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Environment

How the Drug Companies Want Us to Be Sick

By Stan Cox, AlterNet. Posted May 16, 2006.


The pharmaceutical industry has a dream: at least one disease (and more than one prescription drug) for every American.
051606_story2
Are You Sure You're Feeling OK?
Advertisement

You see a TV show or a commercial featuring medical problems, and you start feeling the symptoms yourself: a twinge in the leg or maybe a moment of doubt about your emotional stability.

If so, you, like millions of Americans, could be suffering from a serious condition known as telechondria. But help is here, with new Advertil(R) in the green-and-yellow caplet. Ask your doctor …

No, wait, don't really ask. Telechondriacs have not yet been recognized by science. Pharmacists are not dispensing drugs like "Advertil," and they probably never will. The last chemical that pharmaceutical executives would want to sell you is one that makes it harder for them to convince you that you're sick and need their products.

Drug corporations and their "awareness" groups, as we're all painfully aware, have defined and redefined a host of medical conditions -- including female sexual dysfunction, erectile dysfunction, restless legs, sleeplessness, bipolar disorder, attention deficit disorder, social anxiety disorder and irritable bowel syndrome -- to include larger and larger segments of the population in the United States and other Western nations.

Accepting for a moment the industry's claims about the numbers of people suffering from the eight diseases listed above, we could do some simple calculations showing that up to 93 percent of adult women and men in the United States suffer from at least one of them. Throw in a few more conditions like depression, bone density loss and premenstrual dysphoric disorder, and industry figures make it appear that virtually every American has a disease in need of a treatment.

Last year, Ray Moynihan and Alan Cassels called attention to the epidemic of disease marketing in their book "Selling Sickness." Last month, health professionals, academics, journalists and consumers gathered in Newcastle, Australia, for the Inaugural Conference on Disease Mongering. A set of papers from that meeting was published free by the online journal PLoS Medicine. Also last month, the Prescription Access Litigation Project (PALP) in Boston announced its "2006 Bitter Pill Awards," recognizing drug companies that engaged in the year's worst "overzealous and questionable marketing practices."

These and other recent activities make it all too clear that the profitable practices exposed in Lynn Payer's 1992 book "Disease Mongers: How Doctors, Drug Companies, and Insurers Are Making You Feel Sick" have been refined and amplified in recent years, with the apparent goal of medicating an entire population.

Unruly body parts

The evolution of "restless legs syndrome," documented by Steven Woloshin and Lisa Schwartz in a paper from the Disease Mongering Conference, is a case study in how a pharmaceutical company, with help from the media, can turn what is a serious problem for some people into a contrived medical condition for millions more.

Woloshin and Schwartz analyzed media coverage in the interval between 2003, when GlaxoSmithKline Inc. first issued press releases about trials of its drug Requip for relief of restless legs syndrome, and 2005, when the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved that use.

Of 187 major newspaper articles published during those two years, 64 percent relayed without comment the industry's claims that millions of Americans -- as many as "1 in 10 adults" -- suffer restless leg. Forty-five percent of the articles stressed that many people may be unaware they're sick, even though, according to 73 percent of the articles, the syndrome can have extreme physical, social and emotional consequences. Reports of the relief provided by drug treatment used "miracle language" 34 percent of the time, while 93 percent of articles failed to quantify Requip's side effects.

Yet the relief people get from Requip appears to be anything but miraculous. In one trial, 73 percent of subjects saw improvement -- compared with 57 percent whose symptoms improved with a placebo! Side effects that occurred in clinical trials at least twice as often with Requip as with a placebo included nausea (40 percent of subjects), vomiting (11 percent), somnolence (12 percent), dizziness (11 percent) and fatigue (8 percent).


Digg!

Stan Cox is a plant breeder and writer in Salina, Kan.

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View:
Zyprexa Diabetes link
Posted by: DanielHaszard on May 16, 2006 2:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thanks for the heads up on Zyprexa complications and the helpful link.
{Only 9 percent of adult Americans think the pharmaceutical industry can be trusted right around the same rating as big tobacco}

Zyprexa, which is used for the treatment of psychiatric disorders, such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, accounted for 32% of Eli Lilly's $14.6 billion revenue last year.

Zyprexa is the product name for Olanzapine,it is Lilly's top selling drug.It was approved by the FDA in 1996 ,an 'atypical' antipsychotic a newer class of drugs without the motor side effects of the older Thorazine.Zyprexa has been linked to causing diabetes and pancreatitis.

Did you know that Lilly made nearly $3 billion last year on diabetic meds, Actos,Humulin and Byetta?

