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WARNING: DO NOT DISCONTINUE ANY ANTIDEPRESSANT OR OTHER
PSYCHIATRIC DRUG ABRUPTLY OR TAPER TOO QUICKLY. DOING SO PUTS YOU AT GREATER
RISK OF COMMITTING SUICIDE AND HOMICIDE DURING A SLEEPWALK STATE, OR OF BECOMING
PSYCHOTIC, AMONG OTHER RISKS. CLICK HERE TO READ HOW TO TAPER SAFELY.

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SSRI Stories... 2200+ news stories and counting...
including murder, suicide, criminal activity, and bizarre behavior linked to the
use of SSRI antidepressants...

GIVE BIG BROTHER THE
BOOT... Save innocent unborn children from government-endorsed or forced
drugging of pregnant moms. Click here for the petition against the dangerous and
invasive MOTHERS Act.

In utero
Paxil exposure did this to
Manie.

How many of
tomorrow's children will
have to suffer like Manie does, if we do not stop the MOTHERS Act, and stop GSK
and big pharma from drugging more babies? How many will survive as long as Manie
has?
Would you want this to be your child or grandchild
suffering?

Speak up for our children.

Do you think GSK cares
about Manie, or you?
Aromatherapy, Massage, Nutrition:
www.sacredwindow.com

Holistic PPD prevention and support:
health.groups.yahoo.com/group/perinatalayurveda/
"The last great battle is between the forces of natural medicine, and the forces
of the drug companies."
-Maharishi Mahesh Yogi

Freedom
Democracy
Pharmocracy?
Happy Valentine's Day, America!

Here's your present from Big PhRMA: The fourth campus
shooting in one week! Click here to read about the prescription drug withdrawal
behind this rampage.

CHAADA and
UNITE
Our vision is a world living in
Harmony Without Harm

Click on the picture or these words to see more!
(Docs, try this instead of doling out Prozac, et cetera!)
Green Body and Mind
Help Santa Cruz become Psych
Drug-Free
The Kito Foundation was created to support educating the world to the dangers
of SSRI antidepressants, atypical antipsychotic medications and all serotonergic
drugs, plus any unknown dangers of all prescription medications. This is by far
the greatest threat today against life as we know it. Learn more at
www.drugawareness.org
This website has saved countless lives.




Let's Help Rebecca Come Back Home, Mate... Click Here!

