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Health & Wellness

Rethinking Antidepressants and Youth Suicide

By Courtney E. Martin, AlterNet. Posted September 25, 2007.


Is the confirmed rise in suicide rates among young people, particularly girls aged 10-14, linked to a decrease in prescription antidepressants?
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Rosa Rodriguez,* now a college student, recalls her suicide attempt at 13 years old: "I decided I couldn't take it anymore, so I took some pills and went to bed early. I threw it all up within 20 minutes, and thinking back, I'm glad it didn't work out."

She goes on: "I share my bed with my sister, and it would have been really selfish of me if I did that knowing that she was lying next to me. I obviously wasn't thinking rationally."

While Rosa looks back with remorse, she does not look back with confusion. She has continued to struggle with depression throughout her life, a disease that affects 5 percent of adolescents and children. According to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), 90 percent of those who attempt suicide have a significant psychiatric disease. Rosa is not an anomaly.

Two new studies confirm that the suicide rate among young people has increased, particularly among girls between the ages of 10 and 14. The numbers have researchers, health advocates, parents, educators, and teens debating the potential causes -- the most controversial of which is the corresponding drop in antidepressant use among youth after U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) warnings in early 2003.

The first study, conducted by the CDC's National Center for Injury Prevention and Control confirms that between 2003 and 2004, the suicide rate among children and young adults rose 8 percent; the suicide rate for girls ages 10-14 jumped 76 percent. CDC researchers are quick to point out that, though they are interested in the corresponding drop in antidepressant use, the study doesn't prove a causal relationship.

Robert Gibbons of the University of Illinois at Chicago, the head researcher on the other study, believes he has that proof. His study, published in the American Journal of Psychiatry, found that the youth suicide rates in the United States rose 14 percent between 2003 and 2004 and 49 percent in the Netherlands. Youth antidepressant prescriptions fell 22 percent among children aged 0 to 19 in both the United States and the Netherlands after the 2003 warnings were issued.

The study, however, has come under scrutiny recently because two of its eight authors, including Gibbons, have ties to big pharma. Gibbons once served as an expert witness for Wyeth, maker of Effexor; J. John Mann, a neuroscience professor at Columbia University, has received research funding from GlaxoSmithKline, creator of Paxil, and has been an adviser to Eli Lilly, which sells Prozac.

Still, these conflicts of interest do not necessarily mean the study's conclusions are wrong. Any way you slice it, these numbers are alarming and worth a closer look. Especially when you consider that prior to 2003, the suicide rate among youth aged 10 to 24 had fallen by 28.5 percent over a 13-year period. Dr. Ileana Arias, director of the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control told reporters: "We don't yet know if this is a short-lived increase or if it's the beginning of a trend."

Rethinking antidepressants

Though the FDA has never approved Zoloft, Paxil or most similar drugs (with the notable exception of Prozac) for use by younger patients with depression, many doctors prescribe them. According to the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry approximately 1.4 million pediatric patients are currently taking antidepressants.

In the FDA review, no completed suicides occurred among nearly 2,200 children treated with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) medications. However, about 4 percent of those on the drugs experienced suicidal thinking or behavior, including suicide attempts -- twice the rate of those taking the placebo.

In 2003, following this review and lengthy hearings, the FDA issued a warning that the use of antidepressants -- particularly the very popular SSRI type, including Prozac and Paxil -- could increase the chances of suicidal thoughts or actions in children and teenagers. The warnings were added in a "black box" on the medications in October 2004.


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See more stories tagged with: antidepressants, big pharma, teen suicide, adolescent suicide, ssris, paxil, zoloft, prozac

Courtney E. Martin is the author of Perfect Girls, Starving Daughters: The Frightening New Normalcy of Hating Your Body. You can read more about her work at www.courtneyemartin.com.

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Mike Males
Posted by: mmales on Sep 25, 2007 12:55 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Another poorly researched article by Courtney Martin attempting to push her wierd agenda misrepresenting girls today are crazier than ever due hypersexualization. First, it is highly unlikely that an antidepressant warning label first appearing in October 2004 could have contributed much to a suicide increase covering all of 2004. Second, girls ages 10-14 are the least likely of any age or gender to commit suicide--the increase being talked about is from 56 to 98, a rise of 42 suicides in a population of 10.3 million girls that age. To allow a collection of self-interested sources to exploit such tiny numbers to push self-serving explanations is irresponsible journalism.

