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Tue, 7 Oct 2003 00:53:40 -0500

WC Douglass

It just doesn't ADD up

 

Daily Dose

 

October 7, 2003

 

**************************************************************

 

Today's modern psychiatricks for adults...

 

We all know about ADD, right? How could we NOT know about it?

Attention Deficit Disorder has gotten more ink and airtime in

the last decade than the Clintons...

 

And of course, if you've been reading Daily Dose or my monthly newsletter

for any length of time at all, you probably remember me venting about

this made-up malady - the darling of those pseudo-scientists, the

psychiatrists, and their handmaidens, the psychologists. But in case

you really don't know where I stand on the issue (however remote that

possibility is), here's a brief refresher:

 

I think for the most part, ADD is bogus. It's a made-up

illness foisted on perfectly normal children unlucky enough

to have been born awash in the confluence of an age of

sensory overload from too many TV, computer, and video game

screens - and also an age of no-fault, guiltless parenting

spawned by the " I'm OK, you're OK " sensibilities of the boom-

boom, feel-good hippie age. Any questions?

 

But there's a new spin on the ADD soap opera. It seems that

the drug giants aren't making enough of a profit from the

millions of kids popping their Ritalin and other pills - or

selling them in the schoolyard...

 

Now they've set their sights on adults, too. According to

CNN.com, Eli Lilly and company - holders of the patent on

Strattera, the only drug approved by the FDA for the

treatment of adult ADD - has embarked on a national advertising

campaign to " raise awareness " of the prevalence of the

condition. That's all fine and dandy, but the list of

symptoms to be on the lookout for reads like everyday life!

In a thinly veiled attempt to " screen " (see also: recruit)

potential patients, the ads ask questions like:

 

" ... Are you distracted by activity or noise around you? How

often do you feel restless... ? " And my personal favorite: " Do

you have difficulty waiting in line? "

 

Seriously, who doesn't at times feel distracted and restless?

And who LIKES waiting in lines? Do you go to the bank on a

crowded Friday afternoon and say to yourself: " YES - a huge

line! I can't WAIT - but I guess I'll just have to! " If you do

think this, ADD drugs aren't the ones you need, my friend...

 

The problem is two-fold. First, I think it's wrong to even

offer direct-to-consumer marketing of drugs of any type - it

just invites people with no medical knowledge or education to

self-diagnose. Second, the " symptoms " sound just like the

universal conditions of modern life - leading people to

mistakenly believe that if they feel perfectly normal

(scattered, impatient, irritable, and restless), they must be

SICK!

 

But what can we do about it? Marketing is the only

unstoppable force in the universe nowadays...

 

Bottom line: Don't be tricked by slick sales pitches into believing

the run-of-the-mill stress you're feeling signals a " disorder, " or

that drugs will somehow make you immune to the trying experiences of

everyday life. The antidote for routine annoyances is a healthy perspective

on life -- not an open-ended prescription.

 

**************************************************************

To start receiving your own copy of the Daily Dose, visit:

http://www.realhealthnews.com/dailydose/freecopy.html

Or forward this e-mail to a friend so they can sign-up to

receive their own copy of the Daily Dose.

 

**************************************************************

 

Don't we already pay enough for our " unhealthy " lifestyles?

 

I was thinking the other day about why I am so staunchly

opposed to most types of governmental intervention in our

lives, especially when it comes to our health. And I

concluded that mine isn't so much a philosophical objection

as a near-absolute certainty that they'll just botch up

whatever they get involved with. Honestly, if I thought our

elected officials would always act solely in the best

interests of the citizens they supposedly serve, I'd be all

for bigger, stronger government. But...

 

Such a perfect world does not exist, and the bureaucrats

almost universally don't allow our best interests to govern

them while they're governing us. It's a sad truth, but an

immutable one, it seems. Which is why it's such a shame that

the latest brainstorm to come out of the Department of Health

and Human Services can't actually work - because a lot of

people are likely to think it's a pretty good idea. And it

is, in theory.

 

Basically, the plan is for the government to " incentivize "

health insurance carriers to give people with healthier

lifestyles cheaper rates on their health insurance coverage.

In other words, the healthier you live, the less you'll pay

for insurance. In principal, this sounds pretty fair, doesn't

it? Sure it does.