(Moms on meds, that means you too! Respect the Van! Click
here or on the picture to read more about Zyprexa...)
How about this, let's
try not using the drugs in the first place!
(See prevention tips for PPD by clicking here)
And since we're on the subject of BREEDING...
Instead of taking a bad trip down the psychedelic
superhighway,
how about taking a pit stop over at FameCast to view and
vote for the 5th Annual Roky Ericson Psychedelic Ice Cream Social film, to
promote an end to electroshock!!
Click here!
| |
FDA Rejects New Drug Application
Poisoning for Profit Could Have Reached a Limit
*****UPDATE: We last reported that the FDA approved the new drug application
and put a warning on the label not to operate dangerous machinery while taking Zyprexa.
Today we found out that the FDA has issued a Not
Approvable letter for the injectable Zyprexa to Eli Lilly!!!!!!!!! This was due
in part to the excessive somnolence effect. We don't know what other possible
reasons may have been at play.
See: http://uniteforlife.org/zyprexanews.htm
All you moms out there taking Zyprexa (or other antipsychotic /
psychotropic drugs), it's best to "Respect the Van" and get yourself a Chauffer.
Your baby's carseat or your child's seatbelt is safer than nothing, but your
driving may not be.*****
====
This written testimony is being submitted to
the FDA for the Feb. 6 Zyprexa patent extension hearing on concerns about
increased somnolence with the new formulation.
You have until January 18 to submit your written testimony to:
Diem-Kieu H. Ngo, Pharm.D., BCPS
LCDR, U.S. Public Health Service
Program Management Officer
Food and Drug Administration
Office of Executive Programs
Advisors and Consultants Staff (HFD-21)
5630 Fishers Lane Room 1093, Rockville MD, 20857
Telephone:
301-827-6765
Fax:
301-827-6778
diem.ngo@fda.hhs.gov
======================================================================
I submit this testimony as an extreme objection to
possible approval of any
NDAs for new formulations of the highly dangerous drug Zyprexa, and
particularly to the proposed intramuscular,
extended-release, long-acting (2 week) version. A
2-week-long extended-release formulation which could
potentially threaten children who are incapable of
efficiently metabolizing it (such as breastfeeding
infants), and which carries increased somnolence effects
compared to older formulations, will inevitably lead to
"SIDS" in some infants if the drug is allowed to be
given to breastfeeding women. Should this occur,
increased cases of depression in mothers who lose their
infants because of drugs will increase subsequent
profits for Eli Lilly through additional sales and
continued drugging of grieving mothers and families.
For the sake of expediency I'll assume you understand
that psychosis is commonly caused in postpartum women by
administration of SSRIs. (I know that it is, because I
survived the dose-dependent worsening of homicidal and
suicidal urges and even one hallucination which started
after only 3 days on Zoloft. My family and I suffered
through for about 5 months - starting with Zoloft
samples at 6 days postpartum following the birth and
near death of my son in July 2004, and continuing
through months of frightening urges, expensive hospital
bills and visits to psychiatrists and therapists, my
condition worsening to the point of near loss of control
over my own thoughts or actions until I discontinued the
drug. I also know this from the research that I have
read over the past 3 years.)
I believe that the push to medicate mothers with
antipsychotic drugs serves more than the purpose of
attempting to control psychosis, bipolar disorder, or
extreme depression (which Zyprexa does not do - recent
studies undertaken on "antipsychotic" drugs have
revealed that patients on placebo actually improved more
than those taking atypical antipsychotics, like Zyprexa).
Even if Zyprexa were discontinued by someone who
tried it, in favor of a lesser poison, an SSRI would
only lead people back to a place where they feel they
cannot function without antipsychotic drugs. And so the
cycle of sacrifice on the altar of profit and power will
continue...
Among the effects produced by Zyprexa (and there are
almost 3,000 known side effects), somnolence seems to be
the most advantageous to the psychiatric staff who will
be dealing with patients. With or without breastfeeding
mothers' use, a long-lasting extended-release version
which increases somnolence beyond what these major
tranquilizers already do will make the task of filling
beds and subduing psychiatric patients much easier and
more profitable. And it will pose a serious threat to
young children whose parents and doctors are quick to
medicate them for the "symptoms" which are nothing more
than the effects of other toxic drugs and foods - things
that your organization should never have allowed to be
legally fed to and injected into children.
The current cost of atypical antipsychotics is
$300-$600 more per month than older antipsychotic
agents and sales are steadily increasing. This is Eli
Lilly's best-selling drug, and with all the new users of
SSRIs and other psychosis-inducing, FDA-approved drugs,
it is likely to remain a profitable drug as long as it
enjoys FDA approval, patent protection and inadequate
warnings, and even potentially bring in huge sales
as a generic drug.
Even though Zyprexa has not been studied in under 18s, I
can tell you that every day parents feed their children
antipsychotic drugs like Zyprexa because of court
orders. Why in a country supposedly regulated by your
agency is this allowed to happen? This is criminal! If
you do approve the new intramuscular version of Zyprexa
extended-release I hope you will do the right thing and
create requirements for this drug to be severely
controlled. It should be illegal for a psychiatrist to
force-drug a child with this medication or any
medication which causes permanent neurological damage
and tics. It should be illegal for a pregnant or
breastfeeding mother to take it.
According to the package label for current
formulations, intramuscular administration of Zyprexa
results in a plasma level 5 times that of oral dosage
tablets and reaches that concentration within 15-45
minutes, compared to 6 hours for the oral version. What
will be the speed and exposure level of a longer-acting
version? In addition, the somnolence effect is more
pronounced in current intramuscular versions compared to
oral tablets, and it is reported to be worse in the
newer version for which Lilly seeks the patent.
And what are intramuscular injections used for? Most
