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http://publish.indymedia.org/en/2006/10/847768.shtml

Independent Media Center

A Scary Day

Warner

October 4, 2006

October 5th is National Depression Screening Day (NDSD), a carefully

orchestrated media campaign brought to you by the pharmaceutical and mental

health industries for the purpose of scaring you out of your wits. Think of it

as Halloween for drug companies and their pill pushing minions. Imagine them

going door to door in ghoulish masks transferring fistfuls of green stuff into

their overflowing Cash O'Lanterns while offering to make you a zombie too, and

you'll have it pretty close.

According to NDSD's website, the funding sponsors are all drug makers. Eli

Lilly, maker of the antidepressants Prozac and Cymbalta, is the major sponsor,

with Forest Laboratories (antidepressants Lexapro and Celexa), GlaxoKline

(antidepressants Wellubtrin and Paxil), Pfizer (antidepressant Zoloft), and

Wyeth Pharmceuticals (antidepressant Effexor) providing additional support.

There are a few things these devilish little trick-or-treaters might forget to

mention when they ring your bell so let's help them out. We'll start with the

most obvious: depression is not a disease. It's actually an emotion. This no

doubt comes as a shock, but it's true. There's no chemical imbalance, no

serotonin deficiency - not even a test for these things. According to Harvard

psychiatrist ph Glenmullen, chemical imbalance theories have never been

proven and, in particular, " a serotonin deficiency for depression has not been

found. " Last year, Sharfstein, the president of the American Psychiatric

Association (APA), admitted, " We do not have a clean-cut lab test " to detect

chemical imbalances.

Psychotropic drugs are great, however, at creating chemical imbalances.

Hyman, former director of the National Institute of Mental Health, says the

imbalances created by chronic psychotropic drug use " likely exceed the strength

and time course of almost any natural stimulus. "

But hey, who cares? Antidepressants work, right? Well, not exactly. Earlier this

year the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) released the results of a

three-stage study of antidepressants, the Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to

Relieve Depression (STAR-D) study. 27.5% of patients had a remission on the

first antidepressant they tried. When the drug was switched or more drugs were

added another 21 - 30% of the non-responders remitted. A switch to a third

antidepressant worked for 20% of those who didn't respond to the first two

drugs.

While such results might appear promising, they are more trick than treat. To

achieve these statistics they first excluded from the study anyone who was known

not to respond to the drugs they were testing or even to SSRI antidepressants in

general (drugs like Prozac and Paxil). This is somewhat akin to inviting only

professional singers to the American Idol auditions.

Moreover, there was no placebo control in this study. They probably wanted to

avoid the embarrassing results of previous placebo-controlled studies. In 2002

the Washington Post reported that " in the majority of trials conducted by drug

companies in recent decades, sugar pills have done as well as - or better than -

antidepressants. " A 2005 article in the British Medical Journal concluded that

" selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors have no clinically meaningful advantage

over placebo. " And that, in the final analysis, is just what the STAR-D study

showed too.

So why do people take antidepressants? For a number of reasons. The placebo

effect is powerful. When people expect to improve from taking a pill they often

do. And these pills are stimulants, like their predecessors, cocaine and the

amphetamines. Not surprisingly, an increasing number of experts are pointing to

the drug dependence produced by Prozac-type drugs, their serious withdrawal

effects, and the evidence that antidepressant users are trading a short term

high for long term increased vulnerability to depressive relapse.

Since individuals diagnosed with depression on National Depression Screening Day

most likely end will end up on antidepressants, should side effects be mentioned

as part of the screening promotion? These are effects severe enough that they

would even make Dr. Jekyll feel inadequate. On March 22, 2004, the FDA warned

that Prozac-like antidepressants could cause " anxiety, agitation, panic attacks,

insomnia, irritability, hostility, impulsivity, akathisia [severe restlessness],

hypomania [abnormal excitement] and mania [psychosis characterized by exalted

feelings, delusions of grandeur]. " The FDA has issued several warnings about the

potential increased risk of suicidal behavior in both adults and children taking

antidepressants. Dr. Healy, a world expert on the history and development

of psychopharmacology, recently wrote, " For every year since 1988, the relative

risk of suicidal acts on SSRIs has been double that of placebo. "

So what should someone who is depressed do? It isn't common practice, but

finding out what is actually causing the depression can be very helpful.

