The main newspaper for Eugene, Oregon, USA published this guest column by long-time mental health worker Chuck Areford questioning the use of neuroleptic psychiatric drugs, which are also known as antipsychotics. Chuck is on the Advisory Committee for MindFreedom Lane County. Update: Chuck’s column led to a response by a psychiatrist, see the link at the bottom in “Related Content.”

Antipsychotic drugs are doing harm

Date Published:

Mar 16, 2008 01:00 AM

Author: Chuck Areford

Source: The Register-Guard, Eugene, Oregon, USA

For a footnoted version of this article with references and citations click here.Chuck’s original article click here (after a period of time the newspaper requires registration):

http://www.registerguard.com/csp/cms/sites/dt.cms.support.viewStory.cls?cid=78024&sid=5&fid=2


Commentary – Guest Viewpoint 


[It is essential to note at the outset that suddenly stopping or reducing psychiatric medications can be hazardous. Adjustments in medication are best done under the supervision of a medical professional.]

In the early 1990s, a new class of drugs promised to revolutionize the treatment of schizophrenia and other mental disorders. Known as atypical antipsychotics, drugs such as Clozaril, Zyprexa and Risperdal largely replaced older medications such as Thorazine, Haldol and Prolixin. Research and advertising sponsored by the pharmaceutical industry led to the widespread belief that the newer medications were indisputably safer, more effective and well worth additional billions of dollars in taxpayer money. Pharmaceutical profits soared.

Since then, the life expectancy of those treated in community mental health centers has plunged to an appalling 25 years less than average. Life expectancy may have fallen by as much as 15 years since 1986. Indications are that the death rate continues to accelerate in what must be ranked as one of the worst public health disasters in U.S. history.

The toxicity of antipsychotic medications, also known as neuroleptics, is thoroughly documented. Atypical antipsychotics initially seemed less hazardous because they produce fewer movement disorders. We now know that the newer drugs lead to more cardiovascular disease, which is by far the leading killer of those in the public mental health system.

People who need mental health services already suffer from high rates of cigarette smoking, lack of exercise, substance abuse, poor nutrition, homelessness and poor access to health care. Adding medications pours gasoline on a fire. This lethal combination is almost certainly driving the spiraling death rate.

Advances in brain imaging techniques show that antipsychotic medications cause brain damage. Animal and human studies link the drugs to shrinkage of the cerebral cortex, home to the higher functions. One study of monkeys given either older or newer neuroleptic medication in doses equivalent to those given humans showed an 11 percent to 15 percent shrinkage of the left parietal lobe. Drugs that cause brain damage almost invariably reduce life expectancy.

Marketing campaigns for atypical antipsychotic drugs target new groups of patients, including the elderly and children. Public television recently reported that as many as 1 million children have been newly diagnosed with bipolar disorder, and thus may receive neuroleptic medication. This does not include children treated with antipsychotics for other disorders.

The damage to developing brains cannot be overemphasized. Years ago, the Soviet Union was condemned for giving neuroleptic medication to political dissidents. We now are giving a more lethal form of this medication to our children. Where is the outcry?

Recent studies published in the New England Journal of Medicine and elsewhere demonstrate that the newer drugs are no more effective than the older ones in reducing psychotic symptoms. Patients stop taking the new drugs at the same high rate as the old ones because they do not like the way the drugs affect their lives.

While medications are effective in relieving symptoms in the short run, research indicates that people suffering from psychosis recover more quickly and completely without medication. Incredibly, one study showed that those not taking medications had eight times the recovery rate of those who remained medicated. Research in Finland shows that immediate psychosocial interventions achieve far better results than those in this country. It simply makes sense that people recover better when not treated with medication that causes brain damage and shortens their lives.

Yet professionals and the public widely believe that it is unethical to treat serious mental disorders without antipsychotic medication. The reasons for this are complex, but foremost is the enormous profitability of the pharmaceutical industry. In the early 1990s, the top 10 drug companies earned more profit than all the other Fortune 500 companies combined. The sheer volume of money corrupts medical research, and misinformation is fed to professionals, clients and the public.

The deplorable conditions at the Oregon State Hospital are, unfortunately, just one more indication of the failure of psychiatry as a whole. I know many of the psychiatric professionals in Lane County, and they are intelligent and compassionate people who want the best for their clients. There will always be a place for medication in the treatment of emotional disorders, yet there must be public acknowledgement that the long-term use of antipsychotic medication, particularly the atypicals, is a costly mistake. Silence truly equals death.

The Oregon Department of Addictions and Mental Health has the responsibility to confront the terrible inadequacies of the current system and to fund the development of alternatives. We owe this to the taxpayers, to society and especially to those who suffer from mental illness.

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Chuck Areford of Eugene has worked in the public mental health system for the past 25 years.

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Postscript: The above commentary led to a response from a psychiatrist. To read that response see “Related Content” below.

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