Yes! They sell a drug that causes diabetes and then turn a profit on the drugs that treat the condition that they caused in the first place!
I was prescribed Zyprexa from 1996 until 2000.
In early 2000 i was shocked to have an A1C test result of 13.9 (normal is 4-6) I have no history of diabetes in my family.
----
Daniel Haszard http://www.zyprexa-victims.com

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» RE: Zyprexa Diabetes link Posted by: Maude
We are all sick
Posted by: janten on May 16, 2006 2:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We are, unfortunately, a very sick society. None of us is a shining example of ease. Instead, we are each in varying states of dis-ease. Instead of vigorous visions of wellness, we are dragging drudges of un-wellness, each with our own little package of ailments, uniquely mixed and "dosed" to varying degrees. So, it's both realistic and easy to sell us on the idea that we are sick because it's true, we are sick. We are physically, emotionally, mentally and spiritually sick.

Individually, we have spent our whole lives becoming sick, and collectively, we have spent generations becoming sick. We have polluted our bodies, hearts, minds and spirits, along with our earth, our crops and our livestock in a multitude of ways. We have done this over generations, but most discouragingly, we have done most of our physical pollution along with much of the other types primarily during our current generation and, to some extent, the previous couple of generations.

The result is that there is no quick cure and hardly even any quick let alone lasting relief from the multitude of symptoms we experience every day of our lives. The quick relief or cure "promised" by the cornucopia of drugs currently available is mostly an illusion. It is an illusion because almost all of these pharmacological offerings bring their own set of problems to add to our packages of ailments, It is an illusion because relief and/or cure is usually expected and "promised" to come quickly even when that is not possible because the underlying conditions are not changed. It is an illusion because the real relief and the real cures are either not recognized or they are ignored.

The industrially produced food we consume is not as nutritious and nourishing as it should and could be, and as it once was. The earth we grow our food in has been abused and depleted, the air our food sources breathe - and that we breathe - has been polluted, the water that flows within and upon and that falls onto our earth has been fowled. Much of our food is contaminated with growth hormones, pesticides and preservatives, and it has been refined and otherwise processed to the point that much of its inherent goodness has been removed or destroyed under the guise of making it better. Eating this so called food, we expect to be nourished and sustained for a long, healthy life, but instead find that we suffer with multiple ailments. And then we expect our health will be improved with a few over the counter or prescription drugs.

We fill our lives with stress and crack under the strain. We attack our selves and each other with fear, distrust, anger, hate, and countless other negative thoughts, feelings and actions. We do this individually and we do this collectively, in our families, in our communities, through our businesses, through our entertainment, through our governments, through our churches. We don't know how to not be negative so we become ever more negative under the delusion that this is somehow an appropriate defense that will protect us and keep us healthy. We don't know how to process and integrate the things we experience in our lives so we become overwhelmed by them and suffer physical, emotional, mental and spiritual breakdowns. We don't know how to rest, how to relax, how to sleep, so we go through life worn out and exhausted. And then we expect our health will be quickly and easily improved by taking a few drugs.

(continued...)

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» RE: We are all sick ... continued Posted by: mkeeling@jam.rr.com
» Inducing Disease GMO Diet Posted by: acaryatid
Don't throw the baby out with the bathwater
Posted by: provigilant on May 16, 2006 2:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm not a fan of the pharmaceutical industry for many reasons. Primarily, I am appalled by the way they sit on drugs that could save the lives of so many people in the Southern Hemisphere.

And, while agreeing that there is a tendency to pathologize everything, not all of the pharmaceuticals mentioned in your article are necessarily a bad thing. For example, the drug Provigil makes it possible to get much less sleep on a long-term basis, while avoiding the disastrous side effects of amphetamines. The same is true of the ampakines (CX717) being investigated by DARPA.

Press coverage of these developments often dismisses these as "lifestyle drugs." But what is wrong with having access to a lifestyle drug? Perhaps I want to sustain my sexual performance. I might just want to stay up for a long time to take care of personal projects. Isn't that my decision to make?

There is clearly a growing cultural backlash against pharmacological agents. I'm glad that people are thinking critically about these things. However, it would be nice to see some acknowledgment of the potential off certain lifestyle drugs.

You mentioned substances that allow "hard work for four straight nights with only four hours of recovery sleep in between." You also say that "Tests have shown that monkeys awake on CX717 for 36 straight hours had better memory and alertness than undrugged monkeys after normal sleep."

This is awesome! I want to get in on that action. Not because I want to slave for the man around the clock, but just because I want to do more creative work and spend more of my life awake.

Great article overall.

