Give it to me Raw

My friend in pharmaceuticals and I are carrying on the following argument based on the 8 chapter video put out by CCHR called "making a killing" [ http://www.cchr.org/#/videos/making-a-killing ]
What do you guys think about our points?

TOM WROTE:
CCHR (Citizen’s Commision on Human Rights) is a non-profit that investigates and exposes psychiatric violations of human rights. It works shoulder to shoulder with like-minded groups and individuals who share a common purpose to clean up the field of mental health. So...I understand one member has ties to scientology. And while I don’t care for that, or religion generally, I feel the content still deserves attention. Why? Well, I can certainly speak to the integrity of a few speakers within the film chapters. Mike Adams of NaturalNews: a non-profit collection of public education websites covering topics that empower individuals to make positive changes in their health, environmental sensitivity, consumer choices and informed skepticism. One of the only practical unbiased and monetarily uninfluenced (Declaration of Journalistic Independence) sources of news I know of. Rima Laibow and Ralph Fuectola of HealthFreedomUSA: the the largest, and most effective grass roots, net roots organization in the world.

The video…the following are main points made in the video up for consideration:

1. Psychiatric disorders are not actual diseases requiring medical treatment (although they may cause diseases requiring medical treatment):

There are no biological findings that really support psychiatric diagnoses being medical illnesses. The burden of biological lack of proof falls on psychiatry: there’s no blood test, no lab test, no x-ray...these are just classes of behavior that a group of psychiatrists voted as a disease. Can you imagine doctor’s having to have pow-wows to decide if a heart attack is a real disease or not? No, they don’t have to decide on that. They don’t have to vote on that. We should be asking the doctor, “where are the chemical tests for that? where is the objective test for this?” And I guarantee you’ll be told, “Um, we don’t have a chemical test for that.” There is no such thing as a chemical imbalance and any psychiatrist you talk to, if you ask them this question, they’ll all admit it in private but they won’t admit it in public: it’s a scandal. It is all subjective, and there’s nothing objective about psychiatry.

2. There’s no scientific proof that psychotropic drugs resolve any mental problems.

Since there is no measurement for psychiatric diagnoses – because they’re really just subjective – there can’t be a measurement for the effects of the drug. The evidence that is falsely claimed is that the medications are highly effective and not very toxic. In fact the data in psychiatry is very clear that that’s not true. What is true is that the medications are barely if at all more effective than a placebo. They are selling drugs to people under false premises - under a disease that’s been invented. So how do you measure efficacy for a disease that doesn’t even exist.

3. Psychotropic drugs mask systems and come with severe short and long term side effects.

Whatever problem you’re being treated for - whether depression, shyness, cardiovascular disease or otherwise - medicating these symptoms is not solving the problem. The patent medication sometimes gives the appearance of having helped, because in the short term it usually doesn’t show the bad effects that are going to happen in the long term. So it’s very deceptive. The longer the patient is on the medication the worse the prognosis. None of these medications hit precise targets. You begin accumulating all kinds of collateral damage. In other words other organs of the body are actually harmed. For the first time we’re seeing kids in grade school or middle school who have type 2 diabetes and who have the beginning stages of cardiovascular diseases. You see Parkinson’s disease, comatose, dyskinesia, other movement disorders. Is it true that we’re now seeing a lot of death from psychiatric drugs? Absolutely yes.

4. Psychiatric drugs can cause dependency and addiction.

One of the hallmarks of Informer Consents with psychiatric meds is that you have to discuss the potential for addiction. The vast majority of psychiatric drugs create psychological and physical dependency. Most patients on these drugs have difficulty getting off of them. It’s rare for somebody to just be able to stop it without a problem.

5. Most mental problems are caused by an underlying physical illness.

Many physical conditions can cause mental problems or what pose as psychiatric symptoms. But the psychiatrists does not do an in depth study of what could be causing the problem. If the doctor isn’t taking the time to find the cause of the symptoms then unfortunately those symptoms may continue. And there may be a serious underlying medical disorder that’s being overlooked. The question is, “Is it better to treat depression with a drug or is it better to treat depression by trying to figure out what causes the depression?” and then working it out with the patient. Dehydration can make you exhibit symptoms of depression. Sleeplessness can make you exhibit symptoms of depression. Eating a terrible diet, hyperglycemia, being sedentary. All of these things are biological reasons for having symptoms of depression. The majority of all “mental illnesses” actually have a physical cause.