Third, the suicide increase occurred among adult women as well--among the mothers of these girls, ages 35-54, there were 340 more suicides in 2004 than in 2003, with 2004 suicides totalling 3,399, eight times the rate among younger teen girls. It is likely that whatever caused the suicide rise among girls is linked to the increase among adult women, not some unique new pressure on girls.

We also have to remember that girls today have suffered exploding drug abuse and crime by their mothers' generation over the last 25 years, with record numbers of their middle-aged parents addicted, arrested, and imprisoned. Sure, it's a lot more satisfying and sensational to blame some exaggerated notions of modern teenage sexual images and values inflicted by salacious popular culture, rather than taking a painful look at the increasingly troubled ways their parents are acting. It's easier to quote the same old "experts" the corporate media quotes advocating more pills and bewailing teen behaviors and cultural images aimed at girls than to contemplate why middle-aged men and women's addictions and disarray are creating so much misery for their daughters (and sons).

The clear reluctance of Alternet authors to do any original research to challenge official/media dogmas on youth issues, and to buy into superficial explanations and panaceas, is truly disturbing. It suggests that young people are just a commodity exploited by various interest groups to conduct their culture wars, older-generation self-flatteries, and profiteering instead of taking a tough, fresh look at what's really going on. Today's girls display far less self-destructive and troubled behavior than their mothers did as teens or do as adults today. Martin's and others' relentless efforts to misrepresent girls today as crazy, addicted, miserable, and suicidal is simply bizarre, and a far cry from "feminist." www.YouthFacts.org

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» Excellent comment Posted by: thoughtcriminal
Personal experience
Posted by: pure_genius on Sep 25, 2007 3:47 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I was started on antidepressants at age 12. I started on tricyclics and moved to SSRIs. I have spent over 3 years of my life in secure psych units. No matter who secure they were it didn't stop teens from committing suicide while on SSRIs. Twenty-five of my fellow patients suicided. Three of which I witnessed. I would have been one of them, but my mind was stronger than the drug.

We keep giving children drugs that will have untold long-term effects on neurological health and wonder why things seem so bad among youth.

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» RE: Personal experience Posted by: VZEQICVA
What a Ridiculous Hypothesis!
Posted by: cellorelio on Sep 25, 2007 5:52 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When I speak to young people, I ask them about how they see their future. The response is always so disheartening. Today's youth tend to answer one of two ways.

They either think that the future is bleak: global warming, "endless war for endless peace", a dead-end labor market, a collapsing economy, the rise of fascism--yes, these are the things on many young peoples' minds today.

The other response is a half-assed belief that everything will be just fine. An exciting and challenging job that pays well, a big house in the suburbs, maybe kids/maybe not, lots of great stuff to go in the big house, and, of course, a big, fancy car. I say the response is half-assed because the tone of their voices and the look in their eyes often seem to indicate that they don't really believe it or, if they do, that's not the life they really are hoping for.

Could it be that this is why more young people have committed suicide since 2003--the year that George Bush began the immoral, criminal war on Iraq, two years after 9/11 and the resultant destruction of our Constitution? Do you think that kids don't see what's going on around them, that they don't understand that the generation in charge is basically defecating on their future?

And, why is it that we're only looking at whether or not antidepressants will keep young people from killing themselves? Has anyone conducted a study on the effects of lifestyle, particularly nutrition? Kids today have the worst diet in the history of humankind. Aside from GMO foods (which are being tested on the population as if we were guinea pigs), today's diet has more sugar and artificial ingredients, and is more processed than ever before.

I speak from experience when I say that eliminating processed convenience foods from one's diet and replacing them with fresh, organically-grown, whole foods can improve one's mood more than any pharmaceutical. Exercise, fresh air, sunshine--none of which the average US teen gets much of these days--is also vital to maintain mental health. And meaningful relationships with people as well as doing things that are challenging and rewarding are also so important to keep us balanced.

