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http://www.lef.org/magazine/mag2004/mar2004_awsi_death_01.htm

 

 

LE Magazine March 2004

Death by Medicine

Something is wrong when regulatory agencies pretend that vitamins are dangerous,

yet ignore published statistics showing that government-sanctioned medicine is

the real hazard.

 

Until now, Life Extension could cite only isolated statistics to make its case

about the dangers of conventional medicine. No one had ever analyzed and

combined ALL of the published literature dealing with injuries and deaths caused

by government-protected medicine. That has now changed.

 

A group of researchers meticulously reviewed the statistical evidence and their

findings are absolutely shocking.4 These researchers have authored a paper

titled “Death by Medicine” that presents compelling evidence that today’s system

frequently causes more harm than good.

 

This fully referenced report shows the number of people having in-hospital,

adverse reactions to prescribed drugs to be 2.2 million per year. The number of

unnecessary antibiotics prescribed annually for viral infections is 20 million

per year. The number of unnecessary medical and surgical procedures performed

annually is 7.5 million per year. The number of people exposed to unnecessary

hospitalization annually is 8.9 million per year.

 

The most stunning statistic, however, is that the total number of deaths caused

by conventional medicine is an astounding 783,936 per year. It is now evident

that the American medical system is the leading cause of death and injury in the

US. (By contrast, the number of deaths attributable to heart disease in 2001 was

699,697, while the number of deaths attributable to cancer was 553,251.5)

 

We had intended to publish the entire text of “Death By Medicine” in this

month’s issue. The article uncovered so many problems with conventional medicine

however, that it became too long to fit within these pages. We have instead put

it on our website (www.lef.org).

 

We placed this article on our website to memorialize the failure of the American

medical system. By exposing these gruesome statistics in painstaking detail, we

provide a basis for competent and compassionate medical professionals to

recognize the inadequacies of today’s system and at least attempt to institute

meaningful reforms.

 

 

Death by Medicine

By Gary Null, PhD; Carolyn Dean MD, ND; Martin Feldman, MD; Debora Rasio, MD;

and Dorothy Smith, PhD

Natural medicine is under siege, as pharmaceutical company lobbyists urge

lawmakers to deprive Americans of the benefits of dietary supplements.

Drug-company front groups have launched slanderous media campaigns to discredit

the value of healthy lifestyles. The FDA continues to interfere with those who

offer natural products that compete with prescription drugs.

 

These attacks against natural medicine obscure a lethal problem that until now

was buried in thousands of pages of scientific text. In response to these

baseless challenges to natural medicine, the Nutrition Institute of America

commissioned an independent review of the quality of “government-approved”

medicine. The startling findings from this meticulous study indicate that

conventional medicine is “the leading cause of death” in the United States .

 

The Nutrition Institute of America is a nonprofit organization that has

sponsored independent research for the past 30 years. To support its bold claim

that conventional medicine is America 's number-one killer, the Nutritional

Institute of America mandated that every “count” in this “indictment” of US

medicine be validated by published, peer-reviewed scientific studies.

 

What you are about to read is a stunning compilation of facts that documents

that those who seek to abolish consumer access to natural therapies are

misleading the public. Over 700,000 Americans die each year at the hands of

government-sanctioned medicine, while the FDA and other government agencies

pretend to protect the public by harassing those who offer safe alternatives.

 

A definitive review of medical peer-reviewed journals and government health

statistics shows that American medicine frequently causes more harm than good.

 

Each year approximately 2.2 million US hospital patients experience adverse drug

reactions (ADRs) to prescribed medications.(1) In 1995, Dr. Richard Besser of

the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimated the

number of unnecessary antibiotics prescribed annually for viral infections to be

20 million; in 2003, Dr. Besser spoke in terms of tens of millions of

unnecessary antibiotics prescribed annually.(2, 2a) Approximately 7.5 million

unnecessary medical and surgical procedures are performed annually in the US,(3)

while approximately 8.9 million Americans are hospitalized unnecessarily.(4)

 

As shown in the following table, the estimated total number of iatrogenic

deaths—that is, deaths induced inadvertently by a physician or surgeon or by

medical treatment or diagnostic procedures— in the US annually is 783,936. It is

evident that the American medical system is itself the leading cause of death

and injury in the US . By comparison, approximately 699,697 Americans died of

heart in 2001, while 553,251 died of cancer.(5)