6. No matter how severe the emotional or psychological distress may be, there are many effective options that do not involve psychotropic drugs.

Sunlight, fitness, sleep, water, breathing exercises, and letting food be your medicine (whole ripe fresh fruits, veggies), and so on. Once you’ve proven that there is no problem in the body and no malfunction of the brain, you have to begin to address other levels of the self. That’s what psychiatry has completely stopped doing. There are very few conditions that cannot be treated by other methods than the use of drugs. Any forces that impinge on health that make us think that the drug approach is the only approach is undermining good patient care. And because most non drug options are rarely told to patients, true Informed Consent is almost never given.

When you get into Informed Consent it is almost a responsibility of the patient to make an inquiry about the hazards of the drug and not rely on what the psychiatrist or physician tells them. We can’t go in and abdicate our responsibility as consumers simply because somebody has an MD after there name or someone is a psychiatrist and think they know more than we do. The best way to protect yourself is to educate yourself, to ask questions - not only of your doctor but to do your own research. Don’t be ignorant. Be informed. Get information from as many places as you can. That’s how you’ll be an intelligent skeptical consumer. And that’s how you’ll protect the safety of yourself and your entire family from this industry of death known as modern psychiatry.

And as modern psychiatry has permeated our world over the last 50 years, so too, has psychotropic drugging. There is a way to expose this medical abuse: by reporting all complaints and adverse psychiatric drug reactions to your national drug regulatory agency. Medwatch is the federal reporting program in the United States. Medwatch is a volunteer reporting system. A passive reporting system where doctors, patients, health care providers, pharmacists - anybody really - can make a report saying that they think that what they experienced or what their patient experienced was an adverse drug effect. And this is what we call post-marketing surveillance. It holds accountable the side effects of long term or chronic use of these drugs. The FDA admits that probably only 1% of all the adverse drug effects are actually reported by patients or physicians.

I guess to me it’s not really a laughing matter. But I support laughing as a healthy activity over drugs so it's cool. :) But check out the rest of the chapters and follow up if you like.

ALLISON SAID:
You make it sound like psychiatric disorders are a complete fraud. It's true that the field is subjective and we don't have the ability to put numbers with disorders. However, I would argue that this doesn't mean that psychiatric disorders are fictitious. And I would bet that if you spoke to anyone who knows a person suffering from, say, schizophrenia or Alzheimer's disease, they would tell you that it is not just in their head. Diseases like these keep people from being able to live normal lives. That's the point. People suffering from serious mental disorders cannot control their disorders by choosing to do so or by therapeutic lifestyle changes (which are successful methods for some medical conditions). So, medications have been seen to help these people live normally. People with debilitating depression can get up in the morning. People with schizophrenia can go to work without the fear that they may black out and do something unspeakable. People with Alzheimer's disease may have a few more weeks of mental aptitude, and of remembering who their family is. Isn't that proof enough? If you have known someone with these disorders, you would understand that they cannot simply think it away. Please don't trivialize the seriousness of these conditions.

I'd also like to point out that many drugs cause side effects. In fact, every drug (even daily vitamins and supplements) can cause side effects. This is not unique to psychotropic drugs. Also, addiction is not unique to psychotropic drugs either. Pain medications are highly addictive, but you aren't arguing that we get rid of those too...?
The philosopher in me has to point out the direct contradiction in your 5th argument. The premise of this conversation is that there is no physical connection to psychiatric disorders. You therefore cannot argue, at least not soundly, that they are caused by physical problems. Otherwise, you accept that there is physical causes for psychiatric disorders...which are measurable.
Ok, my last thought is about Medwatch. It is voluntary. And I think we should be encouraging health care professionals to report adverse drug reactions more often too. Right now, there aren't really any regulations about reporting. The system has made reporting as easy as possible. Now, it is the responsibility of physicians, pharmacists, etc. to start using it. Either that, or the FDA could regulate it, making it a mandatory process. I'm not sure what steps need to be taken, but I agree that not enough ADRs are being reported right now.
Anyway, it is an interesting case and I think we could all use a little lesson about psychiatric disorders. You could try Pharmacotherapy: A Pathophysiologic Approach, 2008, DiPiro, et. al. Maybe it would be good to look into these disorders a bit more.