Kids today are the most connected ever but how many actually have a good network of friends with whom they actually do things, rather than just MySpace and Facebook each other about things?

This article may as well have been written by Big Pharma.

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» This is EXACTLY WHY Posted by: Smartcookie
What role does the environment play?
Posted by: kungfoofighterx on Sep 25, 2007 7:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I once heard this crazy statistic at a talk at the university.....child and teenage suicides didnt happen often (they used the term never, but I dont believe that) in the west until people started living in suburbs. I have no idea if it is true. I always wondered what role the environment plays in antidepressant-suicide link. It seems that there would be a lot of other variables that would influence one's decision to take their own life. Are the suicides concentrated in one geographical or economic region? Is it a global phenomena or a western culture thing. I would bet a lot of kids who chose to end their own life have more in common then a pill. It sad to see that more kids choose suicide after withdrawing from SSRIs. So how many years does one wait to see if it is related to SSRIs or something else? Only time will tell if its environmental or lack of drugs that caused this increase. It would have been nice if the author would have included a little more background information on why children commit suicide.

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SACHS IS CORRECT- WE ARE MORTGAGING OUR FUTURE IF WE ONLY TALK ABOUT MEDS
Posted by: drricklippin on Sep 25, 2007 8:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Sachs sums up the task ahead: "When we shrink and distill our conversation regarding adolescent depression and suicidality down to whether or not to prescribe medication, or which medications to prescribe, we miss a crucial opportunity to examine and evaluate our collective priorities, and to perhaps begin redesigning them so that not only adolescents, but ADULTS (Lippin bolding) as well, discover new ways, or rediscover old ways, to bond, care, grow and heal."

THANKS COURTNEY MARTIN AND ALTERNET

I wrote about overuse of antidepressants in the american worker at the american workplace- Yet another dangerous epidemic!

See Jay Cohen's E-Newsletter. Scroll down to July/Sep 04

Thanks Again and Be Well

Dr. Rick Lippin
http://medicalcrises.blogspot.com

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Kids are offing themselves because they cannot see a future
Posted by: vomeggido on Sep 25, 2007 8:52 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why participate in life when its quite plain just how ugly things are going to get.

There is no future for children. The "adults" of this world will likely pick this planet clean leaving nothing but fat corpses in rotting coffins.

Who wants to stick around for that.

I will just bet the administration and religions will institute some sort of program and handout suicide kits in the near future. Clean and tidy.

I plan on leaving a bloody mess.

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Something else to consider:
Posted by: Iconoclast421 on Sep 25, 2007 9:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Antidepressants may not directly cause a person to commit suicide, but it is possible that any attempt to substitute real therapy with some drug might be the problem. A person on the edge might really just need a friend or someone to talk to or a good role model or some kind... any kind of positive influence in their life. But if all they're getting is some stupid drug, then that might just make it worse. People need to talk and work out these problems, not mask them with drugs.

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» RE: Something else to consider: Posted by: VannaLaRoche
Put yourself in their shoes
Posted by: Iconoclast421 on Sep 25, 2007 10:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I can only imagine what it must be like to be a 10 year old girl growing up in today's world. I was always naturally curious, and I am certain that if I was a 10 year old girl I would have stumbled across porn videos just randomly surfing the web. And even if I didnt, some boy down the street would probably play those videos...

Dont get me wrong, kids have been exposed to porn at a young age for a very long time now. (I grew up in a trailer park, so I know how deep the rabbit hole goes!) But what they see nowadays is much more "intense" than what I might have seen as a kid. I saw people doing it, sure, but I never saw the kinds of videos that they have now.... ones where a girl is getting banged by 2 or 3 guys... at once. It might be too much to handle, especially on top of everything else that life throws at them. This is a failure of parenting. If I had a daughter around 10 years old I'd seriously consider having her mother talk with her, in detail, about all the various sex acts that she is likely to see/experience in her lifetime. And explain what is acceptable, and what is not, and why its not. It used to be a simple discussion of the birds and the bees. When growing up, I saw all sorts of animals having sex. It is completely natural and it goes a long way toward preparing a child for adulthood. Group sex, however, is something that rarely occurs in nature, but can and will be seen by hundreds of thousands of children before they reach adulthood. Simply pretending that stuff doesnt exist or that their children wont see it is doing them a major disservice. It needs to be explained very carefully. It's probably one of the most shocking things a girl will see in her lifetime, and she might grow up hating her parents if they do not prepare her for the exposure to it. We'll never know how many girls take their own lives over this very thing, but even one is one too many. One thing I do know is that there is NO drug that can address this problem.

