Guest guest Posted January 18, 2004 Report Share Posted January 18, 2004 I would like to amend and clarify this message. The figures given are for people who are depressed. So, the ones not taking an antidepressant are people who have been declared depressed, but have chosen not to take an antidepressent, It is not just " people " in general. Also, the point is referenced to show that the use of antidepressents, which is supposed to be good for mental illness, in reality causes 7 times the number of suicides than opposed to taking nothing. What I think is even a more valid point is that, is if it can do that. Cause a person's brain and thinking to deteriorate to the point of taking their own life, then it must be affecting most people on antidepressents by deteriorating their brains and thinking in lesser degrees which still would have deleterious effects on their life short of suicide. And when these people show abnormal thinking, then they would be prescribed other psychotropic drugs which will further damage them. In this way, millions are sucked into the " mental healthcare disease " trap. The " medicines " cause mental illness, but no one would believe that so, the " patient " must be " sick. " ( " We don't care about the cause, we just treat the symptoms " ) Wow, then he needs more medicine, hospitalizations, doctor visits, etc. What is the cost of ruining a life when we are talking about what is most important here,....... of course profit is more important here. It is what is most important to the drug companies, the doctors, the hospitals, the politicians, the government, advertisers, regulators, researchers, etc. regards, Frank JustSayNo wrote: Research JustSayNo Sun, 18 Jan 2004 11:52:01 -0500 [sSRI-Research] What we've found to be true... -- from a member... Who is " we " ? The online community of SSRI-activists. Without taking any antidepressants, only 11 people per 100,000 actually commit suicide. Among those using antidepressants, the suicide rate jumps to 752 per 100,000. In ALL of the bizarre homocides that you read about in the newspapers, ALL OF THE PEOPLE WHO COMMITTED THE MURDER(S) WERE TAKING AN ANTIDEPRESSANT. We now can fairly accurately predict WHICH antidepressant the person was on. Each antidepressant drug affects men and women differently, but they each have their own " characteristics " . If we can correctly point out which drug was involved in over 90% of the cases, it seems clear to me that the antidepressants must have some effect on a persons way of thinking. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.