Posted on 08/15/2004 9:17:49 PM PDT by MegaSilver
As far back as the 1970s, shortly after the feminist movement was launched, it was estimated that as many as 30 million American women were taking tranquilizers. That was almost half of the female population at the time. In 1975 alone, more than 103 million prescriptions for tranquilizers were written.
By the 1980s, prescription levels had spiked again. Women throughout Europe and North America were prescribed about twice as many psychotropic drugs as were men. Many of these drugs were taken long-term. In the case of the minor tranquilizers (technically, benzodiazepines such as Librium, Valium, Mogadon, and Ativan), continued use was largely the result of drug dependence.
A May 2001 report by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) on prescription-drug abuse and addiction stated that studies indicate that women were more likely than men to be prescribed an abuse-prone prescription drug, particularly anti-anxiety drugsin some cases 48 percent more likely.
Overall, men and women have roughly similar rates of nonmedical use of prescription drugs. Young women, however, have demonstrated an increased susceptibility over time to the use of medically unnecessary psychotherapeutic drugs. Be it a sedative, an anti-anxiety drug, or an hypnotic, women are almost twice as likely to become addicted.
Studies from 2001 have estimated that two percent of Americans, or about four million people, have used benzodiazepines regularly for five or more years, a figure matched in the United Kingdom and in Europe. Research also shows that, for senior citizens, benzodiazepines are more frequently prescribed to women, which is now suspected to be the cause of increased falls and fractures among that age group.
The drugged-female problem is a free-world phenomenon. In Britain alone, 60 percent of all minor tranquilizers prescribed in 1987 were consumed by women, and some 17 million people were legally prescribed benzodiazepines in 1999.
A Wall Street Journal article on February 25, 2004, claimed that one in every four French women is taking a tranquilizer or an antidepressant and that the average Belgian takes seven times as many sedatives as Americans. Because of the low costs of drugs and little oversight, Western European countries are facing epidemic levels of citizens hooked on tranquilizers as well as antidepressants.
According to Julie-Anne Davies article Accidental Addicts, published in The Age (June 16, 2003), the largest group of users of benzodiazepines in Australia are women over the age of 60, and the most common reason for prescribing them is insomnia. The sleeping pill Temazapan is that countrys most-prescribed benzodiazepine, with 2.5 million authorized in 2002.
In Canada, the over-prescription of benzodiazepines to women was first identified as a critical healthcare issue in the 1970s, yet it is estimated that 3 to 15 percent of the adult population is now using, and may be addicted to, this class of drugs. Of this group, 60 to 65 percent are women.
Today, experts agree that addiction can follow 14 days regular use at therapeutic levels and that there is a 50-percent chance of developing dependency after six months use. After a year, addiction is deemed highly likely.
The tremendous upsurge in tranquilizing drugs seems to have as much to do with the medical professions reticence to spend time on patient complaints that are not easily diagnosed as it does on advertising by drug companies to create a market for their wares. Insurance companies, in turn, are at least partially to blame for cutting short the amount of time a doctor spends with his patient.
In the United Kingdom in 2003, half a million people were long-term dependents of benzodiazepines, drugs deemed so addictive that official prescription guidelines were saying they should not be taken for more than 28 days in succession. Data from coroners reports compiled by Britains Home Office were showing benzodiazepines as a more frequent contributing factor to cases of unnatural death each year than cocaine, heroin, ecstasy, and all other illegal drugs.
Today, antidepressants are replacing tranquilizers as the mood-altering drug of choice, based on the questionable notion that anxious, restless, agitated, irritable, and diagnosis-starved patients are actually suffering from depression. Originally touted as being as harmless as aspirin, the so-called minor tranquilizers have since been found to be addictive, psychologically and/or physically. Thus the rise of the new wonder drugs, antidepressants, which supposedly act on serotonin levels in the brain to alter personality and behavior. Compounds that target this chemical are known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs).
These harmless antidepressants have recently been linked to violent behavior, loss of impulse control, and suicidal thoughts. The young killers at Littleton, Colorados Columbine High School and Houston mother Andrea Yates horrific murders of her five children are just two of many shocking news events that have called antidepressant drugs into question.
Prescriptions of benzodiazepines peaked in 1977 in the United Kingdom at 30 million, yet, in 2002, there were still 12.5 million prescriptions. The story in the United States is the same, only the numbers are even greater. Alprazolam, a benzodiazepine originally marketed by Upjohn (now part of Pfizer) as Xanax, was the 11th-most-prescribed drug in America last year, ahead of top SSRIs such as Zoloft and Paxil. While Alprazolam is not on the U.S. top-20 drug list (it is off-patent and, therefore, cheap), the drugreckoned by many independent researchers to be among the most addictive in its classis consumed in massive quantities. Nearly five million people have, at some point, taken Xanax or a similar anti-anxiety medication, for nonmedicinal reasons according to a 2000 survey conducted by the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.