 

Table 1: Estimated Annual Mortality and Economic Cost of Medical Intervention

 

Condition

 

Deaths

 

Cost

 

Author

 

Adverse Drug Reactions

 

106,000

 

$12 billion

 

Lazarou(1), Suh (49)

 

Medical error

 

98,000

 

$2 billion

 

IOM(6)

 

Bedsores

 

115,000

 

$55 billion

 

Xakellis(7), Barczak (8)

 

Infection

 

88,000

 

$5 billion

 

Weinstein(9), MMWR (10)

 

Malnutrition

 

108,800

 

-----------

 

Nurses Coalition(11)

 

Outpatients

 

199,000

 

$77 billion

 

Starfield(12), Weingart(112)

 

Unnecessary Procedures

 

37,136

 

$122 billion

 

HCUP(3,13)

 

Surgery-Related

 

32,000

 

$9 billion

 

AHRQ(85)

Total

783,936

 

$282 billion

 

 

 

Using Leape's 1997 medical and drug error rate of 3 million(14) multiplied by

the 14% fatality rate he used in 1994(16) produces an annual death rate of

420,000 for drug errors and medical errors combined. Using this number instead

of Lazorou's 106,000 drug errors and the Institute of Medicine 's (IOM)

estimated 98,000 annual medical errors would add another 216,000 deaths, for a

total of 999,936 deaths annually.

 

Table 2: Estimated Annual Mortality and Economic Cost of Medical Intervention

 

Condition

 

Deaths

 

Cost

 

Author

 

ADR/med error

420,000$200 billionLeape(14)

Bedsores

 

115,000

 

$55 billion

 

Xakellis(7), Barczak (8)

 

Infection

 

88,000

 

$5 billion

 

Weinstein(9), MMWR (10)

 

Malnutrition

 

108,800

 

-----------

 

Nurses Coalition(11)

 

Outpatients

 

199,000

 

$77 billion

 

Starfield(12), Weingart(112)

 

Unnecessary Procedures

 

37,136

 

$122 billion

 

HCUP(3,13)

 

Surgery-Related

 

32,000

 

$9 billion

 

AHRQ(85)

Total999,936

The enumerating of unnecessary medical events is very important in our analysis.

Any invasive, unnecessary medical procedure must be considered as part of the

larger iatrogenic picture. Unfortunately, cause and effect go unmonitored. The

figures on unnecessary events represent people who are thrust into a dangerous

health care system. Each of these 16.4 million lives is being affected in ways

that could have fatal consequences. Simply entering a hospital could result in

the following:

 

In 16.4 million people, a 2.1% chance (affecting 186,000) of a serious

adverse drug reaction(1)

In 16.4 million people, a 5-6% chance (affecting 489,500) of acquiring a

nosocomial infection(9)

In16.4 million people, a 4-36% chance (affecting 1.78 million) of having an

iatrogenic injury (medical error and adverse drug reactions).(16)

In 16.4 million people, a 17% chance (affecting 1.3 million) of a procedure

error.(40)

 

These statistics represent a one-year time span. Working with the most

conservative figures from our statistics, we project the following 10-year death

rates.

 

Table 3: Estimated 10-Year Death Rates from Medical Intervention

 

Condition

 

10-Year Deaths

 

Author

Adverse Drug Reaction1.06 million (1)

Medical error

0.98 million(6) Bedsores1.15 million(7,8)Nosocomial Infection0.88

million(9,10)Malnutrition1.09 million(11) Outpatients1.99 million(12,

112)Unnecessary Procedures371,360(3,13)Surgery-related 320,000(85)Total7,841,360

Our estimated 10-year total of 7.8 million iatrogenic deaths is more than all

the casualties from all the wars fought by the US throughout its entire history.

 

Our projected figures for unnecessary medical events occurring over a 10-year

period also are dramatic.

 

Table 4: Estimated 10-Year Unnecessary Medical Events

 

Unnecessary Events

10-year NumberIatrogenic EventsHospitalization89 million(4)17 million Procedures

75 million(3)15 million Total164 million

These figures show that an estimated 164 million people—more than half of the

total US population—receive unneeded medical treatment over the course of a

decade.