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someone who was in that mess. . .
Posted by: sashi on Sep 25, 2007 10:36 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
i'm a 27 year old female grad student who taught freshmen classes at a public university in california.

i was a teenager during the nineties and was very depressed during that time.
several of my classmates committed suicide starting when we were 12-13 years old and it still hasn't ended.

some of this was because a lot of us had chemical imbalances
some because our parents had problems that projected on to us
some because we had (and per my students, still have) this heavy, overwhelming weight on our shoulders---we will not have the standard of living that our parents had or were able to give to us, we feel utterly and totally helpless in regards to the things that the current administration is doing, we're constantly told that we perform below the standards of our parents and their parents, etc.

we're not stupid, we're not lazy.

i honestly believe that the majority of the students i worked with were scared to try because they were so afraid of failure.

its just sad that this has gone on for over 15 years. a whole generation of people who feel helpless. and so sad that they don't even realize the same shit happened during Vietnam.

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Come on - conflicts of interests don't matter?
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Sep 25, 2007 11:39 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The author claims that "Still, these conflicts of interest do not necessarily mean the study's conclusions are wrong. Any way you slice it, these numbers are alarming and worth a closer look."

The author seems to know nothing about statistical pharma research. It's incredibly easy to cook up numbers like this. You could, for example, pore over suicide statistics from a hundred different countries, and then choose the country that happened to have an increase over a specific one year period. For example, looking at the suicide data table from CDC: (bottom of the page)

Here's a closer look at those numbers:

---------------------1992----1996----2000-----2004
Males 10-14-------2.40-----2.23-----2.26-----1.71
Males 15-19------17.61----15.38----13.00----12.65
Females 10-14----0.90-----0.80------0.62-----0.95
Females 15-19----3.42-----3.49------2.75-----3.52

Look at the numbers, look at the whole chart, and then look at this article. All it is is pharmaceuticals trying to pimp their products to the public, and a clueless writer trying to use an argument she doesn't understand to boost her thesis. Just awful.

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?
Posted by: Gaubladt on Sep 25, 2007 12:15 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The suicides could be from coming down from the prescribed drugs.

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» RE: ? Posted by: VannaLaRoche
More Money For Big Pharma and the Insurance Companies
Posted by: sofla100 on Sep 25, 2007 4:55 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article is much ado about a serious topic but without any really valid conclusions. Suicidal behavior is so strongly linked to psychological and social factors, how can you conclude anything (specific to the general population) based on when medications were given or withdrawn? The danger in all this is that insurance companies are increasingly unwilling to pay for counseling and therapy. It take too long for them, and of course, is a lot more expensive than some pills. They will jump on anything to push pills instead of paying for therapy sessions. However, does anyone doubt that what these depressed kids really need is someone to talk to who can try to understand them and help sort things out? Instead, it's just push pills at them. This is not to say that in some circumstances, along with counseling, medication might not be helpful. But, it should only be ancillary and not primary. We need to listen to our kids and help them, not dope them up.

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environmental issues?
Posted by: bluebirdella on Sep 25, 2007 9:50 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Could it be depression rates are so high because there is so much poison in the food, housing, and air? I've thought about suicide since I was 14 years old and now, roughly 30 years later, while still chronically depressed I am also still alive to complain about it. Medication helped me as an adult. Talk therapy had far more limited use. It could be that some of us are just wired for depression. There are so many factors that might lead to depression or make it worse or more prevalent, I am skeptical of any study that points to one cause. I can say bulimia and self-cutting are not new phenomena, since I was doing those things as a teenager. If suicide is more prevalent among the youth, it's because they lack the perspective that comes with time. But I don't think anyone understands why there is so much depression. Societal problems, family problems, interpersonal problems, drug problems, financial problems, medication problems, racism, sexism, street violence, domestic violence, state-sponsored violence, poverty, war, tragic living conditions, limited options - there are just too many variables.