Drs. Peter Breggin, Fred A. Baughman, Jr., John Breeding, Joyce G. and Iver F. Small, Richard Abrams, and Mary Ann Block are just a tiny few among hundreds of prominent medical professionals now speaking out against the trend of prescribing mood-altering drugs. These defectors maintain that doctors are taking the easy way out instead of thoroughly diagnosing and addressing the patients (or parents) complaint. They further insist that the practice of mixing SSRIs and benzodiazepines is creating epidemic levels of brain-injured individuals, especially children, whose brains are not yet thoroughly wired.
In his book Psychiatric Drugs: Hazards to the Brain, Dr. Breggin, a psychiatrist, points to the fact that anti-anxiety drugs and antidepressants do not actually cure anything or even address anxiety and depression per se but act as brain-disablers, turning off the emotions by shutting down the brain as much as possible while still allowing the patient minimal functioning capability. In other words, the patient is on autopilot, performing by rote, getting through the day, even reading the newspaper or driving a car. His decisionmaking power and emotional reaction to stimuli, however, are compromised.
Dr. Breggin clarifies: The most fundamental point to be made about the most frequently used major antidepressants is that they have no specifically antidepressant effect. Like the major tranquilizers to which they are so closely related, they . . . achieve their impact through the disruption of normal brain function.
These drugs can also worsen the original complaints, says Breggin, resulting in acute agitation, confusion, disorientation, anxiety, and aggressionespecially in children, adults with brain disease, and the elderly. Seriously addicted patients, he maintains, may show no outward signs to their family or physicians until accidentally removed from the medicationfor example, following surgery or during a medical emergency. Their withdrawal symptoms may then be wholly misinterpreted as an aspect of some other disorder or as a psychological problem.
There are almost twice as many female psychiatric patients as men, and more than half of these are prescribed psychiatric drugs, which they seem more willing to accept. What effect has this had on women?
One outcome has been a vastly decreased sex drive, which frequently becomes permanent even after the drug, or drug cocktail, is stopped. Some 90 percent of women report a lowered libido in as little as eight weeks of starting a course of therapy involving antidepressants such as Prozac, especially in combination with one of the minor tranquilizers. Other side-effects include cessation of menstruation, breast pain, fibrocystic leukorrhea (white or yellow discharge from the vagina), early-onset menopause, menorrhagia (excessive menstrual bleeding), ovarian disorders, spontaneous abortion (sudden loss of a pregnancy), and dyspareunia (painful intercourse).
The news gets worse. An article first published in the Arizona Republic was picked up by the Washington Times on April 30, 2004, describing a relatively new and growing trend of self-mutilation among teenagers. A Chicago-based self-injury treatment program, Self-Abuse Finally Ends, reports a steady increase in the number of teenagers, mostly girls, who burn, cut, hack and bruise themselvesto relieve tension. Co-founder Karen Conterio says another spike occurred during the 2004 school year. Researchers say that the reasons for this vary, including abuse by others, but most self-mutilators suffer from an underlying psychiatric disorder, such as depression.
Consequently, school personnel nationwide are increasingly pressured to refer girls to psychotherapists, who will give the youngsters antidepressants and tranquilizers. Indeed, it seems that many of the girls had already seen a psychotherapist and either had been, or were taking, psychiatric drugs. Which brings up the old chicken-and-egg question: Did the self-abuse come before or after the drug regimen? And what exactly is so profoundly depressing girls in free societies?
Dr. Armand Nicholi, Jr., a professor at Harvard Medical School of Psychiatry, sees two things: First, the attempt to substitute surrogate mother figures for children via daycare and other arrangements compromises the stability of the child. Then comes the early sexualizing of adolescents that has led to empty relationships, feelings of self-contempt and worthlessness, an epidemic of venereal disease . . . and a profound sense of loneliness. The latter affects girls more than boys and sets them up for obsessive fear of abandonment in adulthood.