INTRODUCTION

Never before have the complete statistics on the multiple causes of iatrogenesis

been combined in one article. Medical science amasses tens of thousands of

papers annually, each representing a tiny fragment of the whole picture. To look

at only one piece and try to understand the benefits and risks is like standing

an inch away from an elephant and trying to describe everything about it. You

have to step back to see the big picture, as we have done here. Each specialty,

each division of medicine keeps its own records and data on morbidity and

mortality. We have now completed the painstaking work of reviewing thousands of

studies and putting pieces of the puzzle together.

Is American Medicine Working?

US health care spending reached $1.6 trillion in 2003, representing 14% of the

nation's gross national product.(15) Considering this enormous expenditure, we

should have the best medicine in the world. We should be preventing and

reversing disease, and doing minimal harm. Careful and objective review,

however, shows we are doing the opposite. Because of the extraordinarily narrow,

technologically driven context in which contemporary medicine examines the human

condition, we are completely missing the larger picture.

 

Medicine is not taking into consideration the following critically important

aspects of a healthy human organism: (a) stress and how it adversely affects the

immune system and life processes; (b) insufficient exercise; © excessive

caloric intake; (d) highly processed and denatured foods grown in denatured and

chemically damaged soil; and (e) exposure to tens of thousands of environmental

toxins. Instead of minimizing these disease-causing factors, we cause more

illness through medical technology, diagnostic testing, overuse of medical and

surgical procedures, and overuse of pharmaceutical drugs. The huge disservice of

this therapeutic strategy is the result of little effort or money being spent on

preventing disease.

Underreporting of Iatrogenic Events

As few as 5% and no more than 20% of iatrogenic acts are ever

reported.(16,24,25,33,34) This implies that if medical errors were completely

and accurately reported, we would have an annual iatrogenic death toll much

higher than 783,936. In 1994, Leape said his figure of 180,000 medical mistakes

resulting in death annually was equivalent to three jumbo-jet crashes every two

days.(16) Our considerably higher figure is equivalent to six jumbo jets are

falling out of the sky each day.

 

What we must deduce from this report is that medicine is in need of complete and

total reform—from the curriculum in medical schools to protecting patients from

excessive medical intervention. It is obvious that we cannot change anything if

we are not honest about what needs to be changed. This report simply shows the

degree to which change is required.

 

We are fully aware of what stands in the way of change: powerful pharmaceutical

and medical technology companies, along with other powerful groups with enormous

vested interests in the business of medicine. They fund medical research,

support medical schools and hospitals, and advertise in medical journals. With

deep pockets, they entice scientists and academics to support their efforts.

Such funding can sway the balance of opinion from professional caution to

uncritical acceptance of new therapies and drugs. You have only to look at the

people who make up the hospital, medical, and government health advisory boards

to see conflicts of interest. The public is mostly unaware of these interlocking

interests.

 

For example, a 2003 study found that nearly half of medical school faculty who

serve on institutional review boards (IRB) to advise on clinical trial research

also serve as consultants to the pharmaceutical industry.(17) The study authors

were concerned that such representation could cause potential conflicts of

interest. A news release by Dr. Erik Campbell, the lead author, said, " Our

previous research with faculty has shown us that ties to industry can affect

scientific behavior, leading to such things as trade secrecy and delays in

publishing research. It's possible that similar relationships with companies

could affect IRB members' activities and attitudes.”(18)

Medical Ethics and Conflict of Interest in Scientific Medicine

Jonathan Quick, director of essential drugs and medicines policy for the World

Health Organization (WHO), wrote in a recent WHO bulletin: " If clinical trials

become a commercial venture in which self-interest overrules public interest and

desire overrules science, then the social contract which allows research on

human subjects in return for medical advances is broken. " (19)

 

As former editor of the New England Journal of Medicine , Dr. Marcia Angell

struggled to bring greater attention to the problem of commercializing

scientific research. In her outgoing editorial entitled “ Is Academic Medicine

for Sale?” Angell said that growing conflicts of interest are tainting science

and called for stronger restrictions on pharmaceutical stock ownership and other

financial incentives for researchers:(20) “When the boundaries between industry

and academic medicine become as blurred as they are now, the business goals of

industry influence the mission of medical schools in multiple ways.” She did not

discount the benefits of research but said a Faustian bargain now existed

between medical schools and the pharmaceutical industry.

