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Prozac -- the Toxic Miracle Drug

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Biology 202
2002 First Paper
On Serendip

Prozac -- the Toxic Miracle Drug

Michelle Tahmoush


America's society has turned to an aggressive means to treat the overwhelming numbers of people who suffer from depression -- antidepressant medication. "The National Institute of Mental Health... has estimated that almost 10 million Americans are seriously depressed and that a total of 14 million will suffer from it during their lifetimes" (7). Taking psychiatric drugs such as Prozac has become trendy. People no longer covertly take antidepressants, but discuss their medications openly as if there were nothing wrong with chemically altering one's brain. This is partly due to how psychiatrists propose the necessity of Prozac and other such drugs. Psychiatrists explain that Prozac will counteract the low levels of serotonin by inhibiting the loss of this neurotransmitter. The low levels of serotonin are said to be the cause of the depression, thus Prozac remedies this disease for certain people. Supposedly, with only a few side effects exhibited in a mere fraction of the patients taking Prozac, happiness can be in one's grasp. Prozac is idealized in this fashion as a euphoric drug. In reality, Prozac harmfully changes one's brain chemistry with no guarantees of reducing one's depression. Society has ignorantly euphemized this toxic drug as the cure of depression because of faulty trial studies, the understatement of the potential adverse reactions, and the neglect of patients prescribed Prozac.

 


Although Prozac has been on the market since 1988, the initial trial studies that were done on Prozac in order to prove its efficacy were manipulated in order to make the drug pass FDA approval. The drug studies themselves were considerably shady. First of all,
"all FDA drug studies are constructed, supervised, and paid for by the drug companies themselves, using doctors and research teams of their own choosing... Pharmaceutical companies do everything they can to make the studies turn out right" (7). Some people may think that the federal government actually supervises the safety of all the drugs that are screened, but this is not the case. The drug manufacturers themselves do the testing and can therefore pick the doctors who would endorse the drug. These are often people with longstanding relationships with the company. In the Manufacturer's Report of June 1998, Eli Lilly claims: "the efficacy of Prozac for the treatment of patients with depression (>18 years of age) has been studied in 5 and 6 week placebo-controlled studies"(6). There are several major points that are essentially left unsaid by this statement. One might ask is this drug safe for adolescence or the elderly; what are the effects of long-term dosages on the nervous system; was this drug able to prevent suicide in at risk patients? The answer to these questions is that they don't know. The community at large is basically one big guinea pig at the moment with thousands of people on antidepressants. "86 percent of all the patients in all the studies were treated for 'three months or less'"(7). This is inadequate time to monitor the effects on one's body. It will not be surprising if, twenty years from now, someone discovers major damage is done to the liver or the brain. There has already been evidence that Prozac is addictive. In addition to the lack of long-term observations, the trials did not include a large number of people due to their age or severity of illness. "The Prozac studies as designed by Lilly excluded all patients with serious tendency toward suicide... Hospitalized psychiatric patients were also excluded... There were no children or elderly adults in the Lilly sponsored FDA studies of Prozac" (7). The trial studies were biased. What is even worse is the fact that the data from the trials was manipulated. Some data was left out while the rest was pooled together in order to have the studies show that Prozac was effective. In actuality, "the number of Prozac patients who actually completed the four-, five-, or six-week trials used as the basis for FDA approval... turned out to be 286 patients" (7). This is unlike the reported 6,000 people that Eli Lilly claimed they had tested. The FDA approval of Prozac was an atrocity. If there was sufficient investigation into the data of the studies, Prozac may not be on the market today.


Even though Prozac passed FDA approval, the drug continues to be a threat because the dangers of Prozac are extremely understated by health care professionals. Most of the populace does not comprehend the extent of adverse reactions that are linked to Prozac. "By December '95 there had already been reported 35,230 adverse reactions to Prozac - including hallucinations, aggression, hostility, assault, manslaughter, and suicide - resulting in a total of 2,394 deaths" (2). In a time span of seven years there had been over two thousand deaths caused by this antidepressant, yet patients are, most likely, only told of the minor side effects such as nausea, sleeplessness, and loss of libido. Neither is the association with fits of aggression or death indicated as warnings on prescription bottles; nor is it likely told of by the patient's doctor. Yet, indeed Prozac can elevate one's mood to a highly agitated state in which one cannot rationally evaluate the surrounding environment. This may cause the patient to behave irrationally and violently. "In some rare, but much publicized cases, patients on the drug have murdered relatives or others"(1). The fact that these extreme states can occur at all on Prozac is call for concern from at least the patients taking Prozac, if not the public at large. The lack of warnings is also significant when it comes to telling the patient that Prozac and other drugs "cause permanent brain damage at the doses customarily given" (5). These are factors that should be of substantial controversy, yet are most likely not discussed when prompting the patient to take antidepressants.