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Teen Suicide
Posted by: Candleinheart on Sep 26, 2007 5:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think this problem has to do with several issues brought up by intelligent comments above. No one mentioned TV.
I was born in '36. A divorced family. Stepfather in Navy. Never in one school district for more than two years. By age 40 I had moved 38 times. My sisters and I were physically beaten with boards and constant mental, critical abuse. I had to give this background for several reasons. I was never depressed. I was sad about moves, leaving friends, cried about the beatings, but never caused any problems for family. One sister began drinking early and became addicted for the next 22 years. She is fine now. She took no antidepressants. Other sister seemed unscathed by it all and has never been depressed. Mid Life difficulties caused depression but I never took antidepressants.
As stated above its being exposed to far too much stimuli and pressures for delicate psyches to comprehend. As an adult I even find TV pressuring and limit my viewing to upbeat programs that bring pleasure and where I learn something of value.
TV has opened a world of untold horror, competition, instant sexual satisfaction and all one can do is compute fear, worry, not making it, not coping. TV condenses time and is false on every level. Young minds have absolutely no perspective cognitively to cope with this information load, to sift out fact from fiction. TV desensitizes one.
NO scientist or psychologist will EVER tell me TV has has no effect on minds. It is false brain washing to the max.
I became a Life Cycles Counselor. Young girls in their late teens each had had up to 12 sexual partners. At their ages I had had none!
The marked effects of TV have seldom been addressed. The endless viewing of material things that program a young impressionable mind with "if you don't have this or look this way, you're not going to belong". In my 40's I turned off TV and the radio for ten years as I recognized how the sorrows, the world's sufferrings, etc was causing me anxiety and sleepnessness. I was 40 and couldn't handle it!
When I was in school we had good times. No drugs. Good clean fun. No suicides ever in any school I attended! No deaths! By the time my sons were out of high school they had been been pall bearers to two suicides and four fast driving drug accidents. Drugs, too much alcohol, TV and endless false values programmed is causing these impressionable young people, deeply sensitve, these abnormal societal reactions. Where do young people learn about the beauty of sex, and to respect others? Get back to courtship. Does anyone remember that?
Human sexuality is so denigrated, the beauty and sacredness of it so polluted, I think if I saw or heard what young girls see and hear today I'd probably feel as they do.
Depressed? Exercise. Turn off TV. Do upbeat things with friends. Talk to a trusted person whether friend, relative or parent. Take Powdered Brewer's Yeast, it's a walking whole food factory. Go to bed at a decent hour. NO SUGAR! Get out into Nature and marvel at the Beauty in the world. Volunteer by helping others worse than yourself. Remember, its the Beauty within that's far more important than external beauty. Everyone has beauty within. Cultivate it. Yes, even you fellows have beauty within. Have courage and cultivate it. The basics instincts of men should be to protect all women, regardless of age. Please begin doing this. Sadly, this is not the case and one of the greatest disappointments of my life and I am a senior now.
Girls, do not be so self absorbed. Care about others, reach out. We all need each other. Do not be cruel to each other. We're all in this pea soup together. Our values now are not good. We've got to get back to basics.

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Riddukkullous
Posted by: Oghbeewanbenkenobee on Sep 26, 2007 8:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I suggest the author do the opposite and stop trying to make a subtle plug for Big Pharma with this twisted logic..like without the use on antidepressants every teenage girl will slide towards suicide.
Rather the opposite is true and very well documented. That the use of SSRI's is clearly linked to suicides and pathological behaviour. There are literally 1,000s of not 10's of thousands of people whose lives are destroyed by these drugs.
What is not talked about is what happens to people when they stop taking the SSRI's... its called " Discontinuation Syndrome".
Go ask your GP about this..they'll say its either "rare" on non-existent.
The fact is that the horrendous side effects of coming off these drugs is not documented.
The ER rooms are filled every night with people who are "terrorized" by "withdrawal" effects , everything from severe diarrhea, headaches, shortness of breath, extreme dizziness, heart attack like symptoms or just plain feeling like your going to go insane...all from an innocent little pink pill.
The fact remains that these are extremely powerful and dangerous drugs that have had very little "real time" testing.
The so called "low serotonin" theory is also very questionable and there is not documentation or "science " to back this up.