 

Angell left the New England Journal in June 2000. In June 2002, the New England

Journal of Medicine announced that it would accept journalists who accept money

from drug companies because it was too difficult to find ones who have no ties.

Another former editor of the journal, Dr. Jerome Kassirer, said that was not the

case and that plenty of researchers are available who do not work for drug

companies.(21) According to an ABC news report, pharmaceutical companies spend

over $2 billion a year on over 314,000 events attended by doctors.

 

The ABC news report also noted that a survey of clinical trials revealed that

when a drug company funds a study, there is a 90% chance that the drug will be

perceived as effective whereas a non-drug-company-funded study will show

favorable results only 50% of the time. It appears that money can't buy you love

but it can buy any " scientific " result desired.

 

Cynthia Crossen, a staffer for the Wall Street Journal, i n 1996 published

Tainted Truth : The Manipulation of Fact in America , a book about the

widespread practice of lying with statistics.(22) Commenting on the state of

scientific research, she wrote: “The road to hell was paved with the flood of

corporate research dollars that eagerly filled gaps left by slashed government

research funding.” Her data on financial involvement showed that in l981 the

drug industry “gave” $292 million to colleges and universities for research. By

l991, this figure had risen to $2.1 billion.

 

 

THE FIRST IATROGENIC STUDY

 

Dr. Lucian L. Leape opened medicine's Pandora's box in his 1994 paper, “Error in

Medicine,” which appeared in the Journal of the American Medical Association

(JAMA).(16) He found that Schimmel reported in 1964 that 20% of hospital

patients suffered iatrogenic injury, with a 20% fatality rate. In 1981 Steel

reported that 36% of hospitalized patients experienced iatrogenesis with a 25%

fatality rate, and adverse drug reactions were involved in 50% of the injuries.

In 1991, Bedell reported that 64% of acute heart attacks in one hospital were

preventable and were mostly due to adverse drug reactions.

 

Leape focused on the “Harvard Medical Practice Study” published in 1991, (16a)

which found a 4% iatrogenic injury rate for patients, with a 14% fatality rate,

in 1984 in New York State. From the 98,609 patients injured and the 14% fatality

rate, he estimated that in the entire U.S. 180,000 people die each year partly

as a result of iatrogenic injury.

 

Why Leape chose to use the much lower figure of 4% injury for his analysis

remains in question. Using instead the average of the rates found in the three

studies he cites (36%, 20%, and 4%) would have produced a 20% medical error

rate. The number of iatrogenic deaths using an average rate of injury and his

14% fatality rate would be 1,189,576.

 

Leape acknowledged that the literature on medical errors is sparse and

represents only the tip of the iceberg, noting that when errors are specifically

sought out, reported rates are “distressingly high.” He cited several autopsy

studies with rates as high as 35-40% of missed diagnoses causing death. He also

noted that an intensive care unit reported an average of 1.7 errors per day per

patient, and 29% of those errors were potentially serious or fatal.

 

Leape calculated the error rate in the intensive care unit study. First, he

found that each patient had an average of 178 “activities”

(staff/procedure/medical interactions) a day, of which 1.7 were errors, which

means a 1% failure rate. This may not seem like much, but Leape cited industry

standards showing that in aviation, a 0.1% failure rate would mean two unsafe

plane landings per day at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport; in the US

Postal Service, a 0.1% failure rate would mean 16,000 pieces of lost mail every

hour; and in the banking industry, a 0.1% failure rate would mean 32,000 bank

checks deducted from the wrong bank account.

 

In trying to determine why there are so many medical errors, Leape acknowledged

the lack of reporting of medical errors. Medical errors occur in thousands of

different locations and are perceived as isolated and unusual events. But the

most important reason that the problem of medical errors is unrecognized and

growing, according to Leape, is that doctors and nurses are unequipped to deal

with human error because of the culture of medical training and practice.

Doctors are taught that mistakes are unacceptable. Medical mistakes are

therefore viewed as a failure of character and any error equals negligence. No

one is taught what to do when medical errors do occur. Leape cites McIntyre and

Popper, who said the “infallibility model” of medicine leads to intellectual

dishonesty with a need to cover up mistakes rather than admit them. There are no

Grand Rounds on medical errors, no sharing of failures among doctors, and no one

to support them emotionally when their error harms a patient.