In addition to the potential harm that the patient is at risk for by simply ingesting the antidepressant, suicidal tendencies may occur due to the improper monitoring or distribution of Prozac and other such drugs. Theoretically, Prozac is administered to individuals who are undergoing therapy so as to help that person deal with certain disturbing issues. Unfortunately, this is often not the case. Many people, especially students, take Prozac as either a "quick fix" or an upper. They use the drug in a way as to continually avoid their problems or to escape from the depressing feelings. Due to the large number of people who experience depressing feelings at some point in their life, professionals may prescribe them with medication instead of therapy. Often times, an appointment with a psychiatrist only lasts twenty minutes. Is that really long enough to thoroughly assess a patient? In addition, doctors who prescribe antidepressants are not limited to psychiatrists. "Because Prozac can be prescribed by all medical doctors, many fear that understaffed and overburdened counselors may be prescribing the drug to lessen their load... The net result: a nationwide culture of collegiate pod people" (4). A detachment from emotion and an estrangement from the everyday world are experienced by some people who take Prozac. With enough people on antidepressants, the world could change drastically. Prozac "inspires a dreamily contented disengagement from the problems of the world. [It also] diminishes any drive to constructive activity" (3). This can be detrimental to society as well as to patients who may be using Prozac as a means to avoid one's issues. The further estrangement felt by a patient can make him or her feel alone and detached from the community. This causes a greater risk of one committing suicide. In fact, Prozac "was implicated in inducing suicidal ideas and behaviors" (1) - the exact conduct it is supposed to counteract. The misuse of Prozac is a direct result of individuals not being informed of the dangers associated with psychiatric drugs. Less people with minor depression would take Prozac and risk themselves to these potential threats if doctors told them of the adverse reactions, such as suicidal ideation and aggression. These drugs have become so commonplace that people consider them to be as safe as aspirin; however, this is certainly not the case.

 


Prozac, the wonder drug of the nineties, has proven to be both harmful and ineffective, yet it is still readily prescribed to fight depression. During the past fourteen years, one would think that the populace would have discovered this, but there are several reasons why Prozac has been so popular. First of all, the mindset of a person who seeks a psychiatrist's advice is most often desperately yearning for a change in his or her lifestyle. This alone could be the reason for one's improved mood. Attitude is a very powerful tool to becoming well. This may seem euphemistic, but "it's been repeatedly demonstrated that up to fifty percent or more of depressed patients improve on the sugar pill. In some studies, nearly 90 percent have improved on placebo" (7). The person merely thinking that the pill will have some effect on his or her mood drastically can change one's outlook. One other reason that Prozac could be considered effective is that some of the side effects could make a person happier. For example, Prozac is a stimulant, which can boost a person out of the tiredness that most depressed people feel. The positive side effects alone are not good reasons to be having a large percentage of the American society on drugs such as Prozac. There are many natural means to change one's mood such as eating well, taking one's vitamins, getting sufficient sleep, and exercising. It seems today people are more willing to putting themselves at risk by taking antidepressants than they are willing to take care of themselves naturally.

References

1) Peter Breggin Homepage, "Dangers of Fluoxetine"

2) "The Dark Side of Prozac"

3) "Hedweb Good Drug Guide: the Responsible Parent's Guide to Healthy Moodboosters for All the Family"

4) College Magazine, "Numb and Number, How One Little Pill is Changing the Face of College"

5) Antipsychiatry, "Psychiatric Drugs: Cure or Quakery?"