Individuals with hormonal imbalances, nutritional deficiencies, adrenal

exhaustion and even brain tumors end up on antidepressants. Exercise also works.

A Duke University Medical Center study found that not only was exercise as

effective as drug therapy but only 8 percent of patients in the exercise group

had their depression return, while 38 percent of the drug-only group and 31

percent of the exercise-plus-drug group relapsed.

Something else a person who is feeling depressed could do is fight back! The

national psychiatric pharmaceutical screening campaign is now targeting

children. You can sign the petition against it here:

http://www.petitiononline.com/TScreen/petition.html

Have a happy National Depression Screaming, I mean Screening, Day. Just don't

take it too seriously. And don't let them put you in that patient gown. It

stinks.

++

12,052 signatures: http://www.petitiononline.com/TScreen/petition.html How many

people can you get the word to today and October 5?

++

If you would rather not receive the latest news via this e-mail line, please

send a message to

records@... with " UNSUBSCRIBE ME " in the subject line.

(posted as a requirement under legal and contractual requirements.)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

http://publish.indymedia.org/en/2006/10/847768.shtml

Independent Media Center

A Scary Day

Warner

October 4, 2006

October 5th is National Depression Screening Day (NDSD), a carefully

orchestrated media campaign brought to you by the pharmaceutical and mental

health industries for the purpose of scaring you out of your wits. Think of it

as Halloween for drug companies and their pill pushing minions. Imagine them

going door to door in ghoulish masks transferring fistfuls of green stuff into

their overflowing Cash O'Lanterns while offering to make you a zombie too, and

you'll have it pretty close.

According to NDSD's website, the funding sponsors are all drug makers. Eli

Lilly, maker of the antidepressants Prozac and Cymbalta, is the major sponsor,

with Forest Laboratories (antidepressants Lexapro and Celexa), GlaxoKline

(antidepressants Wellubtrin and Paxil), Pfizer (antidepressant Zoloft), and

Wyeth Pharmceuticals (antidepressant Effexor) providing additional support.

There are a few things these devilish little trick-or-treaters might forget to

mention when they ring your bell so let's help them out. We'll start with the

most obvious: depression is not a disease. It's actually an emotion. This no

doubt comes as a shock, but it's true. There's no chemical imbalance, no

serotonin deficiency - not even a test for these things. According to Harvard

psychiatrist ph Glenmullen, chemical imbalance theories have never been

proven and, in particular, " a serotonin deficiency for depression has not been

found. " Last year, Sharfstein, the president of the American Psychiatric

Association (APA), admitted, " We do not have a clean-cut lab test " to detect

chemical imbalances.

Psychotropic drugs are great, however, at creating chemical imbalances.

Hyman, former director of the National Institute of Mental Health, says the

imbalances created by chronic psychotropic drug use " likely exceed the strength

and time course of almost any natural stimulus. "

But hey, who cares? Antidepressants work, right? Well, not exactly. Earlier this

year the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) released the results of a

three-stage study of antidepressants, the Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to

Relieve Depression (STAR-D) study. 27.5% of patients had a remission on the

first antidepressant they tried. When the drug was switched or more drugs were

added another 21 - 30% of the non-responders remitted. A switch to a third

antidepressant worked for 20% of those who didn't respond to the first two

drugs.

While such results might appear promising, they are more trick than treat. To

achieve these statistics they first excluded from the study anyone who was known

not to respond to the drugs they were testing or even to SSRI antidepressants in

general (drugs like Prozac and Paxil). This is somewhat akin to inviting only

professional singers to the American Idol auditions.

Moreover, there was no placebo control in this study. They probably wanted to

avoid the embarrassing results of previous placebo-controlled studies. In 2002

the Washington Post reported that " in the majority of trials conducted by drug

companies in recent decades, sugar pills have done as well as - or better than -

antidepressants. " A 2005 article in the British Medical Journal concluded that

" selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors have no clinically meaningful advantage

over placebo. " And that, in the final analysis, is just what the STAR-D study

showed too.

So why do people take antidepressants? For a number of reasons. The placebo

effect is powerful. When people expect to improve from taking a pill they often

do. And these pills are stimulants, like their predecessors, cocaine and the

amphetamines. Not surprisingly, an increasing number of experts are pointing to

the drug dependence produced by Prozac-type drugs, their serious withdrawal

effects, and the evidence that antidepressant users are trading a short term

high for long term increased vulnerability to depressive relapse.

