muscular ticsthat can be permanent — are too profound to justify its use in treating such disorders, panel members said.

“This committee is frustrated,” said Dr. Leon Dure, a pediatric neurologist from the University of Alabama School of Medicine who was on the panel. “And we need to find a way to accommodate this concern of ours.”

The meeting on Tuesday was scheduled to be a routine review of the pediatric safety of Risperdal and Zyprexa, popular antipsychotic medicines made, respectively, by Johnson & Johnson and Eli Lilly & Company. Food and Drug Administration officials proposed that the committee endorse the agency’s routine monitoring of the safety of the medicines in children and support its previous efforts to highlight the drugs’ risks.

But committee members unanimously rejected the agency’s proposals, saying that far more needed to be done to discourage the medicines’ growing use in children, particularly to treat conditions for which the medicines have not been approved.

“The data show there is a substantial amount of prescribing for attention deficit disorder, and I wonder if we have given enough weight to the adverse-event profile of the drug in light of this,” Dr. Daniel Notterman, a senior health policy analyst at Princeton University and a panel member, said when speaking about Risperdal.

Drug agency officials responded that they had already placed strongly worded warnings on the drugs’ labels.

“I’m a little puzzled about the statement that the label is inadequate,” said Dr. Thomas Laughren, director of the agency’s division of psychiatryproducts. “I’m anxious to hear what more we can do in the labeling.”

Kara Russell, a spokeswoman for Johnson & Johnson, said, “Adverse drug reactions associated with Risperdal use in approved indications are accurately reflected in the label.”

But panelists said the current warnings were not enough.

While panel members spoke at length about Risperdal, they said their concerns applied to the other medicines in its class, including Zyprexa, Seroquel, Abilify and Geodon.

The committee’s concerns are part of a growing chorus of complaints about the increasing use of antipsychotic medicines in children and teenagers. Prescription rates for the drugs have increased more than fivefold for children in the past decade and a half, and doctors now use the drugs to settle outbursts and aggression in children with a wide variety of diagnoses, even though children are especially susceptible to their side effects.

A consortium of state Medicaid directors is evaluating the use of the drugs in children on state Medicaid rolls to ensure that they are being properly prescribed.

The growing use of the medicines has been driven partly by the sudden popularity of the diagnosis of pediatric bipolar disorder.

The leading advocate for the bipolar diagnosis is Dr. Joseph Biederman, a child psychiatrist at Harvard University whose work is under a cloud after a Congressional investigation revealed that he had failed to report to his university at least $1.4 million in outside income from the makers of antipsychotic medicines.

In the past year, Risperdal prescriptions to patients 17 and younger increased 10 percent, while prescriptions among adults declined 5 percent. Most of the pediatric prescriptions were written by psychiatrists.

From 1993 through the first three months of 2008, 1,207 children given Risperdal suffered serious problems, including 31 who died. Among the deaths was a 9-year-old with attention deficit problems who suffered a fatal stroke 12 days after starting therapy with Risperdal.

At least 11 of the deaths were children whose treatment with Risperdal was unapproved by the F.D.A. Once the agency approves a medicine for a particular condition, doctors are free to prescribe it for other problems.

Panel members said they had for years been concerned about the effects of Risperdal and similar medicines, but F.D.A. officials said no studies had been done to test the drugs’ long-term safety.

Dr. Dure said he was concerned that doctors often failed to recognize the movement disorders, including tardive dyskinesia and dystonia, that can result from using these medicines.

“I have a bias that extra-pyramidal side effects are being under-recognized with these agents,” Dr. Dure said.

Dr. Laughren of the F.D.A. said the agency could do little to fix the problem. Instead, he said, medical specialty societies must do a better job educating doctors about the drugs’ side effects.   

 

November 20, 2008 Posted by Philip Barton | Blogroll | | No Comments Yet

US Soldiers Being Killed by Psychiatric Drugs

Help the families of these soliders.   Send the below article to  everyone you know.   And also send it to your local legisltors and veteran’s groups.

“I believe there are many more soldiers and Marines who have died in their sleep just like the four in West Virginia,” said Mr. White, a retired high school principal. “I think what we have found is just the tip of the iceberg, but we need more national publicity to help us find others who have lost loved ones and are looking for answers.”

Washington Times
EXCLUSIVE: After death of son, dad takes cases to Capitol Hill
HURRICANE, W.Va.
Andrea Billups and Audrey Hudson
Thursday, November 13, 2008

A West Virginia man whose son survived the battlefields of Iraq only to die in his sleep at home is crusading to find other military families whose loved ones also have died after taking drugs prescribed for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

Stan White’s son Andrew, who was found dead in bed at the family’s Cross Lanes, W.Va., home on Feb. 12, 2007, is one among a cluster of young veterans in the state who have died in their sleep with little explanation. Now Mr. White wants the federal government to monitor the drugs it prescribes to some 375,000 soldiers who have been diagnosed with mental trauma.

Shirley White of Cross Lanes, Andrew’s mother, says she and her husband want an investigation into the medications prescribed to their son and other veterans who died.

So far, he has identified nine veterans across the country – including four in West Virginia – who have died in their sleep after taking antidepressant and antipsychotic medications.
Mr. White has met with members of Congress and asked for Capitol Hill hearings to investigate the deaths. His research prompted a Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) investigation into Andrew’s and one other death, which were found to have been caused by “combined drug intoxication.” But the investigation could not determine whether the prescribed medications were at fault.

The father is taking up the crusade amid increased criticism of VA medical treatment of veterans suffering PTSD upon their return from Iraq or Afghanistan, including media and government reports that several VA centers failed to adequately care for patients and inform them of potentially dangerous drug side effects.

Finding out why his son died and keeping others from suffering a similar fate has become a personal cause for Mr. White.

“Our goal was to find out if the medications are safe,” said Mr. White, who, with his wife, continues to grieve the loss of his son. “If they are, that needs to be publicized. But if they are not, that also needs to be publicized as well.

“I believe there are many more soldiers and Marines who have died in their sleep just like the four in West Virginia,” said Mr. White, a retired high school principal. “I think what we have found is just the tip of the iceberg, but we need more national publicity to help us find others who have lost loved ones and are looking for answers.”

The VA’s Office of Inspector General conducted a review of the quality of care received by Marine Cpl. Andrew White and another veteran whose name was not made public but whom The Washington Times was able to identify as Army National Guard Sgt. Eric Layne, an Iraq war veteran.

According to the Aug. 14 findings, the two combat veterans were taking three prescribed psychiatric medications:

• Paroxetine – an antidepressant that can produce panic attacks, sleeping problems and suicidal thoughts.
• Clonazepam – an anticonvulsive that should not be used with alcohol or other drugs, including narcotics or barbiturates.
• Quetiapine – an antipsychotic used to treat schizophrenia but, combined with clonazepam, can increase sedative effects.

“The medical examiner found that these patients died from combined drug intoxication involving prescribed and nonprescribed medications,” the report said. “In the presence of PTSD, other mental health conditions, and uncertain use of medications by patients, we are unable to draw conclusions about the relationship between medication regimens and these deaths.”

The report said Cpl. White “died as a result of combined drug intoxication,” including a nonprescribed medication that the IG declined to identify. “No contributory natural diseases or physical injuries were identified,” the report said.

Sgt. Layne died as a result of the VA-prescribed drugs and two unidentified nonprescribed medications, “under circumstances significant for fatal over-use of prescribed paroxetine” along with “apparent misuse of nonprescribed medications of uncertain intentionality.”

The VA conducted an agencywide analysis of all cases of death among veterans who were taking a combination of the same drugs and “found no high mortality rate in veterans in the referenced group compared to those taking other similar psychotropic combinations or veterans taking the single agents,” said VA spokeswoman Alison Aikele, who did not specify the death rate.

Nevertheless, a California neurologist who contacted Mr. White after reading about his efforts to investigate the veterans’ deaths in a local newspaper article, expressed alarm over seemingly healthy young veterans suddenly dying in their sleep.

“The drugs and the occurrence there in the four vets in West Virginia really jumps out at you,” said Dr. Fred Baughman of El Cajon, Calif. “They are seemingly OK, and then they go to bed and they die in their sleep.

“The constant drugs that all four of them are on are the Paxil [paroxetine] and Seroquel [quetiapine],” said Dr. Baughman, who has long had his own concerns about PTSD drug prescriptions in the military.

Miss Aikele said it is not unusual for veterans suffering PTSD to be prescribed several psychotropic drugs for various symptoms, including sleep disturbance, nightmares and anxiety.

However, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is re-evaluating whether there are safety issues with recommended doses of quetiapine and possibilities of “overdose due to sample pack labeling confusion.”

The VA, meanwhile, has consented to review all drugs it prescribes to veterans who suffer PTSD.

At the urging of Mr. White, Rep. Shelley Moore Capito, West Virginia Republican, met with four victims’ families in mid-July to hear their frustrations with the VA system.

Mrs. Capito said afterward that it was important for the families to learn whether there is any relation between the medications and the deaths of the young veterans.

“These are returning veterans, and we want to make sure we take as good of care as possible,” she said.

VA Secretary James B. Peake, in an interview with The Times in June, shared Mrs. Capito’s concerns.

“My concern is that there is a perception that we don’t care about our veterans, but that is just the opposite,” he said during the 90-minute interview. “Our first responsibility is to our veterans. My whole life has been about taking care of them.”

The VA was plagued with controversies this year, including its own acknowledgment of “failures” in numerous human subject experiments and tests involving new drugs.

A joint investigation by The Times and ABC News of a behavioral study of veterans suffering from PTSD who also were taking the smoking-cessastion drug Chantix exposed “unacceptable failures” in ensuring safeguards for soldiers in the experiment, according to an internal agency report.

VA officials took anywhere from two weeks to 134 days to warn veterans that the FDA had issued new warnings that the drug could cause suicidal behavior and that more than 40 suicides had been reported among people taking the drug.

Sen. Barack Obama was the first lawmaker to demand an investigation just days after The Times’ story ran June 16, and Rep. Bob Filner, California Democrat and chairman of the House Veterans Affairs’ Committee, held an investigative hearing into the matter weeks later.

“Our veterans – particularly those suffering from mental health injuries – should have the very best health care and support in the world; they should never be needlessly exposed to drugs without proper notification of the dangers involved or effective monitoring of the side effects,” said Mr. Obama, now the president-elect.

According to the VA, more than 83,000 veterans who have served in Iraq or Afghanistan had received diagnoses of actual or suspected PTSD as of Aug. 15.

“Without going through each patient’s medical record, we don’t have a way of knowing exactly how many have persistent symptoms or confirmed diagnosis of PTSD for which specific treatment is needed,” Miss Aikele said. 

Letters to the editor: letters@washingtontimes.com

Source: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2008/nov/13/veterans-kin-demands-answers-on-ptsd-drugs/

November 14, 2008 Posted by Philip Barton | Blogroll | | No Comments Yet

Minnesota To Sue Eli Lilly Over Zyprexa

President Bush’s New Freedom Commission recommended mental screening all of our American children.  
 
Vote for  our new President today and also pass this Petition and Video Against TeenScreen to all of your associates: http://www.petitiononline.com/TScreen/petition.html  and  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RfU9puZQKBY     
 


 

12 States have now sued Eli Lilly over Zyprexa: AlaskaConnecticut, Idaho, Louisiana, Minnesota, MississippiMontanaNew MexicoPennsylvania,South CarolinaUtah and West Virginia.   See lawsuits, etc. here:  www.psychsearch.net/lawsuits.html   
 
Associated Press
Minnesota becomes the latest state to sue drug maker Eli Lilly over Zyprexa 
November 03, 2008

NEW YORK (Associated Press) – Minnesota has joined a long line of states aiming to wrangle money from Eli Lilly and Co. with a lawsuit over the drugmaker’s top seller, the anti-psychotic Zyprexa.

The state attorney general’s office filed a complaint in federal court last week echoing claims of other lawsuits that say Lilly downplayed the drug’s side effects and marketed it for uses not approved by federal regulators.

Lilly has spent more than $1.1 billion since 2005 to settle product liability claims regarding the drug, which brought in more than $4.7 billion in revenue last year. It announced last month a $62 million settlement with 32 states and Washington, D.C., over Zyprexa marketing practices. 

 

Minnesota was not part of that case but has been engaged in settlement talks, said Ben Wogsland, a spokesman for the attorney general’s office.

“We weren’t frankly … comfortable with the amount of money that was being offered to Minnesota, and we communicated that to the company and what our concerns were there,” Wogsland said.

He declined to elaborate on the amount or the talks, citing their confidential nature. Minnesota spent more than $175 million through public health programs on Zyprexa prescriptions between 2000 and 2007. Wogsland said the lawsuit helps the state learn more about the drug’s impact on Minnesota through the discovery process.

Lilly’s Zyprexa legal woes also include an investigation by the U.S. attorney’s office for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. The company recorded a loss in the recently completed third quarter largely due to a $1.4 billion charge related to the investigation of Zyprexa marketing practices.

Lilly said late last month it was taking the charge because it was in advanced discussions with that U.S. attorney’s office over the investigation …  

 

Link:  http://money.cnn.com/news/newsfeeds/articles/apwire/86462e76fe3d36e5ee3d6b31335d0a4d.htm     



 

27,610 Signatures Against TeenScreen. Petition: http://www.petitiononline.com/TScreen/petition.html   Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RfU9puZQKBY     

November 5, 2008 Posted by Philip Barton | Blogroll | | No Comments Yet

Eli Lilly Knew of Thimerosal Dangers for Decades

The following story does not directly bear upon psychiatry.  What it does very clearly demonstrate though is the morality of the pharmaceutical companies who create the drugs used by psychiatry.

From: http://www.newsinferno.com/archives/3298

Eli Lilly Knew of Thimerosal Dangers for Decades

Date Published: Wednesday, June 18th, 2008

In 2005, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. published a lengthy examination of the history of Eli Lilly´s deadly mercury compound, Thimerosal, in vaccines and its decades-long history of suppressed data about dangers to those receiving it. The piece described the outcome of a secret, highly-secluded 2000 meeting—The Simpsonwood Conference—involving a group of government scientists and health officials convened by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Internal Eli Lilly documents revealed by the Kennedy paper show the company knew immediately that its product—Thimerosal—could cause damage, even death, in animals and humans.  Lilly tested Thimerosal in 1930, giving it to 22 terminal meningitis patients; within weeks, all 22 patients died.  This test was not included in Lilly’s report “declaring thimerosal safe.”  In 1935, researchers at vaccine manufacturer, Pittman-Moore, warned Lilly that its claims about Thimerosal´s safety “did not check with ours.”  In a study Pittman conducted with dogs injected with thimerosal-based vaccines, half of the dogs fell ill prompting researchers to “declare the preservative ‘unsatisfactory as a serum intended for use on dogs.’”

The mounting case against Thimerosal did not stop in the 1930s.  During WWII, the Department of Defense used Thimerosal in vaccines on soldiers but required Lilly to label it “poison.”  In 1967, a study in Applied Microbiology found Thimerosal killed mice when added to vaccines.  In 1972, Lilly´s found Thimerosal to be “toxic to tissue cells” in concentrations as low as one part per million (PPM), 100 times weaker than the in a typical vaccine.  Despite all of this ongoing and emerging data, Lilly “continued to promote Thimerosal as ‘nontoxic,’” even including Thimerosal in topical disinfectants.  In 1977, ten babies at a Toronto hospital died when an antiseptic preserved with Thimerosal was dabbed on their umbilical cords.  In 1982, the FDA proposed a ban on over-the-counter products containing Thimerosal.  In 1991 the FDA considered banning Thimerosal from animal vaccines.

Horribly, in 1991, the CDC recommended “infants be injected with a series of mercury-laced vaccines:  Newborns would be vaccinated for hepatitis B within 24 hours of birth; two-month-old infants would be immunized for haemophilus influenzae B and diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis.”  The same year, Dr. Maurice Hilleman, a Merck vaccine program luminary, warned Merck that six-month-olds administered Thimerosal-laced shots would “suffer dangerous exposure to mercury” and recommended Thimerosal be discontinued, “especially when used on infants and children,” noting the industry knew of nontoxic alternatives. “The best way to go,” he added, “is to switch to dispensing the actual vaccines without adding preservatives.”

Thimerosal enables big pharm to package vaccines in multi-dose vials costing half as much as smaller, single-dose vials, cutting costs for international agency distribution to impoverished areas.  Money prompted Merck to ignore Hilleman.  Government officials pushed Thimerosal-laced vaccines and by 1999, children received an unbelievable 22 immunizations by the time they reached first grade.  Before 1989, American preschoolers received eleven vaccinations:  polio, diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis and measles-mumps-rubella.

This entry was posted on Wednesday, June 18th, 2008 at 12:25 pm and is filed under Legal News, Pharmaceuticals.

November 4, 2008 Posted by Philip Barton | Blogroll | | 1 Comment