6) "Manufacturer's Report, Eli Lilly"

7) Breggin, Peter. Talking Back to Prozac. St. Martin's Paperback's edition Sept. 1995

 

 

Comments made prior to 2007

I have suffered from depression and anxiety for as long as I can remember, and actually I am beginning to think I am bipolar, but anyway....I was recently in the hospital for an attempted suicide and I began treatment. I was put on low doses of Prozac and Buspar and this is the first time I have ever been treated, by the way. It helped, until I realized that I was totally void of all emotion. I couldn't cry and I just plain did not give a darn about anything or anyone. And that is not me! I started to hate this person and was scared that I was just going to get worse so I stopped taking my meds completely. It has been a week now and I am starting to feel more depressed than ever. I have been real up and down. I obviously need medication, but there must be some sort of median. My doctor is no help because I have been assigned someone from the County because I do not have health insurance so I really do not think he cares about me. I was hoping there would be someone out there who has been through a similar situation and can give me some advice. Also, what medicine has worked for you? Thank you so much ... Allisha Zegray, 14 November 2007

 

Comments

Andrea's picture

Yes

I completely agree!

Serendip Visitor's picture

And what about those people

And what about those people such as myself who aren't "remaining in a bad situation," but have lived through the murders of their family and abuse in foster homes? People who live a tragic life have little means of escaping the psychological stigma later in life. Not to mention the fact that mental illness and schizophrenia runs through my family tree just like many other peoples. I see a psychologist, but nothing has helped my depression and PTSD as much as prozac has. You are too quick to dismiss chronic depression as something that people could just "get rid of".

P's picture

Too quick to dismiss

I think you are spot-on....so many people are too quick to dismiss true mental disorder as just "being unhappy with your situation". People wih depression, OCD and other mental illnesses are unable to enjoy even small moments of happiness because their bad feelings hang over them like a cloud that just will not go away. Antidepressants can help lift this cloud so that the person may actually be able to start working toward a happier life and enjoying happiness that is already around them. If you have ever experienced the hopelessness of this kind of mental illness, you will realize that the same situation can be hellish when not on an antidepressant and perfectly fine while on an antidepressant. This is the true mark of depression caused by brain chemistry rather than "your situation". Sure, people who don't have true brain chemistry disorders abuse the meds. But that is not to say that plenty of people with true chemical disorders aren't at a huge bennefit to "being happy about their situation" or working towards a healthy lifestyle with the help of antidepressants.

Serendip Visitor's picture

ssri brain death

have taken these drugs for 7 years for so called depresson . actually was in a state of anxst due to hsband removing himself from family and me and going off with the new model i came of them gradually and havent taken anything except aspirin for 3 years .
i still feel fogged out
i feel imbalance when walking in the house
i trip and fall my spacial awareness is crap
im not depressed .
i cant concertrate on anything
im just a jumbling mess really
trying to put over to all around thAT IM OK WHEN INFACT IM NOT
I SUSPECT THAT IM BRAIN DAMAGED BUT GET NO RESPONCE FROM THE DOCTORS THAT PUT ME ON THIS SHIT IN THE FIRST PLACE
I RUE THE DAY I EVER TOOK IT .
SO THREE YEARS ON IM STILL THE SAME
ITS LIKE WAITING FOR DEATH AS I CANT WORK
NO ONE WOULD EMPLOY ME AS I FORGET EVERTHING MINITES AFTER BEING TOLD
I FLOODED OUT MY OLD WORK BY LEAVING ON A TAP
what a hoot
but the goverment in there wisdom want to put ppeople like me back to work. i dont know what to do next
its all a bit mad .

Kdiz17's picture

You Might Have...

Have you had your thyroid tested? I have Hashimotos Thyroiditis, and a lot of the sympto,ms you have mentioned were present, before I started taking thyroid hormone. I also have depression/anxiety. And the prozac helps.but, my brain fog and balance and fatigue wasonly helped by hormone. Good luck.

William's picture

It can definitely help

I've been on fluoxetine (the generic for Prozac) for about 8 years now. I was in my mid-30's, had suffered lifelong OCD and had bouts of very bad depression. Prozac had worked wonders for my mom, who had the same problems. It completely changed my life for the better, but that is not to say there were no side effects. I did have problems attaining erection and orgasm for several months, but these went away and have not resurfaced. Also, I was a little wild for the first few years of fluoxetine therapy, I think just because, for the first time in my life, I was free from OCD fears and limitations and so it made me want to test the waters a bit. I eventually calmed down, and it may have been just a midlife thing. I can't begin to tell you how much fluoxetine improved my OCD especially, and also worked wonders with the depression. It may not work for everyone, but that's why we need to see doctors in order to get it. They keep an eye on us while we try different medications out, as it should be. Please don't demonize a drug based on SOME people's reactions to it!