I suggest this author do some proper...(just type in the word Paxil in Google search..that will tell you volumes right there) research and uncover the real monumental tragedy thats unfolding in our society today.
You will not get any of this information from the medical establishment or your doctor, if you do it would be very, very unusual.
If your doctor prescribes SSRI's for you or your young son or daughter, think very seriously about the path to hell you will be taking them down... if you are wise....don't.
Look at healthy alternatives and try to get to the root cause of the depression rather than resorting to a drug thats a quick fix and a fast road to hell.
Finally these drugs need to be properly controlled, researched and in my view "banned" from the market all together.
Fiddling with the brains chemistry by using questionable , powerful and dangerous drugs is "playing God"..the fact remains, the brains chemistry is like the Universe itself , so vast and complex we will probably never know how it works..to say so..to suggest it.... is a sign of arrogance and hubris..to which young people are paying with their lives... don't believe me ,get informed..stop this tragedy.

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Chemical imbalances
Posted by: vomeggido on Sep 26, 2007 9:29 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Is it any wonder that people today suffer huge chemical imbalances that seem to cause mental defectiveness.

How many of you out here in realityland see the possibility of all these chemical imbalances may stem from Fluoride, chlorines, mercury and chemtrails with God knows what being spilled into the air.

And God knows what extra little doodads and twittywaddy's they will put in the water once they privatize that! Then we will see some more pills to cure what ails us that they have conveniently placed in the water, air and land.

It stinks like shit in here.

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another soft sell for big pharma?
Posted by: DeAnander on Sep 28, 2007 10:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here is a counterbalancing PoV
QUOTE
Long before the New York Times reported this month that youth suicides were up 8% from 2003 to 2004 and experts blamed an "antidepressant deficiency" big pharma was trying to plant the story.

There's too much money in diagnosing children with major psychiatric illnesses and keeping them on psychotropic drugs their whole lives to let a little thing like the black box warnings the FDA imposed on antidepressants for children in 2004 ruin sales.

After all this is a nation that believes that children are born with a Ritalin deficiency, insomnia is Ambien deficiency and old age is hormone deficiency. Why shouldn't pharmacology trump biology with suicide statistics as well?

Last year an article in the June issue of PLoS Medicine set the stage.

Lead author Dr. Julio Licinio, a consultant to Prozac-maker Eli Lilly, found the U.S. suicide rate "dropped steadily over 14 years as sales of the antidepressant [Prozac] rose."

It was followed by an article in April in the Archives of General Psychiatry by four representatives of a private "drug development services" company called Quintiles Transnational and four other authors expressing concerns that "the number of children and teenagers who were prescribed antidepressants has decreased significantly" underlining "the importance of presenting a fair balance within the media." ("Impact of Publicity Concerning Pediatric Suicidality Data on Physician Practice Patterns in the United States")

And in February a MedPage Today article actually scooped the New York Times with the headline, "Teen Suicide Spike Linked to SSRI Black Box."
[...]
The rise in suicides among ages 10 to 24 in 2003 to 2004 stood. But the charge that the rise was due to a drop-off in antidepressant prescriptions, especially selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) like Prozac, which came from an article in the September American Journal of Psychiatry, promptly fell on its head.

It turned out the drop in SSRI prescriptions that "caused" the suicide rise occurred the following year. In most of the year cited, SSRI prescriptions actually "rose an average of just over 10 percent" for those 18 and under according to Psychiatric News and "the number of prescriptions peaked in March 2004."

Meanwhile preliminary Centers for Disease Control and Prevention statistics from the year that would have been influenced by a drop in SSRI prescription that occurred--2005--do not show deaths up, though they have not been broken into category.

Asked about the 180% turnaround in facts which meant the suicide rise was not caused by SSRI prescription drop-offs and possibly caused by SSRIs themselves, vindicating the FDA's black boxes, the article's lead author Robert D. Gibbons, Ph.D., a professor of biostatistics and psychiatry at the University of Illinois at Chicago, did not sound the statistician. [...]/QUOTE

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