TOM SAID:
Thanks Allison. These are good points. But just so you're aware, I wasn't assuming ownership of those points, just presenting them. Even so, I think you will find many of your points align with the film. I think the types of things you describe, like a truly measurable brain disorder that slowly destroys brain cells (alzheimer's), and other salient brain disorders are the nuts and bolts psychiatry was rightfully and soundly addressing before the era of psychotropic drugs (as the video concurs). Their financially modest practices essentially reached little beyond mental institutions. Where the video takes off is in the wake of a bloated 330 billion dollar grossing industry, annually, that ensnares over 100 million people world-wide to take things like Zoloft for every emotional or spiritual problem basic to being human. Where the video takes off is when 44 psych drugs became 174, when the DSM grew from 106 pages to 866, when PDUFA was passed, and when psychiatry, the drug industry and the FDA started having undeniable financial ties and unregistered conflicts of interest, when half of US suicides were committed by people on psychotropic drugs.

Their focus doesn’t lie with the meager income of brain disorders like Alzheimer’s, strokes, comas, concussions, epilepsy, down syndrome, brain tumors, meningitis, parkinson’s, narcolepsy, tourettes, cerebral palsy, et al. The kind of things in focus are depression, anxiety, the invention of bipolar, ADD, PTSD, GAD, SAD, impulse control disorder, phase of life problem, ADHD, nausea, sexual dysfunction disorder, obsessive compulsive, itching, sexual aversion disorder, gambling, occupational problem, female sexual arousal disorder, hot flashes, learning disorder, cannabis-induced disorder, adjustment disorder, shivering, chemical dependence disorder, primary insomnia, PMDD, zoloft, xanax, ritalin, prozac (aka sarafem), paxil, zyprexa, seroquel, risperdal, lexapro, adderall, cymbalta (aka yentreve), effexor, wellbutrin (aka zyban), abilify…and generally the “ pill for every ‘ill’ ” concept.

I’m afraid the premise was not that there is no biology behind one’s psychology, but simply that the diagnoses are unscientific speculations with absolutely no tests. It’s a guessing game. Prescription is based on symptoms of things liking getting nervous speaking in front of a crowd. There’s going to be a physical connection.

Vitimins, supplements, coffee, alcohol, hydrogenated oils, or pain meds weren’t relevant to the topic, but I personally don’t advocate them, either. If I had a say, food would be people’s medicine, as it has been proven to cure things as far reaching as diabetes, cancer, heart disease, arthritis, depression and more. Even so, I honestly haven’t heard of vitamins causing 42,000 deaths each year, strokes, speech disorders, eye disorders, tremors, dizziness, sedation, insomnia, sexual dysfunction, delirium, coma, tardive dyskenesia, paranoia, heart failure, liver problems, fainting, immune system problems, neurological dysfunction, suicides, et al. Why? Because people know what a vitamin b supplement does. But psychiatrists can’t predict what will happen when a patient takes a drug because they admittedly don’t know how they actually work.

ALLISON WROTE:

I think that it is interesting to note that, besides psychotropic drugs (according to this study), medications used to treat high cholesterol also make over the GDP of half of the countries in the world. There are also increasing numbers of these medications available. This doesn't make them dangerous. The purpose of making new medications is to provide more effective treatments for conditions with, hopefully, fewer side effects. The simple fact that there are more drugs, does not mean that it is a bad thing. Rather, it means that we have more options to treat each individual patient.

The FDA does monitor these drugs. In case you weren't aware, the FDA requires that in clinical trials (before the drug makes it onto the market), psychotropic drugs are assessed for suicide risk.

Regarding the side effects of medications: the side effects caused by the first B vitamin I looked up include arrhythmias, atrial fibrillation, edema, flushing, hypotension, orthostatsis, palpitations, syncope (rare), tachycardia, chills, dizziness, headache, insomnia, migraines, nervousness, pain, acanthosis nigricans, dry skin, hyperpigmentation, maculopapular rash, pruritis, rash, urticaria, decreased glucose tolerance, gout, decreased phosphorous levels, hyperuricemia, abdominal pain, diarrhea, dyspepsia, eructation, flatulence, nausea, peptic ulcers, vomiting, decreased platelet counts, hepatic necrosis (rare), jaundice, increased transaminases, increased prothrombin time, leg cramps, myalgia, myasthenia myopathy, paresthesia, rhabdomyolysis, weakness, cystoid macular edema, toxic ambylopia, hepatotoxicity... It might be worthwhile to note that B vitamins are a common component of many foods.