LR's picture

axe grinding

I think anyone who says Prozac is really great or truly awful has a personal agenda and is not looking at all the facts. I recognize that lots of people have had various problems with it. And it doesn't help everyone. For me, it was extremely helpful, despite some annoying side effects. I think for anyone who's struggling with depression, it's worth considering. If you're not prepared to accept a little discomfort at time, then either you're not very depressed or you have misplaced priorities.

The emotionless state can be temporary, or at least for me it was. And for me it was quite an improvement. I also had some days which bordered on mania, but those went away too.

I wonder if, when they talk about the number of behavioral problems, they compare those to a sample of patients on placebos. I suspect in that case these behavioral problems would be a small fraction compared to those not taking anything. I suspect that, at least for people it works on, the side effects of Prozac are far less than those of depression! We have to keep in mind that, if severe enough, "natural" depression is fully capable of killing you. And even if not that severe, it can still damage your health.

To all you knee jerk Puritans: Prozac is not a happy pill. If it works, it just lets you start from the same place as all those non-depressed people. If you're a resourceful person who's been depressed, that may mean you eventually end up fairly happy, but it's not automatic!

Serendip Visitor's picture

Personal Aganda

Sounds like you're the one with a personal agenda.

Serendip Visitor's picture

Prozac is great

At first I was extremely resistant to medication of any type having lost two friends to oxycontin ODs and many others just went off the reservation.

I have been on Prozac for 8 weeks now and it has totally changed my life. I am back to being happy again. I have a girlfriend. I have sex like a porn star. Considering there is a large percentage of Americans abusing prescription pain killers, benzos and amphetamines. Prozac is by far a much happier medium. And is much more effective than all of the drugs listed above.

I wonder if the author of this article has ever taken prozac. If not then they probably shouldnt be talking about it.

Serendip Visitor's picture

That sounds like the

That sounds like the stimulant effect. Hope you don't crash. Wonder how much you take. I have chronic pain issues. I'm on an anti-inflammatory which stimulates and helps counteract the low of muscle relaxers and pain killers. Thank God, I no longer need lortab or neurontin. Just flexiril and tramadol if I can't sleep. Prozac doesn't stimulate if you're having to take any pain killers or muscle relaxers. Just shows how easily you can crash on it. It has a long half life, so you can experiment with skipping a dose to see what it might feel like if you crash. Believe me, you don't want to unexpectedly crash. That's why so many commit suicide on it. They have found that some people can take just one high dose a week, like 60mg, instead of letting it build up taking it every day. Be careful. Too much of a good thing will come back to bite you.

Rosi's picture

prozac

It was 1988 when I start to take prozac THANK YOU GOD FOR PROZAC my life is changed, I am still taking and I will take till I die.....
No side effects for me, no problems. I am content with my life, when I have problems in my life I take it as it comes and keep living.... I think I am a better person since I star with prozac.

Anonymous's picture

positive Prozac experience

Up until this year I have always been very against antidepressants. I finally hit rock bottom and agreed to try one as a last resort. I have been taking Prozac for several months now. I have been suffering from an eating disorder for years. I constantly was stressing out over my weight. I would binge and then starve myself to make up for it. Sometimes binging would go on for weeks , even month. Then I would deprive myself of most food for weeks after. I have horrible anxiety and panic attacks, as well as depression. I also have androgenetic alopecia (a hair loss condition), which is genetic hair loss, it is worsened by anxiety. For a long time I cried about my hair all the time and constantly obsessed over it (I have obsessive compulsive tendencies as well). Since I have been on Prozac I have not binge eaten or starved myself once. I am able to eat like a normal person again. If eat "fattening food", without the guilt and binging pattern to follow. I can actually leave food on my plate when I am full. I have also not cried about my hair once. I touch and play with it less. I don't count the strands that fall out anymore, and it actually seems to be falling out less. I am more relaxed, happier, more productive, and rational. I occasionally still do get spurts of anxiety, as well as an occasional quick moment of hostility/aggression, but it doesn't last more than a couple of minutes. I am able to let things go that upset me shortly after, due to more rational thinking. Prozac may not be for everyone, and it could possibly be over prescribed to people that do not need it. It may have negative effects for some people, however it doesn‘t mean it will for everyone. Honestly for someone like me it has worked wonders so far. I undergo psychotherapy weekly, and am monitored by my therapist. I am on 10mg. Before between my eating disorder, hair loss and anxiety I could barely handle life. Now I can manage and live again. I can actually smile, and not have to suffer and cry every day! There is no reason you should have to live your life feeling miserable everyday, and thinking you would be better off dead. I recommend this drug to anyone who is truly suffering.

