Pubdate: Thu, 23 Sep 2004 Source: Westender (Vancouver, CN BC) Copyright: 2004 WestEnder Contact: http://www.westender.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1243 Author: Brian Peterson ALL THIS SCARY DRUG INDUSTRY NEWS AND NOWHERE TO SMOKE IT ALL AWAY In his latest blast of election fear-mongering, U.S. Vice-President Dick Cheney warned that Al Qaeda is seeking nukes and that'll be the end of us if Americans don't elect him. Quite a choice: nuclear annihilation or the kind, grandfatherly hand of Dick Cheney thrusting a gun in your back. No wonder I've drifted to the edge of depression. Nothing seems to be going right out there. If you believe the polls and the "experts", Bush will be re-elected and the environment will degenerate into a continuous catastrophe of extreme weather events. It almost makes me wonder whether Dick is earning something on the side promoting antidepressants, in addition to his tireless work boosting the sales of weapons and oil services. Not to joke about a serious matter. Depression can be a life-threatening illness. So when good diet, exercise, plenty of regular sleep and shooting the TV don't do the trick, perhaps it's not a bad thing to let some legitimate medical authority introduce you to one of the popular and lucrative members of the SSRI (Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors) family. Of course, I'd like feel confident about ingesting that nice clean, extensively researched and tested pill but I'm a little worried about the recent spate of bad publicity about the side effects. Last week an advisory panel to the US Food and Drug Administration warned that children taking antidepressant drugs which include Prozac, Paxil, Zoloft, Fluoxetine, Effexor and Celexa may be at an increased risk for suicidal behaviour and voted 15-to-8 to advise the government to require a prominent "black box" warning label on the medications. Many of the panelists noted with alarm that except for Prozac, none of the antidepressants have been approved for treating depression in children. Once the FDA puts its rubber stamp on a drug, doctors are free to prescribe it "off label" for conditions not specifically endorsed by the agency. Consumer and patient advocates have complained that the FDA, many physicians and the drug manufacturers themselves have known about these dangers for years and that the standards used to approve these drugs are appallingly low. Speaking of which, a heavily censored report was grudgingly released by UBC concerning serious ethical breaches before 2001 when the university's clinical research ethics board was basing its reviews of proposed new drug research trials on brief summaries instead of detailed project protocols. Canadian and U.S. federal regulations require detailed review of these lengthy protocols to ensure volunteers (or 'human guinea pigs', if you prefer) are fully informed of the risks in participating in drug and experimental treatment trials. University officials claim they have corrected these problems but are refusing to release the censored part of the report because the information, "would constitute harm to the financial interests of UBC and other public bodies if disclosed." - those other public bodies, I suppose, being the drug companies pouring millions of research dollars into cash-starved universities to conduct their careful medical research. I confess, my confidence in the pharmaceutical industry and our regulatory agencies was slightly shaken, if not stirred. So I stuck my head into the heavily-busted Da Kine shop on the Drive to see if they were still retailing any of that relatively harmless cannabis. There was a line of five hopeful customers at the till, down from the usual queue of 35 out the door. But our hopeful expressions crumpled like pop cans when the clerk declared emphatically, "We have no marijuana products of any kind for sale for the foreseeable future." "But I have Dick Cheney-related depression!" I complained, brandishing my self-diagnosed medical form. He shrugged helplessly so I trudged home and made a triple truffle chocolate malted, pet the cat and fired a whole clip into the television. Prognosis: better. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh