Psycho-Babble Medication Thread 38355

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Addiction by Prescription - Discovered this book..

Posted by dj on June 26, 2000, at 7:39:04

while checking out some bookshelves at the local mega-bookstore last night. Particularly interesting because I've met this lady, who also lives in Vancouver, British Columbia. Because it's Canadian published, don't know if it's available in the U.S. yet. Not available on amazon yet, though available on:
http://www.indigo.ca/cgi-bin/bookrec.cgi?bn=1552631567
Looked interesting from a quick scan.

Addiction by Prescription
Joan E. Gadsby

Published 2000 | Key Porter | ISBN 1552631567

-------------------------------------------------------

ON THE JACKET

"This book is a masterful, lucid and cogent account of the causes and horrific consequences of benzodiazepine dependency."
Dr. Reg Peart, International Victims of Tranquilizers
THEY ARE THE MOST WIDELY-PRESCRIBED DRUGS IN THE WORLD, Benzodiazepines -- including such tranquilizers and sleeping pills as Ativan, Dalmane, Librium, Restoril, Rivotril, Serax and Valium -- are the best-selling drugs in the history of medicine, with annual world-wide sales of an estimated $21 billion.

With such a lucrative market stake, high-powered promotional campaigns have convinced millions that tranquilizers and sleeping pills are needed to cope with life's everyday challenges. Thousands of prescriptions -- close to two thirds for women, and almost 75 percent for refills -- are written each day, despite known and often serious physical, cognitive and emotional side effects. Dependency is not uncommon and withdrawal can be lengthy and frightening.

The bottom line? Millions of people throughout the world are becoming addicted by prescription.

In 1966, when Joan Gadsby's four-year-old son died of brain cancer, her doctor prescribed a "chemical cocktail" of tranquilizers, sleeping pills and anti-depressants. It was the first step in her twenty-three-year addiction to benzodiazepines -- an addiction which threatened her family relationships, financial security, career and personal health. As a result of the drugs' side effects, Gadsby was on various occasions arrested, restrained, sedated, jailed and written off as either psychotic or alcoholic. It was only after she almost died following an unintentional overdose in 1990 that she stopped taking the drugs, and tackled the horrors of withdrawal on her own.

A marketing executive who has worked with four of Canada's largest companies and served as a poll-topping elected councilor, Gadsby has emerged from her addiction to become a tireless advocate in the area of prescribed sedative and hypnotic drugs. In 1995, she formed the Benzodiazepine Call to Action Group. Its objective is to create awareness and lobby for systemic and legislative change that will hold physicians, drug manufacturers, pharmacists, health authorities and political decision makers to a higher standard of ethics and accountability.

Drug free for more than a decade, Gadsby has interviewed thousands -- consumers, doctors, health care professionals, pharmaceutical representatives, academics, pharmacists and government officials world-wide. Her extensive international research has earned her recognition as an authority on benzodiazepine addiction.

Joan E. Gadsby is president of Market-Media International Corporation. In 1994, she was selected as one of Canada's notable women by the Canadian University Womens' Club. She lives in North Vancouver, British Columbia.


 

Re: Addiction by Prescription - re: Rivotril

Posted by Kath on June 28, 2000, at 18:51:20

In reply to Addiction by Prescription - Discovered this book.., posted by dj on June 26, 2000, at 7:39:04

I think this is important information. I have had a personal experience with Rivotril & the doctor who prescribed it did not mention anything about addictiveness. I found it very addictive. Thx for posting this info. Kath.


