Is Medicine Losing Its Way?

Dr. Nathan Goodyear

It seems to me that medicine is losing its way. I don’t mean to be an alarmist, but I am VERY concerned about the growing trend of polypharmacy. It’s a problem not just for people, in general, but specifically for children.

How bad is the problem? According to Mike Adams at NaturalNews, the percentage of children on prescription drugs is going up, up, up. Up to 25% of all children are on some kind of chronic prescription drug!

Just look at the numbers reported by the Wall Street Journal in an article entitled “So Young, and So Many Pills” (12.28.2010) and cited in this article by Dr. David Brownstein.

In 2009, prescriptions for children included:

  • 45,388,000 Asthma medications
  • 24,357,000 ADHD medications
  • 9,614,000 Antidepressant medications
  • 6,546,000 Antipsychotic medications
  • 5,224,000 Antihypertensive medications
  • 307,000 Sleep aids
  • 424,00 Non-insulin diabetes medications
  • 94,000 Statin (high-cholesterol) medications

These are startling figures that should make any parent shutter. What are the long-term implications? We don’t know.

These drugs being prescribed for children are not just some mild prescription drugs either. According to the Wall Street Journal, These include sleep aids, anti-depressants, ADD/ADHD drugs, anti-cholesterol drugs (statins), and diabetic medications  All are very dangerous drugs.

Total Number of Prescriptions or Refills Dispensed To Children and Teens in 2009, from the Wall Street Journal article “So Young, So Many Pills” published 12.28.2010

 

Let’s look at Prozac for example. Prozac has a side effect profile larger than any other prescription available. Over 3,500 deaths have been attributed to Prozac. The approval study of Prozac involved 278 people over 8 weeks. No long-term studies were included.  Additionally, Prozac dosing was designed for an average 170-pound individual. Do you know any children that weigh 170 pounds? I’ll answer for you. NO. Any child being dosed with Prozac is likely being overdosed, unless they weigh 170 pounds.

What about anti-depressants? Are there any studies that have looked at the long-term effects of anti-depressants over, let’s say, 40+ years?  Again, a big NO is the answer to this question, too!

We are told that these medications are needed. Prozac is supposed to balance out the imbalances. Unfortunately, that’s a statement that has been made before that was eventually determined to be false. Heroin, Cocaine, PCP, Methadone, LSD, and even Xanax were all pharmaceuticals that were supposed to be safe and effective. All but Xanax are now controlled and/or illegal! In their book Break Your Prescribed Addiction, Billy Sahley, Ph.D., and Katherine Birkner, Ph.D., do a great job of pointing this out.

As a physician, the big question I ask is this: whom are we serving?  Are we serving our system of medicine? Are we serving big pharmaceutical companies? Are we serving the FDA?

We should be serving our patients. We should be protecting our children.

Want to cut future costs of medicine? Let’s get our children off these medicines that mask their problems. Instead, let’s solve their health problems by finding their true source. Let’s listen to physicians like Dr. Danny Benjamin, a professor of pediatrics at Duke University who noted in the WSJ article that “parents must do more to question the safety of medicines their doctors prescribe.”

I think that’s advice that applies across the spectrum of patients. What are you taking? Why are you taking it? And here’s the big question in my book. Are the pharmaceuticals you are taking REALLY solving the problems that you have? Are they just a mask?

 

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Is Medicine Losing Its Way?

Dr. Nathan Goodyear

It seems to me that medicine is losing its way. I don’t mean to be an alarmist, but I am VERY concerned about the growing trend of polypharmacy. It’s a problem not just for people, in general, but specifically for children.

How bad is the problem? According to Mike Adams at NaturalNews, the percentage of children on prescription drugs is going up, up, up. Up to 25% of all children are on some kind of chronic prescription drug!

Just look at the numbers reported by the Wall Street Journal in an article entitled “So Young, and So Many Pills” (12.28.2010) and cited in this article by Dr. David Brownstein.

In 2009, prescriptions for children included:

  • 45,388,000 Asthma medications
  • 24,357,000 ADHD medications
  • 9,614,000 Antidepressant medications
  • 6,546,000 Antipsychotic medications
  • 5,224,000 Antihypertensive medications
  • 307,000 Sleep aids
  • 424,00 Non-insulin diabetes medications
  • 94,000 Statin (high-cholesterol) medications

These are startling figures that should make any parent shutter. What are the long-term implications? We don’t know.

These drugs being prescribed for children are not just some mild prescription drugs either. According to the Wall Street Journal, These include sleep aids, anti-depressants, ADD/ADHD drugs, anti-cholesterol drugs (statins), and diabetic medications  All are very dangerous drugs.

Total Number of Prescriptions or Refills Dispensed To Children and Teens in 2009, from the Wall Street Journal article "So Young, So Many Pills" published 12.28.2010

Let’s look at Prozac for example. Prozac has a side effect profile larger than any other prescription available. Over 3,500 deaths have been attributed to Prozac. The approval study of Prozac involved 278 people over 8 weeks. No long-term studies were included.  Additionally, Prozac dosing was designed for an average 170-pound individual. Do you know any children that weigh 170 pounds? I’ll answer for you. NO. Any child being dosed with Prozac is likely being overdosed, unless they weigh 170 pounds.

What about anti-depressants? Are there any studies that have looked at the long-term effects of anti-depressants over, let’s say, 40+ years?  Again, a big NO is the answer to this question, too!

We are told that these medications are needed. Prozac is supposed to balance out the imbalances. Unfortunately, that’s a statement that has been made before that was eventually determined to be false. Heroin, Cocaine, PCP, Methadone, LSD, and even Xanax were all pharmaceuticals that were supposed to be safe and effective. All but Xanax are now controlled and/or illegal! In their book Break Your Prescribed Addiction, Billy Sahley, Ph.D., and Katherine Birkner, Ph.D., do a great job of pointing this out.

As a physician, the big question I ask is this: whom are we serving?  Are we serving our system of medicine? Are we serving big pharmaceutical companies? Are we serving the FDA?

We should be serving our patients. We should be protecting our children.

Want to cut future costs of medicine? Let’s get our children off these medicines that mask their problems. Instead, let’s solve their health problems by finding their true source. Let’s listen to physicians like Dr. Danny Benjamin, a professor of pediatrics at Duke University who noted in the WSJ article that “parents must do more to question the safety of medicines their doctors prescribe.”

I think that’s advice that applies across the spectrum of patients. What are you taking? Why are you taking it? And here’s the big question in my book. Are the pharmaceuticals you are taking REALLY solving the problems that you have? Are they just a mask?

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