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» I disagree with... Posted by: axolotl_helix
The Failed Medical Profession
Posted by: ChristopherLL on May 16, 2006 3:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
After 25 years of medical practice I realized that I no longer belonged to the profession of medicine. Managed Care, the Legal System, Politics and last the Pharmaceutical Industry had effectively taken control. Their intent, cumulatively, was not to care for people but to make money. And they have done that to the extent few can afford what they offer. I changed course in life and recevied my doctorate in Health Education for I believe, for me, that was how best to continue my Hypocratic Oath and commitment to help others. But there is no funding or interest in these same institutions to embrace taking care of the physical, emotional, spiritual, social and intellectual aspects of life to acheive health and avoid illness. Depression will be the second leading cause of disability in ten years but there is no mention in the profession for treatment except for antidepressants. There was only one antidepressant in 1980. This is only one example. Stress in the leading cause on any illness and disability of all kinds but there is no bona fide plan to help people understand and negotiate this chronic condition. As for diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, arthritis and impotence they are mostly consequential to being overweight and lack of physical activity. But the profession and pharaceuticals provide drugs only with no mention of long term resolution. So it now stands that those who remain ignorant will continue to be victims and those who learn to care for their own lives, and it is work, and live healthy lives in spite of this society.

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» RE: The Failed Medical Profession Posted by: jreinhart1
» RE: The Failed Medical Profession Posted by: VisionQuest
» RE: The Failed Medical Profession Posted by: ChristopherLL
» RE: The Failed Medical Profession Posted by: ChristopherLL
» RE: Trust me, I'm a doctor! Posted by: Cathyc
I wonder
Posted by: mazel on May 16, 2006 4:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How much of an impact does all this advertising have on the cost of these drugs? My husband was prescribed one, "the little purple pill," I believe, and it was so expensive my insurance company would not pay for it without preapproval (and would not preapprove it, saying there were cheaper drugs he could be treated with). I told the pharmacist I felt the reason some drugs were so costly was due to the advertising and she agreed with me.

And by the way, SAD is Seasonal Affective Disorder, not what was stated in this article.

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» RE: I wonder Posted by: Themis
» RE: I wonder Posted by: Cathyc
» RE: I wonder Posted by: monkeybrig
» RE: I wonder Posted by: katsunderthestars
» Brainwashed or Brainwasher? Posted by: vitocaputo
What did you expect?
Posted by: BJT on May 16, 2006 4:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In a quasi-corporatist (neo-fascist?) society, the corporations that live symbiotically with government are destined to exploit us rather than help us.

The wonderful thing about mankind's natural tendencty toward capitalism, though, is that even when government-sponsored pharmaceutical giants try to keep us all sick and poor, a "black market" of truly helpful health products springs up. Just listen to the radio infomercials. I know you're probably predisposed not to trust infomercials, but you KNOW that the professional-looking Pfizer ads are BS. There are dozens of products out there helping people attain real health. Some are even combined with affiliate marketing systems to promote health AND wealth among the products' beneficiaries. I've listed below a couple I know about off the top of my head.

We can bitch and moan about the big bad pharmacorps, but the way around them already exists. Stop using their drugs! All the fascism in the world can't stop free markets of good products from emerging.

http://www.amazonherb.net/Corporate/
http://www.greenteaplus.com/
Herbalife - I can personally vouch for the effectiveness of this stuff. I used it as a detox as I changed to a better diet. My mom even used it to lower her blood pressure.

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» RE: What did you expect? Posted by: Armafied
» Chide the fuck out of it... Posted by: Habaro
» RE: What did you expect? Posted by: ConnecttheDots
» RE: STOP USING THEIR DRUGS! Posted by: Cathyc
A psychologist's view
Posted by: tscox on May 16, 2006 4:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Before it ran, I sent this article to my brother, a psychologist, for his reaction. His thoughts are worth reproducing as a comment.

Stan Cox

Here they are:

I am fully convinced that the body's ability to self heal is often either thwarted or eliminated by overuse of medications. I think what we know about antibiotic overuse today will be found true for many of these medicines. I only know psychiatric medication well but that knowledge leads me to understand that we don't really know much about the true effect of many medications.

I have always thought that this poorly organized method was related to physicians not being empirically trained. They are taught in a symptom - symptom - symptom - syndrome - syndrome - diagnosis - intervention method which suggests that you follow each symptom pattern to end of the line perform the intervention and the patient should get better. The problem is that there is no apparent awareness of interactive effects. Add to this profit motive of the drug companies. Add to that the typical patient who believes in her or his heart of hearts that the doctor must possess the solution to their illness (or the doctor is incompetent) and you have us treating ourselves to death.