>while checking out some bookshelves at the local mega-bookstore last night. Particularly interesting because I've met this lady, who also lives in Vancouver, British Columbia. Because it's Canadian published, don't know if it's available in the U.S. yet. Not available on amazon yet, though available on:
> http://www.indigo.ca/cgi-bin/bookrec.cgi?bn=1552631567
> Looked interesting from a quick scan.
>
> Addiction by Prescription
> Joan E. Gadsby
>
> Published 2000 | Key Porter | ISBN 1552631567
>
> -------------------------------------------------------
>
> ON THE JACKET
>
> "This book is a masterful, lucid and cogent account of the causes and horrific consequences of benzodiazepine dependency."
> Dr. Reg Peart, International Victims of Tranquilizers
> THEY ARE THE MOST WIDELY-PRESCRIBED DRUGS IN THE WORLD, Benzodiazepines -- including such tranquilizers and sleeping pills as Ativan, Dalmane, Librium, Restoril, Rivotril, Serax and Valium -- are the best-selling drugs in the history of medicine, with annual world-wide sales of an estimated $21 billion.
>
> With such a lucrative market stake, high-powered promotional campaigns have convinced millions that tranquilizers and sleeping pills are needed to cope with life's everyday challenges. Thousands of prescriptions -- close to two thirds for women, and almost 75 percent for refills -- are written each day, despite known and often serious physical, cognitive and emotional side effects. Dependency is not uncommon and withdrawal can be lengthy and frightening.
>
> The bottom line? Millions of people throughout the world are becoming addicted by prescription.
>
> In 1966, when Joan Gadsby's four-year-old son died of brain cancer, her doctor prescribed a "chemical cocktail" of tranquilizers, sleeping pills and anti-depressants. It was the first step in her twenty-three-year addiction to benzodiazepines -- an addiction which threatened her family relationships, financial security, career and personal health. As a result of the drugs' side effects, Gadsby was on various occasions arrested, restrained, sedated, jailed and written off as either psychotic or alcoholic. It was only after she almost died following an unintentional overdose in 1990 that she stopped taking the drugs, and tackled the horrors of withdrawal on her own.
>
> A marketing executive who has worked with four of Canada's largest companies and served as a poll-topping elected councilor, Gadsby has emerged from her addiction to become a tireless advocate in the area of prescribed sedative and hypnotic drugs. In 1995, she formed the Benzodiazepine Call to Action Group. Its objective is to create awareness and lobby for systemic and legislative change that will hold physicians, drug manufacturers, pharmacists, health authorities and political decision makers to a higher standard of ethics and accountability.
>
> Drug free for more than a decade, Gadsby has interviewed thousands -- consumers, doctors, health care professionals, pharmaceutical representatives, academics, pharmacists and government officials world-wide. Her extensive international research has earned her recognition as an authority on benzodiazepine addiction.
>
> Joan E. Gadsby is president of Market-Media International Corporation. In 1994, she was selected as one of Canada's notable women by the Canadian University Womens' Club. She lives in North Vancouver, British Columbia.
>
>

 

Re: Addiction by Prescription - re: Rivotril

Posted by dj on June 29, 2000, at 2:46:04

In reply to Re: Addiction by Prescription - re: Rivotril, posted by Kath on June 28, 2000, at 18:51:20

> I think this is important information. I have had a personal experience with Rivotril & the doctor who prescribed it did not mention anything about addictiveness. I found it very addictive. Thx for posting this info. Kath.
>

They are not marketed as addictive and drug companies are addicted to the income and willing to be misleading with facts to all concerned, to maintain their monetary habits just as governments are addicted to cigarette revenues,though they know damm well that they are cancer sticks. Such is the society we share...and the values I don't share or appreciate, which I believe are the source of many of today's modern true evils.

 

Re: Addiction by Prescription - re: Rivotril

Posted by stjames on June 29, 2000, at 16:42:16

In reply to Re: Addiction by Prescription - re: Rivotril, posted by dj on June 29, 2000, at 2:46:04

> They are not marketed as addictive and drug companies are addicted to the income and willing to be misleading with facts to all concerned, to maintain their monetary habits just as governments are addicted to cigarette revenues,though they know damm well that they are cancer sticks. Such is the society we share...and the values I don't share or appreciate, which I believe are the source of many of today's modern true evils.

James here....

Rivotril is Klonipin here is the states. The PDR states clearly that this is an addictive substance. Addictive does not mean bad, doctors need to prescribe correctly. Some will need to be on these meds all their life and cannot avoid the addiction. In this case the addiction has no negative health problems.

james


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