Since individuals diagnosed with depression on National Depression Screening Day

most likely end will end up on antidepressants, should side effects be mentioned

as part of the screening promotion? These are effects severe enough that they

would even make Dr. Jekyll feel inadequate. On March 22, 2004, the FDA warned

that Prozac-like antidepressants could cause " anxiety, agitation, panic attacks,

insomnia, irritability, hostility, impulsivity, akathisia [severe restlessness],

hypomania [abnormal excitement] and mania [psychosis characterized by exalted

feelings, delusions of grandeur]. " The FDA has issued several warnings about the

potential increased risk of suicidal behavior in both adults and children taking

antidepressants. Dr. Healy, a world expert on the history and development

of psychopharmacology, recently wrote, " For every year since 1988, the relative

risk of suicidal acts on SSRIs has been double that of placebo. "

So what should someone who is depressed do? It isn't common practice, but

finding out what is actually causing the depression can be very helpful.

Individuals with hormonal imbalances, nutritional deficiencies, adrenal

exhaustion and even brain tumors end up on antidepressants. Exercise also works.

A Duke University Medical Center study found that not only was exercise as

effective as drug therapy but only 8 percent of patients in the exercise group

had their depression return, while 38 percent of the drug-only group and 31

percent of the exercise-plus-drug group relapsed.

Something else a person who is feeling depressed could do is fight back! The

national psychiatric pharmaceutical screening campaign is now targeting

children. You can sign the petition against it here:

http://www.petitiononline.com/TScreen/petition.html

Have a happy National Depression Screaming, I mean Screening, Day. Just don't

take it too seriously. And don't let them put you in that patient gown. It

stinks.

++

12,052 signatures: http://www.petitiononline.com/TScreen/petition.html How many

people can you get the word to today and October 5?

++

If you would rather not receive the latest news via this e-mail line, please

send a message to

records@... with " UNSUBSCRIBE ME " in the subject line.

(posted as a requirement under legal and contractual requirements.)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

http://publish.indymedia.org/en/2006/10/847768.shtml

Independent Media Center

A Scary Day

Warner

October 4, 2006

October 5th is National Depression Screening Day (NDSD), a carefully

orchestrated media campaign brought to you by the pharmaceutical and mental

health industries for the purpose of scaring you out of your wits. Think of it

as Halloween for drug companies and their pill pushing minions. Imagine them

going door to door in ghoulish masks transferring fistfuls of green stuff into

their overflowing Cash O'Lanterns while offering to make you a zombie too, and

you'll have it pretty close.

According to NDSD's website, the funding sponsors are all drug makers. Eli

Lilly, maker of the antidepressants Prozac and Cymbalta, is the major sponsor,

with Forest Laboratories (antidepressants Lexapro and Celexa), GlaxoKline

(antidepressants Wellubtrin and Paxil), Pfizer (antidepressant Zoloft), and

Wyeth Pharmceuticals (antidepressant Effexor) providing additional support.

There are a few things these devilish little trick-or-treaters might forget to

mention when they ring your bell so let's help them out. We'll start with the

most obvious: depression is not a disease. It's actually an emotion. This no

doubt comes as a shock, but it's true. There's no chemical imbalance, no

serotonin deficiency - not even a test for these things. According to Harvard

psychiatrist ph Glenmullen, chemical imbalance theories have never been

proven and, in particular, " a serotonin deficiency for depression has not been

found. " Last year, Sharfstein, the president of the American Psychiatric

Association (APA), admitted, " We do not have a clean-cut lab test " to detect

chemical imbalances.

Psychotropic drugs are great, however, at creating chemical imbalances.

Hyman, former director of the National Institute of Mental Health, says the

imbalances created by chronic psychotropic drug use " likely exceed the strength

and time course of almost any natural stimulus. "

But hey, who cares? Antidepressants work, right? Well, not exactly. Earlier this

year the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) released the results of a

three-stage study of antidepressants, the Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to

Relieve Depression (STAR-D) study. 27.5% of patients had a remission on the

first antidepressant they tried. When the drug was switched or more drugs were

added another 21 - 30% of the non-responders remitted. A switch to a third

antidepressant worked for 20% of those who didn't respond to the first two

drugs.