If medicine were practiced by empirically trained folks I do not believe you would ever have one person on 4-7 different psychoactive medications, which I have seen many times. You would not have a new medication added without at least consideration of the question of how it would interact with current medications. And I believe you would have some level of resistance to drug companies efforts.

All that being said, I do not know if the empirical practice of medicine would be possible currently. The grace I readily give physicians is that we as a society are asking them to manage the most complex system we know anything about and expecting them to always have a solution and usually one that doesn't require the patient to change their behavior. So, if they need to cut a few corners it seems only fair. I genuinely believe that medical school, of necessity has become an exercise in oversimplifying an impossibly complex problem so that you can at least do something. And given that it is astonishing how successful they are.

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FDA Approved
Posted by: BJT on May 16, 2006 4:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In addition to my earlier comment, in "alternative medicine" products, you'll frequently find they are not FDA approved.

Does that make you trust them less? It shouldn't. The article above should make it clear that the FDA is simply a Fear Distribution Agency to keep you afraid of products that aren't part of the neo-fascist symbiosis.

"Not FDA Approved" simply means that it isn't cooperating with the FDA's system of CONTROL.

That is all.

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Ask your Doctor... or go ask Alice
Posted by: churchofone on May 16, 2006 4:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm not a TV watcher, but when I do stop and pay attention, I notice ad after ad for pharmaceutical drugs. After a ten-year hiatus from cable, I agreed to get satellite for my spouse's hockey habit. That's when I noticed the prevalence of drug advertising, particularly during the news programs. It seems that the evening news hour is solely sponsored by the drug companies!

Sleep issues, sexual performance issues, allergies, restless legs, dry eyes - if you watch TV long enough, you'll probably develop some symptoms for one or more of these conditions.

Instead, turn OFF the tube, take a couple of tokes and go outside for a walk! You'll get fresh air, sunshine, exercise and will probably have a heightened awareness of the beauties of the world - in other words, you'll feel better. All without deadly side effects or long-term liver damage.

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» RE: Ask your Doctor... or go ask Alice Posted by: ConnecttheDots
Know Thyself
Posted by: maolson on May 16, 2006 4:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For most people or at least for very many people the link between the spirit and the body is practically disfunctional. The link is belief and the effective link is positive belief. Belief eventually gives way to Knowing, to Wisdom.

To be healthy and whole, people need to be sending the clear positive message that the body is whole and well from the spirit to the body through the mind. The spirit pervades the body, but is not confined to it; the spirit is linked to All.

If people understood themselves spiritually, mentally and physically, most of their medical problems would evaporate.

Belief not thought is the link to the Eternal Now, the Infinite Source of all.

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» RE: Know Thyself Posted by: nightshade
» RE: Know Thyself Posted by: maolson
manufacturing disease, drugs and death
Posted by: rsaxto on May 16, 2006 4:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Drug companies with their bought scientists, doctors and pharmacists greatest manufactured products are diseases and drugs. They manufacture diseases so they can manufacture drugs to "cure" the diseases. Then many of the drugs make people even sicker. This explains why health care is so expensive in the USA while at the same time our life span is much less than other industrialized nations. They are killing us with their "kindness". This is mass murder for fun and profit. They drug seniors up with multiple drugs and charge them huge prices for the drugs. I am a senior who takes no drugs at all and am healthier than if I were brainwashed to take multiple drugs.

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» RE: manufacturing health Posted by: rsaxto
Just try and criticize the psychotropic drugging of a loved one!
Posted by: Lizmv on May 16, 2006 5:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Interesting article. It comes at the time I am struggling to make sense of my sister's suicide 10 days ago. She was taking 6 different medications prescribed by a psychiatrist. 2 anti-depressants, anti-psychotic, anti-convulsant, sleep aid, wake up aid. She had also started drinking heavily "to stop the vibrating". For 9 months, she was a walking shipwreak, sinking into a deep black hole. Everytime a side effect of a drug became unmanageable, a new medication was introduced. I am convinced that it was the medications that caused her to kill herself.
How can a doctor refuse to SEE that with every new medication, she became sicker? How can a doctor refuse to hear family members who are screaming that the patient is getting worse, not better?
I have been against the drugging of the side effects of our sick culture for a long time but now I am declaring war on the pharmacutical industry.

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» My brother committed suicide, too Posted by: lawstudent08
Here's a better solution. TURN OFF THE TV !
Posted by: maxpayne on May 16, 2006 5:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And learn not to get seducted by the misleading ads. That in itself would cure us Americans from all these poisons !