 

So why won't it work, you ask?

 

Because the government's idea of " healthy " living isn't

really healthy at all - and it's getting even less so with

every passing year. Need proof? Take blood pressure

guidelines, for example. Just five or ten years ago, 140/90

was considered perfectly acceptable - yet 120/80 is viewed as

HIGH nowadays! And don't get me started on the established

thinking about cholesterol...

 

The long and short of it is that if the government is allowed

to set the standards for healthy living that we're all going

to be bound by in the eyes of our insurers, we'll be paying

through the nose if we aren't soy-swilling, tofu-munching

marathoners who'd never dream of drinking a martini or

enjoying a fine cigar.

 

If this becomes public policy, the end result won't be

healthy people saving money on insurance - but " unhealthy " (see

also " normal " ) people being swindled for their so-

called " vices. "

 

Setting my own standards,

 

William Campbell Douglass II, MD

 

**************************************************************

 

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Self or other diagnosed ADD, especially in adults, reminds me of the

saying- " argue for your limitations, and they are yours " .

If " modern life " requires medication in order to get through it,

wouldn't " cure " mean restructing our lives, or at least our

attitudes?...

Misty L. Trepke

http://www..com

 

It just doesn't ADD up

 

Daily Dose

 

October 7, 2003

 

**************************************************************

 

Today's modern psychiatricks for adults...

 

We all know about ADD, right? How could we NOT know about it?

Attention Deficit Disorder has gotten more ink and airtime in

the last decade than the Clintons...

 

And of course, if you've been reading Daily Dose or my monthly

newsletter

for any length of time at all, you probably remember me venting

about

this made-up malady - the darling of those pseudo-scientists, the

psychiatrists, and their handmaidens, the psychologists. But in case

you really don't know where I stand on the issue (however remote

that

possibility is), here's a brief refresher:

 

I think for the most part, ADD is bogus. It's a made-up

illness foisted on perfectly normal children unlucky enough

to have been born awash in the confluence of an age of

sensory overload from too many TV, computer, and video game

screens - and also an age of no-fault, guiltless parenting

spawned by the " I'm OK, you're OK " sensibilities of the boom-

boom, feel-good hippie age. Any questions?

 

But there's a new spin on the ADD soap opera. It seems that

the drug giants aren't making enough of a profit from the

millions of kids popping their Ritalin and other pills - or

selling them in the schoolyard...

 

Now they've set their sights on adults, too. According to

CNN.com, Eli Lilly and company - holders of the patent on

Strattera, the only drug approved by the FDA for the

treatment of adult ADD - has embarked on a national advertising

campaign to " raise awareness " of the prevalence of the

condition. That's all fine and dandy, but the list of

symptoms to be on the lookout for reads like everyday life!

In a thinly veiled attempt to " screen " (see also: recruit)

potential patients, the ads ask questions like:

 

" ... Are you distracted by activity or noise around you? How

often do you feel restless... ? " And my personal favorite: " Do

you have difficulty waiting in line? "

 

Seriously, who doesn't at times feel distracted and restless?

And who LIKES waiting in lines? Do you go to the bank on a

crowded Friday afternoon and say to yourself: " YES - a huge

line! I can't WAIT - but I guess I'll just have to! " If you do

think this, ADD drugs aren't the ones you need, my friend...

 

The problem is two-fold. First, I think it's wrong to even

offer direct-to-consumer marketing of drugs of any type - it

just invites people with no medical knowledge or education to

self-diagnose. Second, the " symptoms " sound just like the

universal conditions of modern life - leading people to

mistakenly believe that if they feel perfectly normal

(scattered, impatient, irritable, and restless), they must be

SICK!

 

But what can we do about it? Marketing is the only

unstoppable force in the universe nowadays...

 

Bottom line: Don't be tricked by slick sales pitches into believing

the run-of-the-mill stress you're feeling signals a " disorder, " or

that drugs will somehow make you immune to the trying experiences of

everyday life. The antidote for routine annoyances is a healthy

perspective

on life -- not an open-ended prescription.

 

**************************************************************

To start receiving your own copy of the Daily Dose, visit:

http://www.realhealthnews.com/dailydose/freecopy.html

Or forward this e-mail to a friend so they can sign-up to

receive their own copy of the Daily Dose.

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