Guest guest Posted July 12, 2005 Report Share Posted July 12, 2005 > > http://my.webmd.com/content/Article/99/105189.htm > > --------------------------------------------------- > > Watchdog Group: Avoid 181 Prescription Drugs > > Public Citizen Cites Poor Safety, Safer Alternatives > for Most > > By Todd Zwillich > WebMD Medical News > Reviewed By , MD > on Wednesday, January 12, 2005 > > > Jan. 12, 2005 - There are 181 popular prescription > drugs on a " Do Not Use " list issued by the watchdog > group Public Citizen on Wednesday. > > The drugs, including the cholesterol-lowering drug > Crestor, the birth control pill Yasmin, and > controversial pain relievers Celebrex and Bextra, > are > condemned by the group because their potentially > dangerous side effects far outweigh their benefits > or > because there are safer alternatives that work just > as > well, says Sidney Wolfe, MD, director of the Public > Citizen Health Research Group. > > The group is a longtime critic of the U.S. drug > industry and a watchdog over the FDA. The agency has > largely failed to adequately police the safety of > new > drugs coming on the market or to track potential > dangers once they are already on sale, Public > Citizen > contends. > > " This is a massive public health problem, " Wolfe > says. > > > Wolfe says the list, contained in a larger volume of > consumer-oriented information on 536 drugs called > Worst Pills, Best Pills, is necessary because the > FDA > has been slow to take action against potentially > dangerous medications. > > " We asked FDA four years ago to put a black box > warning on Vioxx and Celebrex, but they didn't do > it, " > says Wolfe, referring to two popular arthritis drugs > that have come under intense scrutiny because of > evidence that they increase the risk of heart > attack. > Vioxx was pulled from the worldwide market by > manufacturer Merck & Co. in September, and last > month > the National Institutes of Health halted a trial of > Pfizer's Celebrex because of similar concerns. > > Risks associated with Celebrex have only been seen > at > high doses of the medication - 400 mg a day. Heart > problems with Bextra have only been seen in patients > undergoing heart bypass surgery. > > Nearly 100,000 Americans die each year because of > adverse drug reactions, Wolfe says. That number was > quoted in a 1998 University of Toronto study > estimating that 106,000 people died in U.S. > hospitals > in 1994 because of drug reactions. > > The list warns against using Crestor, a > cholesterol-lowering statin, because of what Public > Citizen says is an increased risk of the muscle > disorder rhabdomyolysis. Women should avoid using > the > contraceptive pill Yasmin, it says, because it can > cause elevations in blood potassium while offering > no > advantage over other birth control pills. If severe, > high potassium levels can cause heart rhythm > problems. > > > Wolfe says the list was not intended to scare > consumers away from using prescription medications, > but to help them cut through what Public Citizen > sees > as misleading drug industry ads directed at patients > and doctors. > > " There are people, organizations, that think all > prescription drugs are terrible. We are not one of > them, " he says. > > Jeff Trewhitt, a spokesman for the Pharmaceutical > Research and Manufacturers of America, the drug > industry's largest lobbying group, calls the book > " another source of information " for consumers and > doctors to use. > > Trewhitt declined to comment on individual drugs but > says fewer than 3% of all pharmaceutical products > approved by the FDA have been pulled off the market > because of safety problems. He adds that patients > should not stop taking a drug without first checking > with their doctor. > > " There may be some room for improvement " in the > FDA's > regulation of drug safety, Trewhitt says. " But we > believe the FDA has struck exactly the right > approach > to the risk-benefit interpretation. " > > > ------------------------------------------------------- > > SOURCES: Wolfe, S. Worst Pills, Best Pills: A > Consumer's Guide to Avoiding Drug-Induced Death or > Illness, Pocket Books, Jan. 4, 2005. Sidney Wolfe, > MD, > director, Public Citizen's Health Research Group. > Jeff > Trewhitt, spokesman, Pharmaceutical Research and > Manufacturers of America. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 12, 2005 Report Share Posted July 12, 2005 sheeesh - that is scary - io take yasmin.... I guess no more!!! shari Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.