 

Leape hoped his paper would encourage medical practitioners “to fundamentally

change the way they think about errors and why they occur.” It has been almost a

decade since this groundbreaking work, but the mistakes continue to soar.

 

In 1995, a JAMA report noted, " Over a million patients are injured in US

hospitals each year, and approximately 280,000 die annually as a result of these

injuries. Therefore, the iatrogenic death rate dwarfs the annual automobile

accident mortality rate of 45,000 and accounts for more deaths than all other

accidents combined. " (23)

 

At a 1997 press conference, Leape released a nationwide poll on patient

iatrogenesis conducted by the National Patient Safety Foundation (NPSF), which

is sponsored by the American Medical Association (AMA). Leape is a founding

member of NPSF. The survey found that more than 100 million Americans have been

affected directly or indirectly by a medical mistake. Forty-two percent were

affected directly and 84% personally knew of someone who had experienced a

medical mistake.(14)

 

At this press conference, Leape updated his 1994 statistics, noting that as of

1997, medical errors in inpatient hospital settings nationwide could be as high

as 3 million and could cost as much as $200 billion . Leape used a 14% fatality

rate to determine a medical error death rate of 180,000 in 1994.(16) In 1997,

using Leape's base number of 3 million errors, the annual death rate could be as

high as 420,000 for hospital inpatients alone.

 

ONLY A FRACTION OF MEDICAL ERRORS ARE REPORTED

 

In 1994, Leape said he was well aware that medical errors were not being

reported.(16) A study conducted in two obstetrical units in the UK found that

only about one-quarter of adverse incidents were ever reported, to protect

staff, preserve reputations, or for fear of reprisals, including lawsuits.(24).

An analysis by Wald and Shojania found that only 1.5% of all adverse events

result in an incident report, and only 6% of adverse drug events are identified

properly. The authors learned that the American College of Surgeons estimates

that surgical incident reports routinely capture only 5-30% of adverse events.

In one study, only 20% of surgical complications resulted in discussion at

morbidity and mortality rounds.(25) From these studies, it appears that all the

statistics gathered on medical errors may substantially underestimate the number

of adverse drug and medical therapy incidents. They also suggest that our

statistics concerning mortality resulting from medical errors may be

in fact be conservative figures.

 

An article in Psychiatric Times (April 2000) outlines the stakes involved in

reporting medical errors.(26) The authors found that the public is fearful of

suffering a fatal medical error, and doctors are afraid they will be sued if

they report an error. This brings up the obvious question: who is reporting

medical errors? Usually it is the patient or the patient's surviving family. If

no one notices the error, it is never reported. Janet Heinrich, an associate

director at the U.S. General Accounting Office responsible for health financing

and public health issues, testified before a House subcommittee hearing on

medical errors that " the full magnitude of their threat to the American public

is unknown” and " gathering valid and useful information about adverse events is

extremely difficult. " She acknowledged that the fear of being blamed, and the

potential for legal liability, played key roles in the underreporting of errors.

The Psychiatric Times noted that the AMA strongly opposes

mandatory reporting of medical errors.(26) If doctors are not reporting, what

about nurses? A survey of nurses found that they also fail to report medical

mistakes for fear of retaliation.(27)

 

Standard medical pharmacology texts admit that relatively few doctors ever

report adverse drug reactions to the FDA.(28) The reasons range from not knowing

such a reporting system exists to fear of being sued.(29) Yet the public depends

on this tremendously flawed system of voluntary reporting by doctors to know

whether a drug or a medical intervention is harmful.

 

Pharmacology texts also will tell doctors how hard it is to separate drug side

effects from disease symptoms. Treatment failure is most often attributed to the

disease and not the drug or doctor. Doctors are warned, “Probably nowhere else

in professional life are mistakes so easily hidden, even from ourselves.”(30) It

may be hard to accept, but it is not difficult to understand why only 1 in 20

side effects is reported to either hospital administrators or the FDA.(31, 31a)

 

If hospitals admitted to the actual number of errors for which they are

responsible, which is about 20 times what is reported, they would come under

intense scrutiny.(32) Jerry Phillips, associate director of the FDA's Office of

Post Marketing Drug Risk Assessment, confirms this number. “In the broader area

of adverse drug reaction data, the 250,000 reports received annually probably

represent only 5% of the actual reactions that occur.”(33) Dr. Jay Cohen, who

has extensively researched adverse drug reactions, notes that because only 5% of

adverse drug reactions are reported, there are in fact 5 million medication

reactions each year.(34)

 

A 2003 survey is all the more distressing because there seems to be no

improvement in error reporting, even with all the attention given to this topic.