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» RE: TURN OFF THE TV ! Posted by: Cathyc
Hyprocracy, partner of big Pharma
Posted by: ciccio on May 16, 2006 5:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
About a year ago I came across a website 'International
Federation of Competitive Eating' and I was shocked to see
that it was sponsored by Alka-Seltzer. This 'sport', which they
claim is the fasting growing sport in the US, indulges in such
heroics as eating a gollon of ice cream in 6 minutes. I knew
that the maker of Alka-Seltzer, Miles labs., was a subsidiary
of the German pharmaceutical giant Bayer, who had just
announced a new investment in the treatment of diabetes
and with righteous fury fired off a letter to the chairman.
Nothing, de nada. Next I sent my complaint to the US Bayer
office, who regretted that I found their sponsorship indecent,
but they base their sponsorship on broad public perceptions,
sorry if it offends me, tough luck. I finaly found the 'coalition against Bayer dangers', wrote a lovely press release which they managed to get out in Europe. Lo and behold, Bayer was
aghast to find their US company was doing something so very
bad, without head office's knowledge, it was stopped immediately.

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Big Pharma
Posted by: BOSOMBUBBY on May 16, 2006 5:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It has long been my belief that Big Pharma should not be allowed to advertise. That they do advertise is a damn shame. Liquor and cigarette ads are not allowed on televison. When I see a pharma ad on TV I change the channel or hit the mute button and the first thing I do before I read a magazine is pull out all the "hard page" ads from pharma and toss them. I even cancelled my subscription for Guideposts magazine, which went from no ads a few years ago to now having 10 pharma ads in each issue. It really pist me off so I cancelled after reading it for 15 years. I'm not going to be inundated by their propoganda!!

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» RE: Big Pharma Posted by: henderson
» RE: FEAR ADS Posted by: Cathyc
» RE: Big Pharma Posted by: Armafied
» RE: Big Pharma Posted by: WyrdSister
» RE: Liquor advertising Posted by: AngryWhiteFemale
» RE: Liquor advertising Posted by: drmeow
» RE: Liquor advertising Posted by: peacefulaim
» RE: Big Pharma Posted by: ConnecttheDots
Out of control drug maniacs
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on May 16, 2006 5:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Great article. There are so many corrupt aspects to the pharmaceutical system in the US, and this article covers a lot of them.

Take the FDA - it's own employees regularly express their disgust with the organization, where drug company employees sit on the regulatory panel and push their pet drug projects through.

What about the drug discovery process? There is one word that matters - patents. If the drug or treatment cannot be patented, no matter how effective it is, it will not be developed. Most drugs cost pennies to make compared to their final price. What keeps the cost high? Intellectual property rights - the primary international concern of big Pharma, who are always attacking third world countries for wanting to get cheap AIDS drugs.

The drug companies will tell you they need high prices to support their years of research and clinical trials. At the same time 2/3 of their budget goes to sales and marketing; more and more the actual research is done at public universities using federal tax dollars (outsourcing costs to the taxpayer) under proprietary nondisclosure contracts (which have a corrupting effect on academic research, if you can imagine).

What about the products? The ADD drugs are mostly speed knockoffs, all based on the amphetamine molecular structure. What long-term effects do these drugs have on kids, particularly with predisposition to other drug effects? See this article on Ritalin and Cocaine. Many other drugs have terrible side effects that the companies try to hush up to boost sales for as long as they can. They also encourage over-prescribing drugs, and invent new disorders for their drugs. Human growth hormone is a treatment for dwarfism, but company scientists were saying that 'parents who wanted taller children should also think about giving it to their children!'. That sounds like something out of a athletic drug doping program.

The drug company tries to influence the training of doctors as much as possible to indoctrinate them in the 'one disease, one drug' model. They follow this up with all-expenses paid golfing conferences, personal attention from drug marketers, etc. etc. The patients get their advertising through the mainstream media channels. The result of all this marketing? Many people are taking huge cocktails of drugs that their doctors recommend; noone has studied the multi-drug interaction effects.

There was a time when drug discoveries made huge strides in increasing human health; the best example is the discovery and application of the antibiotics (which is what the drug companies are always promoting in their PR). However, the whole business has grown incredibly rotten, yet with very high returns on investment. Unfortunately, if you want to take care of your health in the US, you can't trust the pharma sector or their pet doctors and regulatory agencies.

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This is just the tip of the iceberg. What about engineered diseases?
Posted by: Prophit on May 16, 2006 5:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Has anyone thought of that? After Manufacturing left this nation back in the first Bush attack against American, we were left with the big five service industries which need to increase each year to add to our GDP (Gross Domestic Product). One of those is the medical industry. How do you grow a medical industry?

