The Problematic Overprescription of Psychiatric Drugs
The use of antidepressants and antipsychotics has skyrocketed among children, adults, and the elderly—a trend seen long before the COVID-19 pandemic.
One in six Americans now takes a psychiatric drug and many are on drug “cocktails,” with drugs added to treat the side effects of other drugs. Some people have been on the drugs or drug cocktails for decades.
Certainly, mental health conditions that respond to psychiatric drugs exist—but aggressive drug marketing has broadened original diagnostic criteria and added new conditions so that more people are diagnosed.
For example, anxiety was never considered a mental illness until the creation of the diagnostic categories “generalized anxiety disorder” and “social anxiety disorder” in 1980. Neither were “alcohol use disorder” and prolonged grief deemed mental illnesses until they were included in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) in 2013.
The DSM is the “handbook used by healthcare professionals in the United States and much of the world as the authoritative guide to the diagnosis of mental disorders,” according to its publisher, the American Psychiatric Association.
Disorder is the operative term, though. Something has gone awry, but has it gone wrong with the people themselves, or is it something that has happened to them? People are suffering. And many people do need help. The question is what has caused their suffering and what is the best way to alleviate it.
If people are stressed and anxious because they’ve lost the psychological disposition that once allowed them to navigate the inevitable hardships of life, that’s a problem of culture and education.
Or if real conditions in their world have changed and have led to their increased stress and anxiety, that may be a problem of governance or economic management.
Or it could be because of choices they’re making that they experience this suffering, or increased contamination from their environment that affects their biochemistry.
The cause of the “disorder” should inform the approach used to help them recover from it. But that may not be happening if we simply ignore the cause and give them substances that alter their biochemistry, emotions, and personality.
The Rise of Mental Illness
According to the drug-industry-funded mental health advocacy group National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI), a mental illness is “a condition that affects a person’s thinking, feeling or mood. Such conditions may affect someone’s ability to relate to others and function each day.” The description is so broad, who wouldn’t be mentally ill under that definition?
In fact, two-thirds of U.S. patient advocacy groups accept drugmaker funding, according to a 2020 article in the Journal of Bioethical Inquiry. Last year, the NAMI received funding from at least 16 drugmakers, as well as funding from PhRMA, the trade group representing the pharmaceutical industry in the United States.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in 2011, 11 percent of Americans over 12 were taking antidepressants—more than 36,000,000 people. Moreover, the CDC says, more than 60 percent of users had been taking the drugs for two years or longer, and 14 percent for 10 years or longer, though medical experts recommend taking an antidepressant for only six to nine months and at most for two years.
In 2020, the number of Americans taking antidepressants had not changed, according to the marketing site Evernorth, and antidepressant use had increased by 55 percent in teen girls and almost 38 percent in teen boys.
The debut of SSRI antidepressants such as Prozac and Paxil, buttressed by direct-to-consumer advertising, enlarged the concept of “depression,” according to psychiatrist Stuart Shipko.
Until then, depression was defined “as a time-limited condition that typically would go on its own, even if you didn’t treat it,” he says. “The idea of keeping somebody on maintenance medicine forever … was just sloppy. You took people off.”
But thanks to new depression diagnostic categories like “major depressive disorder” created in 1980 and unproven chemical imbalance brain theories, depression was recast as a chronic brain state requiring long-term medication. “Depression may require long-term treatment,” says top medical group the Mayo Clinic.”
As depression was redefined as chronic, “situational” depression that might come from problems with a job, romance, health, or family was rolled into the mix and also treated with antidepressants—even if there were clear causes.
Marketing Increases Drug Sales
Of course, some people’s depression responded well to antidepressants, and the drugs have a place in the medical arsenal. But other patients experienced worsening panic disorder, or they developed bipolar disorder on antidepressants and found they couldn’t quit without experiencing distressing withdrawal symptoms.
In addition to helping establish chronic types of depression in the DSM, drugmakers also rolled out the concept of “treatment-resistant depression.”
“If your primary care doctor prescribed antidepressants and your depression symptoms continue despite treatment, ask your doctor if he or she can recommend a health care provider who specializes in diagnosing and treating mental health conditions,” says the Mayo Clinic. “With treatment-resistant depression, standard treatments aren’t enough. They may not help much at all, or your symptoms may improve, only to keep coming back.”
In fact, the first antidepressant prescribed fails to help as many as two-thirds of patients, says WebMD, and a third aren’t helped by subsequent treatments.
How is treatment-resistant depression handled? First, you should find out if you have another mental condition like bipolar disorder, says WebMD. If not, and if a different antidepressant doesn’t help, you may need to add additional drugs such as another antidepressant or an antipsychotic like Abilify, Rexulti, or Seroquel, the site says.
Do patients with “treatment-resistant depression” question why their expensive drug didn’t work and why they should keep taking it with an additional drug, doubling their costs? Who is benefiting from the protocol—patients, or drugmakers?
The Downside of Antipsychotics
Antipsychotic medications such as Risperdal, Zyprexa, Seroquel, Geodon, Abilify, and Invega have also been best sellers for drugmakers. Research in BMC Psychiatry in 2020 estimates that 3.8 million U.S. adults take the antipsychotics for schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and major depressive disorder, as well as “off-label” uses such as sleep, mood, and anxiety, and obsessive-compulsive disorders. In children, antipsychotics are used to treat autism spectrum disorder, ADHD, disruptive behavior disorders, depression, bipolar disorder, insomnia, and aggression, according to Psychiatry Advisor.