Dr. Dorothea Wild surveyed medical residents at a community hospital in

Connecticut and found that only half were aware that the hospital had a medical

error-reporting system, and that the vast majority did not use it at all. Dr.

Wild says this does not bode well for the future. If doctors don't learn error

reporting in their training, they will never use it. Wild adds that error

reporting is the first step in locating the gaps in the medical system and

fixing them. Not even that first step has been taken to date.(35)

 

PUBLIC SUGGESTIONS ON IATROGENESIS

 

In a telephone survey, 1,207 adults ranked the effectiveness of the following

measures in reducing preventable medical errors that result in serious harm.(36)

(Following each measure is the percentage of respondents who ranked the measure

as “very effective.”)

 

giving doctors more time to spend with patients (78%)

requiring hospitals to develop systems to avoid medical errors (74%)

better training of health professionals (73%)

using only doctors specially trained in intensive care medicine on intensive

care units (73%)

requiring hospitals to report all serious medical errors to a state agency

(71%)

increasing the number of hospital nurses (69%)

reducing the work hours of doctors in training to avoid fatigue (66%)

encouraging hospitals to voluntarily report serious medical errors to a state

agency (62%).

 

DRUG IATROGENESIS

 

Prescription drugs constitute the major treatment modality of scientific

medicine. With the discovery of the “germ theory,” medical scientists convinced

the public that infectious organisms were the cause of illness. Finding the

“cure” for these infections proved much harder than anyone imagined. From the

beginning, chemical drugs promised much more than they delivered. But far beyond

not working, the drugs also caused incalculable side effects. The drugs

themselves, even when properly prescribed, have side effects that can be fatal,

as Lazarou's study(1) showed. But human error can make the situation even worse.

 

Medication Errors

 

A survey of a 1992 national pharmacy database found a total of 429,827

medication errors from 1,081 hospitals. Medication errors occurred in 5.22% of

patients admitted to these hospitals each year. The authors concluded that at

least 90,895 patients annually were harmed by medication errors in the US as a

whole.(37)

 

A 2002 study shows that 20% of hospital medications for patients had dosage

errors. Nearly 40% of these errors were considered potentially harmful to the

patient. In a typical 300-patient hospital, the number of errors per day was

40.(38)

 

Problems involving patients' medications were even higher the following year.

The error rate intercepted by pharmacists in this study was 24%, making the

potential minimum number of patients harmed by prescription drugs 417,908.(39)

 

Recent Adverse Drug Reactions

 

More-recent studies on adverse drug reactions show that the figures from 1994

published in Lazarou's 1998 JAMA article may be increasing. A 2003 study

followed 400 patients after discharge from a tertiary care hospital setting

(requiring highly specialized skills, technology, or support services).

Seventy-six patients (19%) had adverse events. Adverse drug events were the most

common, at 66% of all events. The next most common event was procedure-related

injuries, at 17%.(40)

 

In a New England Journal of Medicine study, an alarming one in four patients

suffered observable side effects from the more than 3.34 billion prescription

drugs filled in 2002.(41) One of the doctors who produced the study was

interviewed by Reuters and commented, " With these 10-minute appointments, it's

hard for the doctor to get into whether the symptoms are bothering the

patients. " (42) William Tierney, who editorialized on the New England Journal

study, said “… given the increasing number of powerful drugs available to care

for the aging population, the problem will only get worse.” The drugs with the

worst record of side effects were selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (

SSRIs), nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), and calcium-channel

blockers. Reuters also reported that prior research has suggested that nearly 5%

of hospital admissions (over 1 million per year) are the result of drug side

effects. But most of the cases are not documented as such. The study found

that one of the reasons for this failure is that in nearly two-thirds of the

cases, doctors could not diagnose drug side effects or the side effects

persisted because the doctor failed to heed the warning signs.

