Shown: posts 1 to 6 of 6. This is the beginning of the thread.
Posted by judy1 on August 20, 2002, at 22:29:25
A U.S. Federal Court in LA ordered GSK to pull tv ads that claim Paxil is not habit forming. A real win for those of you who had to go through the 'zaps', etc. take care, judy
Posted by alan on August 22, 2002, at 12:37:53
In reply to To those who had problems withdrawing from Paxil, posted by judy1 on August 20, 2002, at 22:29:25
> A U.S. Federal Court in LA ordered GSK to pull tv ads that claim Paxil is not habit forming. A real win for those of you who had to go through the 'zaps', etc. take care, judy
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Finally, the dam has broken. We all knew that this "withdrawl syndrome" GSK and others have been covering up in their research that was NOT submitted to the FDA for approval is now coming back to haunt them. But they already have a death-grip commercial hold on the market attained with the sly implication about the "non-addictive" part - which is really the need to taper this drug just like any other.They and other AD producers tried but will not succeed in the end in trying to marginalise the bzds as the drug of choice for anxiety disorders.
alan
Posted by moxy1000 on August 23, 2002, at 11:33:18
In reply to Fantastic news!!!!!! » judy1, posted by alan on August 22, 2002, at 12:37:53
My friend is a rep for lilly (prozac manufacturer) and said that he has been talking to physicians for years about the short 1/2 life of paxil and it's subsequent withdrawal like symptoms. He said you wouldn't believe how many doctors said that they NEVER saw withdrawal with paxil and called the information "propaganda."
I thought that was interesting - maybe the docs should listen to their patients a lot more, and maybe their reps at least a little more.
Posted by alan on August 23, 2002, at 12:23:29
In reply to Re: Fantastic news!!!!!!, posted by moxy1000 on August 23, 2002, at 11:33:18
> My friend is a rep for lilly (prozac manufacturer) and said that he has been talking to physicians for years about the short 1/2 life of paxil and it's subsequent withdrawal like symptoms. He said you wouldn't believe how many doctors said that they NEVER saw withdrawal with paxil and called the information "propaganda."
>
> I thought that was interesting - maybe the docs should listen to their patients a lot more, and maybe their reps at least a little more.
>
>
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Then one is really asking for trouble.Are these the same drug reps that deny any "discontinuation syndrome" from any AD because they aren't "habit forming" (code for addicting)? All one has to do is look on this and other health bboards where the majority of discussion revolves around having troubles stopping all of the ssri's. Paxil just got caught doing it - having nothing to do with half-life - but having to do with the emerging complaints about stopping EVERY AD.
It reminds me of those that mistakenly refer to longer half-life bzds as "less addictive" than the shorter half life bzds. Of course this is bogus since there is no chemical rationale to substantiate such a claim.
Tapering off a longer acting psychtropic med may be less difficult for some because the drug leaves the body more slowly. But that doesn't exclude the probability that even though ssri's aren't (yet) classified as controlled substances because of a withdrawl (euphemistically "discontinuation syndrome" or tolerance as "poop-out") that they don't carry with them these inherent characteristics of controlled substances.
The previous marginalizing of benzos to get market share in treating anxiety disorders is going to look pretty rediculous in a couple or so years when all of this eventually comes out.
Alan
Posted by judy1 on August 23, 2002, at 16:40:44
In reply to Re: Fantastic news!!!!!! » moxy1000, posted by alan on August 23, 2002, at 12:23:29
Mad In America by Robert Whitaker- 'bad science, bad medicine, and the enduring mistreatment of the mentally ill. Basically it follows the collusion of the APA with big pharma- how psychiatrists are paid off to skew results of studies, so that the billion dollar psychotropics look great against the (for example) generic benzos. It's a distressing but necessary book. Take care, judy
Posted by alan on August 25, 2002, at 2:03:13
In reply to Alan- you may enjoy this book » alan, posted by judy1 on August 23, 2002, at 16:40:44
This is the end of the thread.
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