You manufacture "diseases" either through brainwashing (TV ads) or through creation of new "emerging diseases" and then how do you distribute them? Who knows, maybe through the newly created "Atmospheric Science Program".

Here is a site that is tackling such a problem: studying of a newly emerging disease that has here to for never been seen in this country.

http://www.morgellons.org/

As for distribution of such organisms, here is a site that is new and was put up because of the hue and cry about chemtrails that the Feds stated didn't exist, but in Oct 2005 the President made this "nonexistant' spraying Legal and was placed under "Cheney's" dept of energy.

There are many more new diseases and some which are bioweapons such as those sold to Saddam back in the 80's by Rumsfeld, for example West nile virus and Blue Nile Virus. So all of these have a purpose and unless you think this is just another conspiracy theory, please read this link since it is promoted by the very people currently in the highest offices in the land. You can verify it by reading the Pax Americana document yourself.

www.sundayherald.com/print27735

See paragraph 14 in part states:

".......the world of microbes ... advanced forms of biological warfare that can 'target' specific genotypes may transform biological warfare from the realm of terror to a politically useful tool';"

We are under full blown attack. Just check around and notice how often you and your loved ones are ill during the course of one year. Frankly, I never used to get sick, or maybe a flu once a year at best. Now its something every two weeks, sinuses, coughs, rashes, and other nefarious symptoms.

I go herbal in my treatments so I never do the drugs with the exception of high blood pressure. That is it. All natural other than that. Soooooo what are we going to do about it? If history is any indication....... NOTHING!

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And what about "food"?
Posted by: henderson on May 16, 2006 6:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And what about the "food" that is supposed to keep us healthy? The same chemical companies have adulterated our food, from soil on up, so that we don't know if the "symptoms" are from what we eat, or the air we breathe, or the medications we take. God help us!

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WHAT WERE YOU EXPECTING FROM AMERICA?
Posted by: LMNOP on May 16, 2006 6:10 AM   
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What did you expect from a people with one single solitary value, profit, to which all other considerations must completely subordinate themselves?

Another ramification of this is the mirror side of the problem: diseases like sleeping sickness for which a known antedote exists, but which is not manufactured by any pharmaceutical house because the people with this problem and their governments haven't got enough money to make it worth their while, and people die. Makes you proud, don't it!

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Damn Dupes of Drug Companies
Posted by: AdamSelene40 on May 16, 2006 6:11 AM   
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Don't they know that all we need is proper diet, exercise, good attitude and organic food -- then noone would have to get sick or die young.

And if they do -- well, it's their own damn fault , anyway.

Natural cures are totally effective and have no side effects.

How do I know ?
Carlton Fredricks told me so!

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» Drugs good or bad? Posted by: anewport
» THANK you! Posted by: rivka_m
» RE: THANK you! Posted by: nickptar
New pills practically killed me.
Posted by: jreinhart1 on May 16, 2006 6:46 AM   
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The pill pushing big pharma creates new drugs by tweaking most of what is already available and then charges high prices. Not only that, they often don't work. I am on a drug that has been around for quite some time (almost 20 years). Big pharma has to be in collusion with the insurance industry as this drug is not covered for my condition anymore. It used to be. Now, the drugs that are available that my doctor has put me on has had bad to very severe side affects. One of the most popular ones caused me to loose white blood cells, thinned my subcutaneous fat under the skin to the point where when I would scratch an itch, I would bleed.

This is pathetic, but nothing compared to the psycho-tropics that are coming out now. The pill pushing pimps must not test what they put out as a couple of family members have consistently gotten worse. Another major problem are the few people that are qualified to make a diagnosis. Psychiatry used to be a very advanced medical profession that included standard practice, psychology, neurology (for those that are good, passing the neurology boards is a must), psychology, psycho-pharmacology and endocrinology. Most psychiatrists don't maximize their knowledge in all areas leaving them deficient in the knowledge of how and where neurotransmitters, hormones, ... work and how they affect perception and cognition.

My girl friend's mother almost died from terrible practitioners. My sister is in the fight of her life because of the religious nutbags that carry their faith before any form of healing and are just pushing new pills that the pharmacist is telling them to use. So much for a qualified diagnosis.

There are great psychiatrists in the US, but they are hard to find as managed care has put most people in a waiting line for substance abuse facility beds, regardless of how much money one has.

One last note. My mother was a dietitian that got her degree at Iowa State and interned at Cornell for two years back in the 50s. Dietetics is no longer a profession compared to what was required for her to get her degree. Her knowledge of physiology and the bodies systems and how they the body breaks down foods into their component parts to be used by the body in all of the body's systems was exceptional. At University hospitals, she used to teach physicians. She was always correcting the BS that came across the news as as new findings. She even knew what is now being said about cholesterol. Half the courses she had to take are too tough for current dietitians and I know that a two year internship isn't required. To add insult to injury, physicians don't have to take nutrition and if they do, it is just a couple of weeks. The best advice would come from your dentist!

