Guest guest Posted September 22, 2006 Report Share Posted September 22, 2006 E-news broadcast - 21 September 2006 No.294 Help us spread the word This broadcast is copyright-free. Please e-mail this on to any friends you think would appreciate receiving it. Better yet, get them to join the WDDTY community by registering on our website - www.wddty.co.uk - to receive their own E-bulletins twice a week. Thank you. News Contents · PARENT OF THE WEEK: Father spends own money to prove suicide link to acne drug · AMERICAN MEDICINE: The monster that ate itself · HOW TO KEEP YOUR CUSTOMERS: Give them more nicotine · EAR INFECTION: Doing nothing is as good as antibiotics · STENTS: Back to the drawing board PARENT OF THE WEEK: Father spends own money to prove suicide link to acne drug Our Parent of the Week award goes to Liam Grant, who has spent £340,000 of his own money on research that suggests the acne drug Roaccutane may be linked to depression and suicide. Mr Grant's own son, also called Liam, committed suicide while he was taking the drug. One of the studies, which was published by the American Academy of Psychiatry, scanned the brains of 15 Roaccutane patients and 15 others who were taking another acne drug. There were changes in the brains of the Roaccutane group that were associated with depression. Roche, the drug's manufacturer, has already offered to pay Mr Grant all of his research costs together with a no-liability sum of £800,000. Mr Grant has refused to settle and is instead pressing for a public hearing in court. Despite the behind-the-scenes offer, Roche's public stance is to vigorously deny any link between Roaccutane and depression and suicide. The drug has been suspected of causing more than 100 suicides or attempted suicides over the years, and Roche has been forced by drug regulators to include a warning of possible suicidal tendencies in the drug information sheet. Researchers at Bath University have also recently established a link to depression in a study involving mice. It's not known if similar behavioural patterns would be replicated in humans, the researchers conclude, but we think we know the answer Mr Grant might give. (Source: The Guardian, 19 September 2006). AMERICAN MEDICINE: The monster that ate itself The main driving force of the American medical model is money rather than health care. Because money from insurers is in ready supply, doctors adopt a more interventionist and aggressive approach, which, in turn, increases the premiums, and so on, round and round. Not surprisingly, perhaps, the wheels are starting to fall off, as a new survey has discovered. It found that 40 per cent of all Americans have 'serious problems' paying for health insurance as premiums continue to rise, while a similar number couldn't make a quick appointment with a doctor. Even those who jumped those two obstacles then found they were dealing with a mountain of paperwork relating to their claim, and with disputes with the insurer. While 40 per cent of those with a household income of less than $50,000 a year reported a serious problem in paying their health insurance, a third of those earning up to $75,000 were also having difficulties. The survey, carried out by the Commonwealth Fund, involved interviewing a representative sample of 1023 adults. Its working group is due to report back with recommendations at the end of the month. As a starter, the vicious circle could be broken at the doctor's surgery with a more conservative approach to healthcare, perhaps. (Source: The Lancet, 2006; 368: 963). HOW TO KEEP YOUR CUSTOMERS: Give them more nicotine It's been a tough couple of decades for the tobacco industry, what with it killing off quite a few of its customers. Not surprisingly, the remaining healthy ones may be thinking twice about smoking, which presents an interesting challenge for the industry. Fortunately, it's one that the manufacturers are meeting head on - by making sure that existing smokers get more of a nicotine fix each time they puff. Health officials in Massachusetts have found that there's been a 10 per cent increase in the amount of nicotine that's inhaled from cigarettes over the past seven years. Nicotine yield - which is the amount inhaled rather than the amount in the cigarette - has increased in 92 of the 116 brands monitored by officials, and across every type of cigarette, such as 'full flavour', 'light' and 'ultra-light'. Massachusetts is just one of three states that requires tobacco companies to submit annual information on the nicotine content of its cigarettes. The state's health commissioner, Paul Cote, said that smokers could need " additional help in trying to quit " . Time to crank up that nicotine content again. (Source: British Medical Journal, 2006; 333: 566). EAR INFECTION: Doing nothing is as good as antibiotics Around 15 million prescriptions are written every year in the USA for an antibiotic for children with the ear infection, acute otitis media. But, as a new study reminds us, the drug merely creates resistance, and does nothing to cure the problem any faster than doing nothing. In all, 283 children with the ear infection were either given an antibiotic immediately or were told to 'wait-and-see' for 48 hours before taking the drug. There was no difference between the two groups in terms of fever or otalgia, or ear pain - and yet, interestingly within the 'wait-and- see' sub-group, those who finally took the drug experienced worse fevers and more ear pain. So there's yet another example that doing nothing first is the best policy - and it's one that has already been adopted in the UK, Holland and other northern European countries for cases of ear infection. Perhaps, now, the USA will follow suit. (Source: Journal of the American Medical Association, 2006; 296: 1235-41). STENTS: Back to the drawing board Drug-eluting stents were supposed to be the great way forward in artery health in people with atherosclerosis, the disease where plaque narrows the artery. Not only did the stents employ the latest technology of releasing small amounts of a drug, they were also more effective than standard stents, according to early trials. As a result, six million people have been fitted with this new generation stent, which includes the Cypher (sirolimus) and the Taxus (paclitaxel), in the last few years. But a new study has discovered that they can dramatically increase the risk of death and heart attack through thrombosis. Two Swiss researchers made the discovery after they carried out a meta-analysis of studies to discover the long-term effects of the drug-eluting stent. In itself, there's nothing particular clever about the stent; in fact, it's a form of micro scaffolding inserted into the artery to keep it propped up. It can be fitted after angioplasty, where the arteries are unblocked, or it can be inserted into patients for whom angioplasty is not appropriate But the standard bare metal or uncoated stent hasn't been a great success. In one study in 2002, 26 per cent of patients who had a standard stent fitted still suffered re-stenosis, where the arteries block up again - while not one patient with a drug-eluting stent suffered re-stenosis. The rest, as they say, is history. (Source: Proceedings of the World Congress of Cardiology, Barcelona). · YOU DON'T have to rely on medical scaffolding to have healthy arteries and a healthy heart. Instead the same can be achieved without drugs or surgery - and it's all explained in the WDDTY Healthy Heart pack, which includes the WDDTY book My Healthy Heart, our best-selling report Secrets of Longevity, together with three special reports on heart drugs and heart health alternatives. Together they make a powerful pack of hard-to-get information, and it also represents a saving of 30 per cent. To order your pack now, http://www.wddty.co.uk/shop/detail4665.htm Listen to Lynne On the radio: Hear Lynne McTaggart on Passion the innovative DAB Digital Radio Station focusing on your health and your environment - http://www.wddty.co.uk/passion_main.asp On demand: Select and listen to any of Lynne's archived broadcasts on Passion, there's a new one each week - http://www.wddty.co.uk/passion_archive.asp Help us spread the word If you can think of a friend or acquaintance who would like a FREE copy of What Doctors Don't Tell You, please forward their name and address to: info. 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