 

Medicating Our Feelings

 

Patients seeking a more joyful existence and relief from worry, stress, and

anxiety often fall victim to the messages endlessly displayed on TV and

billboards. Often, instead of gaining relief, they fall victim to the myriad

iatrogenic side effects of antidepressant medication.

 

Moreover, a whole generation of antidepressant users has been created from young

people growing up on Ritalin. Medicating youth and modifying their emotions must

have some impact on how they learn to deal with their feelings. They learn to

equate coping with drugs rather than with their inner resources. As adults,

these medicated youth reach for alcohol, drugs, or even street drugs to cope.

According to JAMA , “Ritalin acts much like cocaine.”(43) Today's marketing of

mood-modifying drugs such as Prozac and Zoloft ® makes them not only socially

acceptable but almost a necessity in today's stressful world.

 

Television Diagnosis

 

To reach the widest audience possible, drug companies are no longer just

targeting medical doctors with their marketing of antidepressants. By 1995, drug

companies had tripled the amount of money allotted to direct advertising of

prescription drugs to consumers. The majority of this money is spent on

seductive television ads. From 1996 to 2000, spending rose from $791 million to

nearly $2.5 billion.(44) This $2.5 billion represents only 15% of the total

pharmaceutical advertising budget. While the drug companies maintain that

direct-to-consumer advertising is educational, Dr. Sidney M. Wolfe of the Public

Citizen Health Research Group in Washington, DC, argues that the public often is

misinformed about these ads.(45) People want what they see on television and are

told to go to their doctors for a prescription. Doctors in private practice

either acquiesce to their patients' demands for these drugs or spend valuable

time trying to talk patients out of unnecessary drugs. Dr. Wolfe

remarks that one important study found that people mistakenly believe that the

“FDA reviews all ads before they are released and allows only the safest and

most effective drugs to be promoted directly to the public.”(46)

 

How Do We Know Drugs Are Safe?

 

Another aspect of scientific medicine that the public takes for granted is the

testing of new drugs. Drugs generally are tested on individuals who are fairly

healthy and not on other medications that could interfere with findings. But

when these new drugs are declared “safe” and enter the drug prescription books,

they are naturally going to be used by people who are on a variety of other

medications and have a lot of other health problems. Then a new phase of drug

testing called “post-approval” comes into play, which is the documentation of

side effects once drugs hit the market. In one very telling report, the federal

government's General Accounting Office " found that of the 198 drugs approved by

the FDA between 1976 and 1985... 102 (or 51.5%) had serious post-approval

risks... the serious post-approval risks (included) heart failure, myocardial

infarction, anaphylaxis, respiratory depression and arrest, seizures, kidney and

liver failure, severe blood disorders, birth defects and

fetal toxicity, and blindness. " (47)

 

NBC Television's investigative show “Dateline” wondered if your doctor is

moonlighting as a drug company representative. After a yearlong investigation,

NBC reported that because doctors can legally prescribe any drug to any patient

for any condition, drug companies heavily promote " off label " and frequently

inappropriate and untested uses of these medications, even though these drugs

are approved only for the specific indications for which they have been

tested.(48)

 

The leading causes of adverse drug reactions are antibiotics (17%),

cardiovascular drugs (17%), chemotherapy (15%), and analgesics and

anti-inflammatory agents (15%).(49)

 

Specific Drug Iatrogenesis: Antibiotics

 

According to William Agger, MD, director of microbiology and chief of infectious

disease at Gundersen Lutheran Medical Center in La Crosse, WI, 30 million pounds

of antibiotics are used in America each year.(50) Of this amount, 25 million

pounds are used in animal husbandry, and 23 million pounds are used to try to

prevent disease and the stress of shipping, as well as to promote growth. Only 2

million pounds are given for specific animal infections. Dr. Egger reminds us

that low concentrations of antibiotics are measurable in many of our foods and

in various waterways around the world, much of it seeping in from animal farms.

 

Egger contends that overuse of antibiotics results in food-borne infections

resistant to antibiotics. Salmonella is found in 20% of ground meat, but the

constant exposure of cattle to antibiotics has made 84% of salmonella resistant

to at least one anti-salmonella antibiotic. Diseased animal food accounts for

80% of salmonellosis in humans, or 1.4 million cases per year. The conventional

approach to countering this epidemic is to radiate food to try to kill all

organisms while continuing to use the antibiotics that created the problem in

the first place. Approximately 20% of chickens are contaminated with

Campylobacter jejuni, an organism that causes 2.4 million cases of illness

annually. Fifty-four percent of these organisms are resistant to at least one

anti-campylobacter antimicrobial agent.