In fact, most of the medications on the market today come directly from or are derived from natural products. Where do you suppose pharmaceuticals began? We haven't always had such fancy machines.

I should point out that, of the side effects you didn't know vitamins could cause, that the B vitamin mentioned earlier causes eye disorders, dizziness, heart problems, liver problems, fainting, and neurological changes. This doesn't mean that you will experience these if you eat something with vitamin B in it! The same goes for other drugs. Just because it is a possible side effect, does not mean that you will experience it. They are patient specific.

I also disagree that we don't know how these drugs work. In fact, the mechanism of action is well understood for the drugs you've listed. Which one(s) would you like to know about? Perhaps psychiatrists don't know how each one works, but I would bet most physicians and pharmacists do.

I'm just curious to know if you have ever met someone with schizophrenia, OCD, depression, or Alzheimer's disease? If you have, than I would be very surprised that you would want them to stop taking a medication that allows them to live a normal life. I am not sorry to say that I do not want my loved ones who suffer from depression to stop taking a medication that may prevent them from committing suicide.



WHAT DO YOU THINK!!!???

Tags: drugs, pharma, pharmaceuticals, psychiatric

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...I'm going to come back to this and read it all again thoroughly...but in the meantime, I'd just like to add I come from a family with a history of late-onset diabetes (not from being over-weight, but the pancreas giving up), suicide, suicide attempts and devastating bouts of depression. It hasn't really been discussed, but after one successful suicide everyone saw the consequences and has coped in their own way.I failed a three yr course simply unable to cope with the course work combined with my perpetually unbalancing mental state. I didn't want to be diagnosed with depression nor put on any drugs, as I saw the consequences in my friends. Changing my diet has revolutionized my life. I'm nearly vegan (eat honey! oh the sin) with a high percentage of raw. If I feel myself going for a slide, three days of just fruit and veg will turn me around and get me functioning again. Now, there could be any number of arguments of how serious a case I may be, but I have no need to argue this point with anyone. I have been to the edge and had my toes over the top...and sleep looked to be the only way out of this misery.

There is some argument too, that once someone is on such drugs, there is a big loss in the traction they can make to get themselves back to normal, without always feeling like there is the safety net of drugs and so there is that diminished responsibility to comply to a program that works for an individual.

...but it's late, so I'm coming back to this! :) Thanks for bringing this up Tom. Really interesting. I know from a very good, but not connected source that the Scientologists have some pretty good ideas on mental health and treatment...will be back. night :)

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thank you for sharing your story Eve. it inspires me to know you revolutionized your life with diet. and i appreciate your honesty and observations as someone with first hand experience. your voice is valuable to this issue that's so complex. look forward to any more comments you may have.

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for whatever its worth, david wolfe mentioned something in one of his talked where he SEEMED to be indicating that proper nutrition (i.e. meganutrition/supernutrition) and supplements etc could actually affect a persons genetic makeup positively, in that he SEEMED to be suggesting something about the possibility of even things like down syndrome being cured, if a person knew what they were doing and what to give someone... Specifically he mentioned a case of a child he knew that was born with down syndrome and ever since the child was little, the grandfather had been making sure the child had super-supplementation, and wolfe seemed to indicate that this actually possibly had the potential of healing the GENETIC disease!!! sorry thats all the details i have and he wasnt really conclusive, just sort of mentioned it along with a bunch of other things, but it stuck with me. i wish i knew better what he was talking about...and that super-nutrition was more available to everyone..but not everyone owns a company like sunfoods ;/

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i'm really interested in this discussion as well.

i've recently been able to come off anti-depressants and i thank a change in diet for guiding me in this direction.

however, with the cold weather present...i feel set back every once in a while. currently trying to work it out and remain conscious of all the things i can do to prevent a slump. winter is a happy time, winter is a happy time, winter is a happy time. =)

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i'm trying to think that way! that is all true if you have family around, which for me is only thanksgiving and christmas. but all those other cold days?...i'd like to take a nice walk outside with my pup, sit in the sun, go for a swim, yoga on the beach. grrrrrrrr hehe. its tough!! maybe its why i ONLY want a boyfriend in the winter.

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life doesn't make us happy, we make us happy.

good point rawzi. you just gave me something to think about tonight.
thank you :)

salted bath tub seaweed baths. oh my. sounds nice!