Young or old, women who take tranquilizers and antidepressants are at greater risk than men. So why do adult women willingly take these risks? One answer appears to lie in the obsessions of a sex-and-youth culture that is also beset by feminism. The notion that they canand, indeed, shouldhave it all has resulted in women feeling defeated, whether they are married with children, in relationships, or pursuing college and careers. The numerous changes in society, including sexual freedom, have negatively affected women, contrary to advertisements portraying carefree women using easy birth-control patches. In post-1950s America, the cleaning, groceries, and pharmaceuticals are not delivered. The milkman does not leave milk, eggs, and butter. There is no actual human being on the other end of the line when you telephone about a problem. Grocery stores are foot-ball-field-sized minimalls. Men put on their socks in the morning and forget about it; women can ruin three pair of pantyhose before lunch.
Much of what passes for depression in women may, in fact, be exhaustion. Except that they cant sleep. They fret over their weight and hair, agonize over every wrinkle, and purchase armloads of beauty products to look as seductive as possible. Then, before turning in, they write up grocery lists, check on the kids homework, reprogram their cell phones, and iron a blousethings they cannot do at work. After all that, a woman is wide awakeand not feeling sexy. So she takes one of those minor tranquilizers.
Research shows that we do not necessarily need to sleep, but we do need to dream. Most psychiatric drugs, including those promoted as sleeping medications, inhibit the critical dream phase of sleep, inducing a state that looks like sleep but is merely dreamless and unconscious. Sleep, therefore, is actually impaired or stopped by most psychiatric drugs.
Ironically, many women want to perform certain functions, like grocery shopping and caring for children. This was not anticipated when the feminist movement began, and now that females make up half (or more) of the workforce, the results are in: Women on tranqs are overwhelmed by the enormity of their tasks.
B.K. Eakman is executive director of the National Education Consortium and the author of Cloning of the American Mind.
Just read your post boy im sleeepy nowwwwwwwwwwwwwwww
just about as good as 50mg of valiummmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
.zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz............
self^
Saves me a trip to the doctor and a co-pay. But what do I know - I'm a guy.
Go to sleep, little beeber.
I want Nader to be on the Ohio ballot, so I spent a day shilling for Nader signatures.
My line was that Nader was addressing issues that the other candidates won't touch.
And, I believe that American business do great things. They provide jobs, pay taxes and mostly do a good job providing goods and services. They can sometimes get out of control. And Nader is the only person who will address this as both parties need big business contributions.
I hear ev'ry mother say
Mother needs something today to calm her down
And though she's not really ill
There's a little yellow pill
She goes running for the shelter of a mother's little helper
And it helps her on her way, gets her through her busy day
Either I missed something, or your reply has absolutely nothing to do with this thread. Got your beeber stuned tonight?
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1192288/posts
American advertising is making people sick. Women should be physically fit and healthy, but not runway models. The medications are excessive.
And I think this is the fault of US corporations who tell you only the good that they do.
Nader will point out the bad, and it is something the other candidates are reluctant to do.
Nader will not be elected thank god, but he can be useful at times.
That was my point.
As is so typical of these types of arguments it paints with too braod a brush...there are some legit psychiatric conditions that respond well to certain drugs ( chemical adjusters for imbalance in brain chemistry)...on the other hand it is easier for a GP to prescribe a mood elevator to a woman in his office rather than taking the time to chat with her about why she may be depressed. Fact of the matter is that there are more psychiatric drugs prescribed by general physcians than by psychiatrists...
WooHoooo, oh Taraaayzuh, pick up the white Prozax, uh, courtesy phone, please.

Riiiight....
They also forgot to address
the nail polish issue.
I think what staytrue was trying say was the more Democrats we can get hooked on drugs - the more Psychocrats we can get to vote for Nader.
A guy on the radio once said that there are two types of women - neurotic and psychotic. But seriously, with all the mental health drugs for the gals, ADD drugs for the kids, and E.D. drugs for men, we really must be living in a golden age of pharmacology. Better living through drugs!
I am admittedly a "white-knuckler", but I rather like this aspect of my personality and my friends and immediate family (hubby and kids) seem to find it all rather entertaining.
:-)
The most I'll take for it is a nice cup of chamomile now and then.
OTOH, when the woman I loved left me for another woman almost 30 years ago, a different doc prescribed 3 months of an ancient anti-depressant. It gave me a "buzz" and strange dreams, but I would not have missed the experience for anything. As I explained to him: "It's like a raincoat for my brain...the bad thoughts come, but don't stick--they roll off like water from a duck's back."
Spoke to a nurse recently when I was in the hospital (osteomyelitis), and she told me that the job was so stressful that she routinely took 5 mg Ambien each night for sleep. "But isn't that addictive?" I asked her. "No," she replied. Me, I don't know.
--Boris
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