 

Denmark banned growth-promoting antibiotics beginning in 1999, which cut their

use by more than half within a year, from 453,200 to 195,800 pounds. A report

from Scandinavia found that removing antibiotic growth promoters had no or

minimal effect on food production costs. Egger warns that the current crowded,

unsanitary methods of animal farming in the US support constant stress and

infection, and are geared toward high antibiotic use.

 

In the US, over 3 million pounds of antibiotics are used every year on humans.

With a population of 284 million Americans, this amount is enough to give every

man, woman, and child 10 teaspoons of pure antibiotics per year. Egger says that

exposure to a steady stream of antibiotics has altered pathogens such as

Streptococcus pneumoniae, Staplococcus aureus, and entercocci, to name a few.

 

Almost half of patients with upper respiratory tract infections in the U.S.

still receive antibiotics from their doctor.(51) According to the CDC, 90% of

upper respiratory infections are viral and should not be treated with

antibiotics. In Germany, the prevalence of systemic antibiotic use in children

aged 0-6 years was 42.9%.(52)

 

Data obtained from nine US health insurers on antibiotic use in 25,000 children

from 1996 to 2000 found that rates of antibiotic use decreased. Antibiotic use

in children aged three months to under 3 years decreased 24%, from 2.46 to 1.89

antibiotic prescriptions per patient per year. For children aged 3 to under 6

years, there was a 25% reduction from 1.47 to 1.09 antibiotic prescriptions per

patient per year. And for children aged 6 to under 18 years, there was a 16%

reduction from 0.85 to 0.69 antibiotic prescriptions per patient per year.(53)

Despite these reductions, the data indicate that on average every child in

America receives 1.22 antibiotic prescriptions annually.

 

Group A beta-hemolytic streptococci is the only common cause of sore throat that

requires antibiotics, with penicillin and erythromycin the only recommended

treatment. Ninety percent of sore-throat cases, however, are viral. Antibiotics

were used in 73% of the estimated 6.7 million adult annual visits for sore

throat in the US between 1989 and 1999. Furthermore, patients treated with

antibiotics were prescribed non-recommended broad-spectrum antibiotics in 68% of

visits. This period saw a significant increase in the use of newer, more

expensive broad-spectrum antibiotics and a decrease in use of the recommended

antibiotics penicillin and erythromycin.(54) A ntibiotics being prescribed in

73% of sore-throat cases instead of the recommended 10% resulted in a total of

4.2 million unnecessary antibiotic prescriptions from 1989 to 1999.

 

The Problem with Antibiotics

 

In September 2003, the CDC re-launched a program started in 1995 called “Get

Smart: Know When Antibiotics Work.”(55) This $1.6 million campaign is designed

to educate patients about the overuse and inappropriate use of antibiotics. Most

people involved with alternative medicine have known about the dangers of

antibiotic overuse for decades. Finally the government is focusing on the

problem, yet it is spending only a miniscule amount of money on an iatrogenic

epidemic that is costing billions of dollars and thousands of lives. The CDC

warns that 90% of upper respiratory infections, including children's ear

infections, are viral and that antibiotics do not treat viral infection. More

than 40% of about 50 million prescriptions for antibiotics written each year in

physicians' offices are inappropriate.(2) U sing antibiotics when not needed can

lead to the development of deadly strains of bacteria that are resistant to

drugs and cause more than 88,000 deaths due to hospital-acquired

infections.(9) The CDC, however, seems to be blaming patients for misusing

antibiotics even though they are available only by prescription from physicians.

According to Dr. Richard Besser, head of “Get Smart”: " Programs that have just

targeted physicians have not worked. Direct-to-consumer advertising of drugs is

to blame in some cases.” Besser says the program “teaches patients and the

general public that antibiotics are precious resources that must be used

correctly if we want to have them around when we need them. Hopefully, as a

result of this campaign, patients will feel more comfortable asking their

doctors for the best care for their illnesses, rather than asking for

antibiotics. " (56)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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