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hey i want to do salted seaweed baths...but my caravan has no bathtub, only a shower..i went bathtub hunting in a couple of abandoned caravans and found a couple....but we cant figure out how to get them out... its all one piece, all the way up to the ceiling... . really cute bathtubs, round and just big enuff to sit in..anyone have any suggestions on how to remove a bathtub? i.e. what to use to cut through the plastic and how to undo the hardware? i really want one. i figure i can jury-rig it up in my bathroom with a plug and a hose attached to the bottom, fill it from the showerhead then siphon it outside or into the shower drain..its too big to fit IN the shower... any handymen on this site? :) thanks.

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hahaha. "maybe its why i ONLY want a boyfriend in the winter" yeah, someone to snuggle with. i feel ya. i live in a caravan on a cold windy hillside with my pup, in a town with few young people and no single men, and winter is coming on, and yeah, that boyfriend longing for someone to snuggle with definitely intensifies :) definitely tough.

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Hey lovebug. I don't get the winter blues but know someone bright and sparky that does...so have seen how for real it is, and saw her suffer a lot in silence.

Until you can afford to spend 6months of the year in tropical climes, check out things like Grapefruit essential oil and Austrlian Bush Flower rememdies.

Very sorry you're not around London...I'd introduce you to some wonders of winter :)...Londoners all dressed up in their dapper coats and hats. Outdoor ice-sckating, Christmas lights, snow if you're lucky...days of wet weather to potter inside and get all the little projects complete, so you're ready for spring. Blankets on the counch with DVDs or a mighty book. Hot mugs cocoa/carob. Wooley boots, heaps of cut hats and mittens...love it :)

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Well, if I am gonna be honest. I had a very serious year of major depression, which was bad. Very, very bad. I tried to avoid Western medicine by seeing acupuncturists, cranio sacral therapists, naturopaths, therapists, parapsychologists...you name it, I went there. I really think that if I didn't have to deal with basic survival, I could have gone along a natural way, more meditation, holistic medicine, retreats, etc...but I had to unearth some really wild demons inside of me and my depression was more about the suppression of past trauma throughout key developmental phases of my life. THAT beings said: I went home to my parents for 6 weeks, put myself on an antidepressant & everything was a-ok. Until some issues came up with a relationship when I was back to the grind & well & bam, depressed - and even worse.

Basically, I had doctors telling me everything, drugging me to a point that I couldn't even walk straight or really talk - going off the meds would cause a seizure, and my pervy doctor wanted to hug me all the time. So, I weaned myself off the bad stuff by myself and it was very nasty. I would just wrap myself up and get the shakes, sweat, vomit, sleep. This literally lasted weeks. It was hell on earth & I felt like my life was hijacked.

Basically, today I am off the main antidepressant which I was convinced was my only choice. I am happy & deal with life as it comes. I am doing better in reality now that I am very spiritual from other cool stuff that happened in accupuncture which opened me to whole other world of meditation...anyway, all I am saying is:

I think psychiatric drugs are a blessing as a means to intervene when there is no hope. If someone has gone so far from reality (which, hey, it happens) they need a jolt to get back. Now, could I have stayed on an antidepressant and not faced my demons, loved myself, ate healthier, go to work, etc...sure. Would I be my true self? That's hard to say. All I know is I am doing well. I'm a professional by day, painting at night & feel better than normal, because I am just myself and not trying to be anything else.

Psychiatric drugs as intervention = good.
Psychiatric drugs & long term affects on body = bad
Psychiatrists = creepshows
Healthy diet changing mood and creating new neural connections, well, it seems like a much better pill to swallow.

Oh, and another thing. I went into see a psychiatrist for depression. I would take his pill & my body would freak out, then he would try to give me another and another. After I had a reaction to these, he changes his diagnosis...

It's common in psychiatry. I think it's called medication induced (insert behavioral symptom here). Anyway I wouldn't wish that on my worst enemy.

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lol, i'm amused by your use of the word "creepshows." i'm so sorry that was the case.

Thank you, Leigh Ann, for contributing in such an open honest way. i'm grateful to know you were able to endure the reversal of the main antidepresant. that takes tremendous strength; i acknowledge you for being so strong!

are you using a secondary med(s) as a means to intervention? or are you totally off now?

I might have to get my hands on some royal jelly - i've never tried it.

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There was a cover story that my friend told me about. I believe in the Washington Post, that some soldiers are coming from Iraq and being prescribed psychotropic drugs. These men are dying in their sleep! These medications are not made to cure people!

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