While such results might appear promising, they are more trick than treat. To

achieve these statistics they first excluded from the study anyone who was known

not to respond to the drugs they were testing or even to SSRI antidepressants in

general (drugs like Prozac and Paxil). This is somewhat akin to inviting only

professional singers to the American Idol auditions.

Moreover, there was no placebo control in this study. They probably wanted to

avoid the embarrassing results of previous placebo-controlled studies. In 2002

the Washington Post reported that " in the majority of trials conducted by drug

companies in recent decades, sugar pills have done as well as - or better than -

antidepressants. " A 2005 article in the British Medical Journal concluded that

" selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors have no clinically meaningful advantage

over placebo. " And that, in the final analysis, is just what the STAR-D study

showed too.

So why do people take antidepressants? For a number of reasons. The placebo

effect is powerful. When people expect to improve from taking a pill they often

do. And these pills are stimulants, like their predecessors, cocaine and the

amphetamines. Not surprisingly, an increasing number of experts are pointing to

the drug dependence produced by Prozac-type drugs, their serious withdrawal

effects, and the evidence that antidepressant users are trading a short term

high for long term increased vulnerability to depressive relapse.

Since individuals diagnosed with depression on National Depression Screening Day

most likely end will end up on antidepressants, should side effects be mentioned

as part of the screening promotion? These are effects severe enough that they

would even make Dr. Jekyll feel inadequate. On March 22, 2004, the FDA warned

that Prozac-like antidepressants could cause " anxiety, agitation, panic attacks,

insomnia, irritability, hostility, impulsivity, akathisia [severe restlessness],

hypomania [abnormal excitement] and mania [psychosis characterized by exalted

feelings, delusions of grandeur]. " The FDA has issued several warnings about the

potential increased risk of suicidal behavior in both adults and children taking

antidepressants. Dr. Healy, a world expert on the history and development

of psychopharmacology, recently wrote, " For every year since 1988, the relative

risk of suicidal acts on SSRIs has been double that of placebo. "

So what should someone who is depressed do? It isn't common practice, but

finding out what is actually causing the depression can be very helpful.

Individuals with hormonal imbalances, nutritional deficiencies, adrenal

exhaustion and even brain tumors end up on antidepressants. Exercise also works.

A Duke University Medical Center study found that not only was exercise as

effective as drug therapy but only 8 percent of patients in the exercise group

had their depression return, while 38 percent of the drug-only group and 31

percent of the exercise-plus-drug group relapsed.

Something else a person who is feeling depressed could do is fight back! The

national psychiatric pharmaceutical screening campaign is now targeting

children. You can sign the petition against it here:

http://www.petitiononline.com/TScreen/petition.html

Have a happy National Depression Screaming, I mean Screening, Day. Just don't

take it too seriously. And don't let them put you in that patient gown. It

stinks.

++

12,052 signatures: http://www.petitiononline.com/TScreen/petition.html How many

people can you get the word to today and October 5?

++

If you would rather not receive the latest news via this e-mail line, please

send a message to

records@... with " UNSUBSCRIBE ME " in the subject line.

(posted as a requirement under legal and contractual requirements.)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

http://publish.indymedia.org/en/2006/10/847768.shtml

Independent Media Center

A Scary Day

Warner

October 4, 2006

October 5th is National Depression Screening Day (NDSD), a carefully

orchestrated media campaign brought to you by the pharmaceutical and mental

health industries for the purpose of scaring you out of your wits. Think of it

as Halloween for drug companies and their pill pushing minions. Imagine them

going door to door in ghoulish masks transferring fistfuls of green stuff into

their overflowing Cash O'Lanterns while offering to make you a zombie too, and

you'll have it pretty close.

According to NDSD's website, the funding sponsors are all drug makers. Eli

Lilly, maker of the antidepressants Prozac and Cymbalta, is the major sponsor,

with Forest Laboratories (antidepressants Lexapro and Celexa), GlaxoKline

(antidepressants Wellubtrin and Paxil), Pfizer (antidepressant Zoloft), and

Wyeth Pharmceuticals (antidepressant Effexor) providing additional support.