So, often, physicians that prescribe pills now don't even really know what they do. America is drowning in pills that are usually tweaked drugs from some other formulation which are all to often prescribed by physicians that don't really understand how they work. With the advent of managed care, this even gets worse as they work together just to push new formulations. The doctors that do know how the pills work are now specialists and that is the option of last resort for managed care.

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ugh
Posted by: Iconoclast421 on May 16, 2006 7:04 AM   
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This is why I think a universal healthcare system would be a disaster in this country. The government would end up subsidizing our insane addiction to self-prescribed sickness. So many people taking so many pills... So much money, and 9 times out of 10 it's a total waste.

Only one person is going to be able to make you better. A doctor cannot describe your symptoms for you. If you don't describe things accurately then you could end up being pigeonholed into one of the major "drug categories". The more you study your own symptoms, the less likely you are to become a money sponge for big pharma.

Anyone who takes any medication should spend many hours researching that medication. Sadly, it will not take long to become more informed than your own doctor.

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A Personal Touch...
Posted by: RoffleTheWaffle on May 16, 2006 7:08 AM   
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Just something interesting I thought I might throw in, since I've already rolled with all the dope dealers that have the nerve to call themselves practitioners of medicine that I'd ever care to deal with...

At a very early age, I was diagnosed with, among other things, obsessive compulsive disorder. This was about ten or eleven years ago, I'd say. From that moment forward, there was never a time when I wasn't on some kind of pill. There was never a time when I wasn't taking some kind of dope at least once daily, and when one kind of dope didn't make me feel 'good' and 'right', what did the doctor do? They upped the dose until they couldn't anymore, and then they switched me off of it. Bear in mind, I was a little kid then - I didn't know jack about how drugs work, and I genuinely felt poor and extremely anxious. I did - and still do - have issues, but my family and I were told that the dope was the only way to fix it.

Years passed, and I was given more and more drugs. There was a time when I was taking at least three if not four kinds of medicine daily, all to treat a slew of fad diseases I may or may not have actually had. Finally, when I was about fourteen years old, I told my mom, "I'm done with this. It's not doing anything for me, I don't want to take this anymore." I meant it - the drugs were making me feel strange, they were messing with my appetite, and I couldn't sleep properly anymore. So I dropped off of them, and for about a year, I was fine. Eventually, however, my condition worsened due to a great deal of emotional distress attributed to personal matters, and after I conveyed that I'd been contemplating self-injurious behavior, I was institutionalized for a brief period of time.

During my stay at the funny farm, I was run through a gauntlet of childish self-help excercises, while I used the time in solitude to get to the root of my own problems. It didn't stop the doctors there from giving me yet more dope, though. Wellbutrin, it was called, and I wound up taking it for about five years straight. Initially, I noticed some beneficial effects - my naturally elevated level of anxiety seemed to subside, as did my lingering depression, though this may or may not have been my own doing - but it didn't last long. Soon I was taking it just because, and the dosage was raised as old problems returned. I'd only realize later that the only reason I felt bad in the first place was because a lot was missing from my life, including any inkling of self confidence.

Just a few months ago, I stopped taking the dope, cold-turkey. I actually felt better, and it was great. In spite of that, to this day I still have withdrawal symptoms, and I'm beginning to wonder if maybe all these drugs over all this time - all the rapid switching and pill cocktails I've gone through - haven't damaged me somehow, permanently. I've learned to deal with my shit, whatever the hell it is. I think the latest fad disease I was diagnosed with was Asperger's syndrome, but frankly, I don't care how many risk factors and warning signs I have. I don't think it exists, and while I genuinely feel sorry for people that actually have autism - which is definitely real - this Asperger's stuff is bullshit.

The moral of the story is that no pill will ever fill all the holes we have in our hearts. We feel miserable because our lives are unfulfilling. We're lonely, we're bored, and we don't know how to relax. Learning how to take care of yourself is a better cure than any drug dealt to you, and it's a fuck of a lot cheaper, too. It took me more than a decade - presently more than half my life - to figure that out... I've got to admit, seeing myself type that makes me feel kind of stupid, but hey, better late than never.