commonly they are used in cases of forced treatment for
hospitalized patients. Given the fact that almost every
patient who enters a psych ward will be given an
antipsychotic agent, the potential for worsened adverse
events is profound. The situation which we are faced
with is one where the order of a doctor - even one who
has never met the patient - but is told of her situation
over the phone - can legally require a patient to be
locked up, deprived of informed consent, and
force-drugged with poisons approved by your
organization. So I ask, are you the FDA, charged with
regulating drugs and foods that the public faithfully
trusts are safe or "safe enough," or are you merely a
tool drug companies use to persuade the public to trust
in their so-called science, proprietary and twisted as
it may be?
The label for Zyprexa includes a warning against nursing
an infant while taking the medication. However, recently
Dr. Thomas Hale and Kathleen Kendall-Tackett (among
others) have encouraged breastfeeding mothers who
experience psychotic episodes to make their way
immediately to a hospital and get treatment with Zyprexa
without interrupting breastfeeding. According to
Mothering Magazine, psychotic breastfeeding mothers can
safely continue nursing while taking Zyprexa if they
avoid feeding during peak plasma concentration.
What is the likelihood that a doctor will know when
the peak concentration in a nursing mother will be,
when only one study has been cited by advocates of this
position as an excuse for evidence of safety, and this
was conducted on a sample with 7 women? Most
breastfeeding studies have samples this small, even for
drugs like Zoloft, with samples as small as 4 women, and
totaling around 30 women in all. In addition, many
studies purporting to study breastfeeding women have
actually involved mostly women who were not exclusively
breastfeeding, with the infant who was exclusively
breastfed being the one who experienced seizures and
coma and other serious effects.
Not to mention that psychiatric patients are often
given multiple drugs which cause concentrations of
Zyprexa to become elevated and increase the somnolence
effect. The Zyprexa package label also cites reports of
pregnant women using Zyprexa which led to 1 neonatal
death, 3 therapeutic abortions, and 1 spontaneous
abortion (or miscarriage). Though the package label
states that infant exposure through breast milk is as
high as 1.8% of the maternal dose, the article cited by
Thomas Hale in his recommendations that Olanzapine is an
acceptable drug for breastfeeding mothers claims that
out of the six "evaluable" samples... the exposure was
only 1% of the maternal dose. They only studied 7
people, 6 of whom were "evaluable", yet on this weak
basis the drug is recommended to breastfeeding mothers
for psychosis, bipolar disorder and extreme depression.
How can we in good conscience expose infants to
risks like excessive somnolence, hypotension,
seizures, tardive dyskinesia and multiple other
effects? This drug has not been studied or approved
for children under 18, yet it is now
being prescribed to breastfeeding mothers and
apparently some pregnant mothers as well.
This is completely irresponsible, and even though the
advice of breastfeeding advocates differs from what the
package inserts say (as to the the level of exposure to
the baby, the claims of no side effects in babies, and
in the attitude about the reasoning behind the claims
being based on liability versus risk), people are
currently going along in droves with the most dangerous
advice, rather than heeding the most cautious approach.
How is a mother who is under the influence of a drug
which causes extreme somnolence supposed to prevent the
baby from nursing at peak concentration times? Anyone
who has ever seen a patient under the influence of
antipsychotic agents knows that the other profound
effects of Zyprexa can incapacitate you to the point
that you would not even be able to care for yourself,
much less an infant. A drooling, barely able to walk or
talk woman, whose bodily functions have been disrupted
cannot be expected to do anything to take care of a baby
safely, and the expectation that she would is dangerous.
If any woman taking the drug actually were able to
continue caring for her baby she would at minimum be
severely impaired. Perhaps she could lie around nursing
her child 24 hours a day and increase the exposure, but
it is doubtful she could do much more.
A mother who is told to take Zyprexa while nursing
cannot be expected to manage breastfeeding in a way
that would minimize exposure at a peak concentration
time, particularly if she is also taking another
agent like Prozac which enhances plasma levels of
olanzapine. If concomitant medications or
intramuscular injection are used, the concentration
multiplies 5 times or more, and could reach peak
concentration in a shorter amount of time (according
to the package label, 15-45 minutes from
intramuscular injection alone and potentially faster
if mixed with other drugs). How is a mother supposed
to guess how all the factors play a role?
Furthermore, Zyprexa increases prolactin levels and
will thus increase milk supply and overall exposure
for the baby (especially by increasing the
likelihood of engorgement and mastitis, thereby
encouraging the mother to nurse more frequently,
especially during potentially peak concentration
times).
Most women who would be so insistent on nursing
as to continue doing so while taking this
medication would be those who are also
co-sleeping and night nursing. Increased
somnolence above and beyond current levels
caused by existing formulations, in this type of
co-sleeping situation, would be even more
dangerous than somnolence in other patients due
to the lack of the awareness of the baby's
whereabouts and the potential for a mother to
fail to notice whether her baby is nursing when
a potentially peak concentration time is taking
place.
Is increased bonding worth the risk that these
drugs pose to infants? Somnolence, seizures,
coma, inability to regulate temperature, all
effects of Zyprexa... these pose so much risk to
babies for SIDS that it sounds like population
control or eugenics to recommend them. Even if
all psychotic mothers and their babies were
accidentally killed by drugs we will still have
more come along because of SSRIs and other
FDA-approved drugs.
Infants cannot metabolize drugs at the same rate as
adults - drugs are more readily absorbed, more
free-floating drug courses through their veins, their