There are a few things these devilish little trick-or-treaters might forget to

mention when they ring your bell so let's help them out. We'll start with the

most obvious: depression is not a disease. It's actually an emotion. This no

doubt comes as a shock, but it's true. There's no chemical imbalance, no

serotonin deficiency - not even a test for these things. According to Harvard

psychiatrist ph Glenmullen, chemical imbalance theories have never been

proven and, in particular, " a serotonin deficiency for depression has not been

found. " Last year, Sharfstein, the president of the American Psychiatric

Association (APA), admitted, " We do not have a clean-cut lab test " to detect

chemical imbalances.

Psychotropic drugs are great, however, at creating chemical imbalances.

Hyman, former director of the National Institute of Mental Health, says the

imbalances created by chronic psychotropic drug use " likely exceed the strength

and time course of almost any natural stimulus. "

But hey, who cares? Antidepressants work, right? Well, not exactly. Earlier this

year the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) released the results of a

three-stage study of antidepressants, the Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to

Relieve Depression (STAR-D) study. 27.5% of patients had a remission on the

first antidepressant they tried. When the drug was switched or more drugs were

added another 21 - 30% of the non-responders remitted. A switch to a third

antidepressant worked for 20% of those who didn't respond to the first two

drugs.

While such results might appear promising, they are more trick than treat. To

achieve these statistics they first excluded from the study anyone who was known

not to respond to the drugs they were testing or even to SSRI antidepressants in

general (drugs like Prozac and Paxil). This is somewhat akin to inviting only

professional singers to the American Idol auditions.

Moreover, there was no placebo control in this study. They probably wanted to

avoid the embarrassing results of previous placebo-controlled studies. In 2002

the Washington Post reported that " in the majority of trials conducted by drug

companies in recent decades, sugar pills have done as well as - or better than -

antidepressants. " A 2005 article in the British Medical Journal concluded that

" selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors have no clinically meaningful advantage

over placebo. " And that, in the final analysis, is just what the STAR-D study

showed too.

So why do people take antidepressants? For a number of reasons. The placebo

effect is powerful. When people expect to improve from taking a pill they often

do. And these pills are stimulants, like their predecessors, cocaine and the

amphetamines. Not surprisingly, an increasing number of experts are pointing to

the drug dependence produced by Prozac-type drugs, their serious withdrawal

effects, and the evidence that antidepressant users are trading a short term

high for long term increased vulnerability to depressive relapse.

Since individuals diagnosed with depression on National Depression Screening Day

most likely end will end up on antidepressants, should side effects be mentioned

as part of the screening promotion? These are effects severe enough that they

would even make Dr. Jekyll feel inadequate. On March 22, 2004, the FDA warned

that Prozac-like antidepressants could cause " anxiety, agitation, panic attacks,

insomnia, irritability, hostility, impulsivity, akathisia [severe restlessness],

hypomania [abnormal excitement] and mania [psychosis characterized by exalted

feelings, delusions of grandeur]. " The FDA has issued several warnings about the

potential increased risk of suicidal behavior in both adults and children taking

antidepressants. Dr. Healy, a world expert on the history and development

of psychopharmacology, recently wrote, " For every year since 1988, the relative

risk of suicidal acts on SSRIs has been double that of placebo. "

So what should someone who is depressed do? It isn't common practice, but

finding out what is actually causing the depression can be very helpful.

Individuals with hormonal imbalances, nutritional deficiencies, adrenal

exhaustion and even brain tumors end up on antidepressants. Exercise also works.

A Duke University Medical Center study found that not only was exercise as

effective as drug therapy but only 8 percent of patients in the exercise group

had their depression return, while 38 percent of the drug-only group and 31

percent of the exercise-plus-drug group relapsed.

Something else a person who is feeling depressed could do is fight back! The

national psychiatric pharmaceutical screening campaign is now targeting

children. You can sign the petition against it here:

http://www.petitiononline.com/TScreen/petition.html

Have a happy National Depression Screaming, I mean Screening, Day. Just don't

take it too seriously. And don't let them put you in that patient gown. It

stinks.

++

12,052 signatures: http://www.petitiononline.com/TScreen/petition.html How many

people can you get the word to today and October 5?

++

If you would rather not receive the latest news via this e-mail line, please

send a message to

records@... with " UNSUBSCRIBE ME " in the subject line.

(posted as a requirement under legal and contractual requirements.)

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