Guest guest Posted July 7, 2004 Report Share Posted July 7, 2004 > JustSayNo > Tue, 06 Jul 2004 02:40:15 -0000 > [sSRI-Research] Group blames medication > -SSRIs [2003] > > Group blames medication > By Ellen Barry, Globe Staff, 4/11/2003 > > http://www.boston.com/dailyglobe2/101/metro/Group_blames_medication+.s > html > > As friends, family, and investigators searched for a > possible motive > in Tuesday's slaying of a Massachusetts General > Hospital > cardiologist, an antipsychiatry ''watchdog group'' > said that Colleen > Mitchell's psychiatric medication had spurred her to > shoot Dr. Brian > McGovern and then turn the gun on herself. > > Members of the Citizens Commission on Human Rights, > which is > affiliated with the Church of Scientology, planned a > protest at the > hospital today against the use of antidepressants > such as Zoloft, > which Mitchell had apparently been taking. > > There is a long history of allegations that > selective seratonin > reuptake inhibitors (a tremendously popular category > of > antidepressants that includes Prozac and Paxil) > drive people to > violence or suicide. In 2001, a Wyoming jury made a > $6.4 million > judgment against GlaxoSmithKline, which makes Paxil, > after an oil > field worker taking the drug shot his wife, > daughter, and > granddaughter and then committed suicide. The > company appealed the > decision and ultimately settled out of court. The > following year, the > Food and Drug Administration filed a brief > supporting the drug > maker's position. > > A Harvard Medical School psychiatrist said yesterday > that it > is ''preposterous'' to assign blame for a crime to > an antidepressant > like Zoloft. The drugs increase buildup of a > naturally occurring > chemical, seratonin, around nerve endings in the > brain. > Although ''edgy'' people may sometimes see an > exaggeration of that > quality, he said, the effects are transient. > > ''These medicines are not that powerful, frankly, > for good or for > ill,'' said Dr. J. Alexander Bodkin, chief of the > Clinical > Psychopharmacology Research Program at McLean > Hospital. ''It is not a > cause for misbehavior, not an excuse for > misbehavior, and it doesn't > help us understand the misbehavior.'' > > But a Utah activist who has testified as an expert > witness against > drug manufacturers said a high level of seratonin in > the brain can > cause people to ''act out their nightmares,'' > leading them to commit > violent crimes. Ann Blake Tracy, director of the > International > Coalition for Drug Awareness, said she had become > increasingly > suspicious of SSRI antidepressants as she watched > more and more > friends in Utah begin taking them, ''doing violent > things completely > out of character for them.'' > > The debate over the drugs has emerged in Boston > several times since > 1990, when a McLean researcher, Dr. Martin Teicher, > published a study > showing that 3.5 percent of patients taking Prozac > attempt or commit > suicide due to severe agitation. Eight years later, > Teicher helped to > patent a reformulation of the drug, whose > application states that the > new version reduces side effects such as ''intense, > violent suicidal > thoughts.'' > > This story ran on page B7 of the Boston Globe on > 4/11/2003. > © Copyright 2003 Globe Newspaper Company. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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