Samuel's picture

Thanks for this article.

Thanks for this article. There is so much pro-drug stuff out there, it is refreshing to see this fair and balanced, certainly not biased view. Obviously it is always going to be a difficult decision to make, and certainly one must be feeling quite bad in order to visit a doctor who would then issue a prescription. I certainly hope the damage to the brain is not permanent. I was put on ssri's in 2001, and for most of those years I was on effexor, and certainly lived in a horrific numb dreamworld. I transferred over to prozac 20mg in March 2007, and have been very gradually reducing the dose since then. I am currently at 3.6mg, and am still having withdrawal problems. Considering that doctors say that you should come off 'slowly' over a number of 'weeks', I really feel for those who will stay on the the drugs for life as they have the misconception that they need them due to a chemical imbalance. Kind regards.

EvilShit's picture

prozac can be horrible

When I defended myself from my father at the age of 16 I was sent to prison and charged with assault and utter threats (long clusterfuck of a story). When I was bailed out by my Aunt (fathers sister, who just so happens to be a judge) I was initially happy that I wouldn't be stabbed (prison isn't all that dissimilar to Bear-baiting in a human fashion). One of the conditions was that I had to see my doctor, which was interpreted by my Aunt to mean I had to take any drug that was suggested, by my doctor. I guess I should have never told the doctor I was depressed (which would be expected by anyone in such a horrible situation I found myself in). He suggested Prozac, which my aunt decided I had to take. So I did not take this drug by choice but instead chose it over being sent back to prison,.... for my initial self defense. During my use of this drug , the only thing that changed is I became suicidal. However I am extremely unique as a person and murderous in thought when it comes to suicide, in the "take as many as a can with me who wronged me, mentality". I feel as though prozac has permanently rewired my brain, I will probably never be as smart quick and witty as i was before taking prozac (I am now 21) My emotions since taking prozac are strangely low or nonexistent ( I guess blank faced is the only way I can explain it). Suicidal thoughts and permanent brain damage I'm assuming aren't things a doctor is going to tell you about prozac (I certainly wasn't). I'm sure prozac helps some people but what happened to me and probably others and is still happening to me was and is pure evil. I would like to extend this warning to anyone thinking of taking prozac - IT MAY PERMANENTLY DAMAGE YOUR BRAIN ! Also the last thing I would like to add is, once I stopped taking prozac I stopped dreaming. That is perhaps the worst of it, because I used to have such vivid dreams, sleep was like an escape from everyday BS, and prozac has robbed it from me. Just my experience. Peace

Serendip Visitor's picture

You need Jesus Christ. anti

You need Jesus Christ. anti depressants wont work for some people because their problems are spiritual.

Shannonhh's picture

No.

This website is a bias opinion of Prozac.

People do NOT think they're being trendy by taking drugs. My doctor put me on a low dose of Prozac for my periods and I began taking it regularly for panic attacks and depression. It's not fair that someone would say it's a trend because it's not. One needs to go through a horrific panic attack to know that Prozac does indeed help. I feel everyday emotions. I feel just like myself now.

I cried yesterday. I laugh all the time.

This site is bias and is trying to get Prozac users in a state of panic. As if people with depression need anymore problems.

Anonymous's picture

Prozac is just ok

For people who have suffered severe depression, Prozac helps. (No, I am not a representative of a drug company, but a school teacher.) I have been on it for over six years and I can still cry, create art, feel etc. It has moreover helped me function and be able to go through as many years of psychotherapy.

If you need Prozac, (and you know who you are), take it, but under a psychiatrist's care, not your local doctor. And go to a good psycho-dynamic counselor (your basic PhD shrink) to work through your history. Life can and does get better. Don't believe internet naysayers without considering the source (and the grammar).

AT's picture

Amen

Amen

Anonymous's picture

antidepressants cause brain

antidepressants cause brain damage...its a crime...

Anonymous's picture

Neurofeedback

Try neurofeedback! It retrains your brain w/out meds, invasive procedures and is 85%+ effective. I am finally going back to school so I can become a practitioner of it.

I wish you the best Allisha!