A few years ago, research in JAMA Psychiatry revealed that one percent of boys between 7 and 12 and almost 0.5 percent of girls that age use antipsychotic drugs; in children 13 to 18, those numbers rise to almost 1.5 percent for boys and almost one percent for girls. Antipsychotics are disproportionately prescribed for poor children and those in foster care, according to published research.
The currently preferred antipsychotics, sometimes called “atypical” or “second generation” antipsychotics, largely replaced older antipsychotics like Thorazine and Haldol because of their apparently better safety profile.
Specifically, the newer drugs were thought to be less linked to tardive dyskinesia (TD) a disfiguring syndrome of involuntary movement disorders that may not be reversible. However, research in the journal Drugs in Context suggests that prescribers may have a “false sense of security” if they think the newer drugs are free from links to TD.
Other Antipsychotic Concerns
TD is not the only concern with antipsychotics. Whether they’re used for their FDA-approved indications or nonapproved uses (called off-label), the drugs can have “unwanted and potentially harmful adverse effects,” according to a 2021 article in the Journal of Pediatric Pharmacology and Therapeutics, the official journal of the Pediatric Pharmacy Association. “These effects include metabolic effects, such as weight gain, Type 2 diabetes mellitus, and hyperlipidemia, as well as cardiovascular effects, sexual dysfunction, and extrapyramidal side effects,” the researchers write.
In children, antipsychotics are linked to a greater risk of death from cardiovascular or metabolic causes as well as suicide and unintentional injury. In the elderly, antipsychotics are so clearly linked to an increased risk of death in demented patients that a warning exists on the label. The American Geriatric Society recommends avoiding antipsychotics for dementia patients because of the increased risks of sedation, cognitive worsening, falls, strokes, and mortality.
Recently, antipsychotics have gained another black mark: They’ve been linked to breast cancer risk due to their effects on the milk-producing hormone, prolactin. Patients on Risperdal and drugs with similar actions had a 62 percent increase in breast cancer risk according to research conducted by scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. Patients on Zyprexa and similar drugs experienced a 54 percent increase in breast cancer risk, the researchers write.
Stay Healthy While Treating Mental Conditions
Clearly, some medical conditions may require treatment with psychiatric drugs. But as side effects emerge, drug safety experts increasingly recommend limiting how long the drugs are taken and seeking safer treatments. For example, natural substances such as lavender, St. John’s wort, and omega-3 fatty acids may help with depression. Traditional Chinese medicines, Indian Ayurvedic therapy, and ginkgo biloba have shown promise as “natural” antipsychotics.
With aggressive advertising and “add-on” medications, many people these days are prescribed psychiatric medications by doctors who mean well. But if patients do their homework, they can often find gentler and safer treatments for mental conditions that don’t involve some of the risks seen with psychiatric medications.
And it may also be worth questioning what has happened in our society that so many people feel so unwell.
See more here: theepochtimes.com
Bold emphasis added
Header image: Human Givens Institute
Editor’s note: It seems obvious that the main reason for the large increase in teenagers wanting anti-depressants is the constant fearmongering surrounding so-called ‘climate change’.
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Mar Tapley
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Psychiatrists years ago were mostly used for keeping inmates in the nut house sedated. The psychiatrists and the criminals at big Pharma figured that if they could expand their clientele to the general population, there was a lot of profit to be made. Unlike other illnesses such as heart disease or cancer there is no verifiable tests. Just the DSM which are conditions a board of psychiatrists vote on. Such as homosexuality which used to be a mental illness but is no longer politically correct so has been thrown out. As the DSM keeps getting bigger so do the drug profits. But who can blame the medical shysters when the world is full of simps that even believe in fake viruses and line up for fake vaccines.
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Alcheminister
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Mark, one question, fake vaccines? Do you know wtf is in that shit? If it’s toxic and has no benefit…then it’s a vaccines.
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Mark Tapley
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Hello Alcheminister:
You are absolutely correct. I was just using the term in the traditional meaning. However everyone should be aware that no one ever got immunity from anything by injecting contaminated tissue sample garbage into their blood stream. For the real history of vaccines using public records all the way back to the “small pox” vaccine read Suzanne Humphries MD “Dissolving Illusions.” For a well written account of the man made Polio, read Maready’s “The Moth In the Iron Lung” To discover the real reason for the epidemic of Autism read his book “The Autism Vaccine.”
Here is Brendon D. Murphy with the story of the years of preparation leading up to the current fake virus:
https://rumble.com/vauahd-100-proof-covid-19-was-planned-years-in-advance-truthiverse-episode-14-with.html
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Russ D
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As a 12 year cancer survivor I stay alive by avoiding doctors, eating right, exercise and minimizing the toxins in my life. Doctors/Shrinks push legal drugs. They NEED patients to make money and getting people hooked on legal drugs MAKES patients.
I will NEVER set foot in a Doctor’s office again unless it’s an emergency!
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Mark Tapley
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Hello Russ D:
Have you read G, Edward Griffin’s book “World Without Cancer.” Griffin was friends with one of the first doctors to use Dr. Ernest Krebs B17 discovery to treat cancer (can’t remember name). All of these practitioners were put out of business by constant law suits from the FDA. The modern diet should be supplemented with B 17 since it is practically always processed out.
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Tom
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About 10 years ago, there were some 370 variations of listed mental disorders…probably over 400 by now. 60 years ago, it was about 20. The same with vaccines going from a handful to over 70 today. See the pattern. It’s got nothing to do with providing better health solutions and everything to do with marketing and selling more and more drugs. And the ultimate drug of mRNA gene therapy with the express purpose of forcing billions of injections, many paid for by numbskull governments…all for a nonexistent virus.
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