kidneys work at 30-40% the capacity of adults, and brain
concentrations are always higher than the dose would
suggest (10 to 30 times higher) due to the immature
blood-brain barrier. It takes infants much longer to rid
themselves of a single dose. How long will it take an
infant exposed to Zyprexa to eliminate it - especially
if the child is a newborn? If the toxic effects are
noted in an infant who is exposed to an even
longer-lasting formulation (such as a 2-week
formulation), it will already be too late to do anything
to save the child. Prozac has caused coma in infants
exposed through mother's milk... why would we put them
at risk with a drug much more toxic?
Involuntary injection with a formulation of a highly
dangerous drug which will not wear off for 2 weeks will
pose a particularly serious threat in any case of a
breastfeeding mother who comes to the hospital for
psychosis. It is not unreasonable to assume that
psychiatric staff may at some point inject a woman with
this prior to learning that a mother is breastfeeding,
nor is it unlikely that the mother may insist on the
basis of Hale's endorsement that she can continue
nursing her baby on this drug. If this is allowed, there
is no doubt that mothers who start the treatment will
probably continue an oral version if they are sent home.
If the drug were to be banned to breastfeeding women (a
burdensome choice you could easily enact by declaration
due to safety concerns), then any mother mistakenly
forcibly injected with this drug will also be forced to
discontinue breastfeeding, most likely permanently.
If the FDA approves the New Drug Application and hands
Eli Lilly another several years of patent protection in a market that has
grown to over 4 billion dollars per year and is
ever-expanding, we will have a dire situation on our
hands.
Doctors do not abide by your recommendations, or even
necessarily those of drug companies, and currently even
though the package insert says that pregnant and
breastfeeding women should not use Zyprexa - or women
who use it should not breastfeed, this advice is not
being heeded. Three years ago I was told that I should
wean my baby and take Zyprexa - that the "symptoms" I
was having stood a better chance of relief with a toxic
drug that my baby could not have. I chose not to go on
Zyprexa or wean my son. Instead I eventually realized
that no matter how long I gave Zoloft to work, it was
only going to make me more homicidal. I was even told it
was not Zoloft, but that I was just crazy, and ought
never to have more children. But I got off Zoloft and as
a result I got better. I had a second child (an
un-interfered-with home birth attended by a CNM), and
experienced no PPD whatsoever in the past 16 months
since my second son was born.
Psychiatrists have demonstrated no concern for safety
whatsoever, even prescribing cocktails of drugs to very
young children for completely ridiculous reasons despite
the evidence that children can die from being given
these medications (not to mention that adults can too).
You go after chiropractors or doctors who administer
unapproved hormone treatments, sandwich carts that serve
tainted food, and vaccine manufacturers who put
contaminated drugs into vials intended for injection
into newborns, and you should equally go after judges
who court-order parents to drug their children,
psychiatrists who prescribe these drugs and others in a
cocktail, and any hospital that force-treats someone
with harmful medications. There should be some sort of
improved warning or prescription process that applies to
Zyprexa and the entire class of drugs so that mothers
will not be led astray and into dangerous territory by
people who haphazardly attempt to be their advocates.
We have entered a brave new world where drug companies
seek FDA approval for new versions of old drugs for financial reasons alone. Much
of the public has seen how dangerous Zyprexa is, yet it
remains a growing market for those who are unaware, or
for those who are forced, or for those who mistakenly
believe they have chemical imbalances which can only be
corrected by the "right" medication. To consider
approving a more dangerous version of Zyprexa simply for
the financial gain of Eli Lilly, knowing that it puts patients at even
greater risk is unthinkable. This drug currently costs several
hundred dollars more per month than older antipsychotic
agents. The very clear incentive to prescribe such an
expensive drug or forcibly inject it into a patient
should make you all pause and ask yourselves if you are
in this organization for the ultimate mission of
ensuring the safety of Americans or for keeping the drug
companies profitable and powerful.
On behalf of the 257 members of CHAADA (Children and
Adults Against Drugging America) and on behalf of
members and friends who are unable to attend this
meeting or submit written testimony due to the fact that
they are currently in the midst of having their children
forcibly poisoned and ruined by these drugs, I urge you
to do the right thing and consider what possible
implications your actions will have. The Eli Lilly
corporation does not need more patent protections for a
drug that is already causing so much disease in our
country, especially in an even more dangerous form than
the current formulation.
Hopefully by the time their existing patent expires in
2011, this drug and others will already have suffered a
ban, or the government will rein in their out of control
actions and regulate them like a company that claims to
promote health should be regulated instead of a company
out for profit and more disease markets.
Your SSRI black box warning for suicide played a role
in saving my life in 2004, secured my son's safety with
me as his sole caregiver for the first time in his life,
and made it possible for me to go on to have another
child. The public has been deluded for too long and it
is your responsibility to issue the types of warnings,
bans, and denials of drug approval applications that will
ensure public safety. We do not need more Zyprexa, more
expensive Zyprexa, or more long-lasting Zyprexa. There
are enough generic, less toxic drugs and placebos for
doctors to experiment on us with to last us until the
sun implodes or explodes, our planet is destroyed, and
the solar system gets its claws on Eli Lilly and pulls
it straight to Hell (unless I am mistaken and we are
already living in it).
Sincerely,
Amy Philo
Breastfeeding mother of two boys
Founder,
www.uniteforlife.org
Co-Founder,
www.chaada.org
Founder,
www.babywhys.org
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