Guest guest Posted September 2, 2003 Report Share Posted September 2, 2003 Dangerous Pharmaceutical Side Effects An excellent story was posted on the Internet recently titled Too Little Is Known About The Long-Term Effects Of The Most Popular Drugs. It was written by Thomas Moore and posted on the Washingtonian Online Health & Medicine web site. Here are just a few of the highlights from the story. " An NIH study with 42,000 participants found that the blood pressure drug Cardura-one of a family of alpha blockers taken by 1 million people was so ineffective at preventing strokes and heart failure that patients taking Cardura needed to be switched to more effective medicationåá Although new drugs are usually studied in thousands of patients for short periods, the international standard provides that drugs intended for lifetime use should be tested only in about 100 people for periods of one year or more. Although Food and Drug Administration requirements for some drugs are stricter, US law does not provide for the long-term testing of drugs, before or after approval for marketingåá Even when lives are at stake, drug companies and other health authorities repeatedly have failed to warn doctors and patients about newly discovered problems or ensure they halt treatment or switch to a better drug. The failure to provide for long-term testing of drugs and to make wise use of the results constitutes perhaps the single most dangerous flaw in a system intended to protect patients from unnecessary harm from prescription drugsåá A system so rife with examples of drugs that fail to deliver on their promises is a system in crisis. Add the fact that so many who take these drugs are exposed to unnecessary risks of major events such as heart attack and stroke, and the need for reform is clear. " A story appeared in a June 1998 edition of the Orlando Sentinel that exposes some of the fraud within the pharmaceutical industry in approving new drugs. The story was written by Stephen Fried in a special to the Washington Post and was titled Inside The FDA. " Agency officers know, for instance, that the organization doesn't actually test new drugs; the pharmaceutical companies do, and submit their results pretty much on the honor code. They know that drugs are tested on no more than 3,000 to 4,000 people before approval, and that many drug-safety problems will not show up in that small of a sample. Medical officers also know that the system for catching these problems after approval is woefully inadequate. " This story verifies that we are dealing with a self-regulated industry with no real checks and balances in place. Another story that appeared in the Orlando Sentinel on July 4, 2001 reported new risks associated with the cancer drug tamoxifen. " New research suggests that women taking the breast-cancer drug tamoxifen have an increased chance of getting a more aggressive form of the disease if a new tumor appears in their previously healthy breaståá The new research found tamoxifen users who developed new tumors were five times more likely than nonusers to get a more deadly kind of tumor ̦ referred to as estrogen negative. " Then we come to one of the most abused pharmaceutical drug on the market today with terrible side effects. It's a relatively new pain medicine called OxyContin. This drug contains a powerful alkaloid derived from opium. It has replaced cocaine, heroin and ecstasy as the number one killer in the State of Florida. People suffering from tremendous pain have become junkies on this drug. OxyContin sales in the year 2000 alone were over a billion dollars. OxyContin is fast becoming the new drug of choice in America. The tablets are manufactured in a time-released delivery system so the mind-altering effects of the opium alkaloid are not experienced by the users. They are designed to deliver painkilling effectiveness for between a 12 and 24 hour period. On the street users either chew the tablets, crush them and snort the powder, or boil down the tablets and inject it intravenously because it bypasses the time-released system and delivers a powerful euphoric, heroin-like punch. Entire towns and neighborhoods are dealing with problems associated with OxyContin. The Roanoke Times ran a story on August 16, 2000 that reported OxyContin to be the worst problem seen in the community. " Tazewell County's prosecutor has charged more than 150 people in the last year with felonies associated with the addictive painkilleråá Tazewell County Commonwealth's Attorney Dennis Lee called abuse of OxyContin an epidemicåá Andy Anderson, a narcotics detective with the Pulaski Police Department, estimated that 90 percent of the people in Pulaski who admit to such crimes as breaking and entering, shoplifting, forgery or stealing checks said they committed the crimes to get money to finance their OxyContin addiction. " Conclusion There is much more that can be said about the harmful effects of pharmaceutical medicine. To cover all the facts in great detail would take a large book. The purpose of this story has been to summarize the issues and enlighten you to the roots of the pharmaceutical industry and to show that there is a sinister force behind the increase of prescribed drugs. This story offers no medical advice other than warning readers to Beware Of The Sorcerers Medicine. I hope you have been educated by this story and that it prompts you to take a closer look at the pharmaceutical industry before buying into their propaganda. Look for more pharmaceutical expose stories in future issues of CRUSADOR. http://www.thehealthcrusader.com/pgs/archives/article_2003_02_21_2759 ..shtml Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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