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» Hang in there Posted by: Lizmv
» RE: A Personal Touch... Posted by: Loopylafae
We need more local farmer's markets.
Posted by: jreinhart1 on May 16, 2006 7:19 AM   
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Locally grown foods without the chemicals can be found by local growers. It would be nice to see more of them if there was a demand. We would be eating healthier as well as saving fuel from the long distances carrying products that have to withstand the long trek. When is the last time anyone has eaten a real egg, tomato or brussel sprout?

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» RE: We need more local farmer's markets. Posted by: RoffleTheWaffle
Role of competition in forcing drug use
Posted by: medstudgeek on May 16, 2006 7:30 AM   
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I've been beaten to the punch by a lot of the great commenters here, so I just wanted to add my bit about the role of competition.

Anyone think it's kind of funny that we all have to consume a drug (caffeine) to go through daily life? I.E., our lives require more than the unmodified human body can perform, so we have to drug ourselves to perform at the accepted level.

As Provigil and these other sleep-replacement drugs spread, first manic investment bankers will take them. Then not-so-manic investment bankers. Then, lawyers. Then, regular maangers. Then it will be required to maintain the level of activity necessary to move up the corporate ladder. Then it will be required just to do your job...because everyone else is taking it, and you can't be less productive than everyone else or you will get fired.

The labor movement should make this an issue. Though I suppose they've got their hands full just trying to stay alive. Whoever brings it up, this is a labor issue.

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» Right on! Posted by: AngryWhiteFemale
Crazy Conspiracy
Posted by: chaoslegs on May 16, 2006 7:47 AM   
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I bet you right now they are working on a drug to counter skepticism. I think Mother Jones did an artilce on the treating Oppositional Defiant Disorder as a way to make dissent something to be treated. Marketing works better on compliant people!

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Hilarious Onion Spoof!
Posted by: haystack1317 on May 16, 2006 7:50 AM   
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The pharmaceutical companies are some of the worst abusers of the system out there. The following is an extremely funny spoof on a typical drug quiz (Could Zoloft be right for you?). It sums it all up, in my opinion:

www.theonion.com/content/node/28348

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Jules
Posted by: Maude on May 16, 2006 8:17 AM   
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There was a study done about psyhiatrists. They make more money by prescribing drugs than talking to the patient.
There is a mind set in psychiatry: take a pill you'll feel better and if you don't well, at least you'll be quiet about it.
Laws benefit these docs. If a patient is non compliant, he or she can be involuntarily commited. It is a silentt hreat held over the heads of patients.
Patients who are vulnerable are railroaded into taking multiple drugs.
The side effects are dangerous.
I think that we need to get the power out of the doctors fat little hands. THey have agendas and they do harm first.
Too many peole have been damaged or have died because of the belief that drugs are the answer.
One trick that psychiatrists use is to prescribe a drug, outside of the prescribing guidelines and then label the patient with a "disorder" that takes away the patient's credibility.
A patient who would complain about the psychiatrist's unethical and dishonest behaviour would be at a loss to rectify matters.
This has to be changed.
The word Disorder is dehumanizing and opens the door to putting people into little defined boxes and making sure that they have no voice.
The drug companies can't make profits if the docs aren't pushing the drugs.
Anyone have any ideas on how to put a stop to this viscious circle?
I am sure that there are plenty of people who would join together to create a strong force to begin taking away the power and control of the docs, the drug industry and the insurance companies.
It has gone too far. It has gone on for too long.
Psychiatry is a belief system, not a science.
The research is all wrong. Messing with brain chemistry is not a solution.
It is the whole body system that needs to be looked at.
Jules

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I agree with a lot of these comments...
Posted by: r.frenchie on May 16, 2006 8:24 AM   
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as I have family members and friends on more medications than I can count. Many of them, too, are put on an additional pill or pills when side effects become troublesome or whatnot. I think this a shame, but on the other hand, I suffered from depression for about 15 years. I went through four rounds of therapy and tried everything I could possibly think of before finally going on Lexapro about three months ago. I've had doctors try to push meds on me in the past and resisted because I thought it was ridiculous to need medication. Finally agreeing to go on meds was one of the best decisions I've ever made; I have never felt so normal! So while I agree doctors are far too eager to push pills on you, in some cases it really is the right thing to do.

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Allan Sherman warned us 40 years ago about this.
Posted by: Artkansas on May 16, 2006 8:28 AM   
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In his song "Pills"

There are pills that make you happy.
There are pills that make you blue.
There are pills to kill your streptococci.
There are pills to cure your cockeye too.
There are folks whose pills have made them healthy.
There are folks whose pills have cured their chills.
But the folks whose pills have made them wealthy
Are the folks who make all those pills.

(There are) Dexedrine and Miltown, to pick you up and let you down.
(happy) Or if you're sufferin', swallow a Bufferin.
(pills) Vi