Bush To Impose Psychiatric Drug Regime

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Bush To Impose Psychiatric Drug Regime

Post by Thess »

Bush To Impose Psychiatric Drug Regime


Plans to screen whole US population for mental illness

According to a recent article in the British Medical Journal, US president George Bush is to announce a major "mental health" initiative in this coming month of July. The proposal will extend screening and psychiatric medication to kids and grown-ups all over the US, following a pilot scheme of recommended medication practice developed in Texas and already exported to several other states.

The Texas Medication Algorithm Project (TMAP) will serve, according to the President’s New Freedom Commission on Mental Health, as a model for the upcoming initiative. The TMAP medication guidelines were established in 1995 as an "expert consensus" based on the opinions of prescribers, rather than an analysis of scientific studies. The pharmaceutical companies who funded the scheme include Janssen Pharmaceutica, Johnson & Johnson, Eli Lilly, Astrazeneca, Pfizer, Novartis, Janssen-Ortho-McNeil, GlaxoSmithKline, Abbott, Bristol Myers Squibb, Wyeth-Ayerst and Forrest Laboratories. The drugs recommended as "first line treatment", many of them with potentially deadly side effects, are patented expensive drugs produced by the sponsors of the guidelines: Risperdal, Zyprexa, Seroqual, Geodone, Depakote, Paxil, Zoloft, Celexa, Wellbutron, Zyban, Remeron, Serzone, Effexor, Buspar, Adderall and Prozac.

TMAP was extended to cover children, again by "expert consensus", and no doubt the Bush program for widespread testing in schools all over the US will find hundreds of thousands if not millions of new "customers" for the dangerous psychiatric drugs the scheme promotes. A recent article in the New York Times about "the use of juvenile detention facilities to warehouse children with mental disorders" might give us an idea of how many future patients are already waiting in the sidelines. But more importantly it shows that the problem that fits the TMAP solution is now being promoted by the media - go figure.

A similar "patient recruitment" move for psychiatry is the re-definition of environmental illness - a debilitating condition with varying symptoms due to environmental causes such as chemical poisons and electromagnetic pollution - as a purely psychological phenomenon. "It's all in your head, stupid!" seems to be the rationale.

Diana Buckland, the Brisbane representative of the Australian Chemical Trauma Alliance calls for world wide submissions in a Global Recognition Campaign for sufferers of multiple chemical sensitivity or chemically induced illnesses.

Investigative author Martin Walker in his most recent book SKEWED, discusses how the recognition of biological causes of a whole variety of environmentally induced illnesses has been blocked by a small interest group of "experts" linked to the polluters - the multinational agro-petro-chemical industries. Those suffering from the debilitating effects of environmental illnesses are told that they are just imagining their symptoms and all they need is psychiatric help, perhaps some forced exercise, called "graded exercise therapy", re-education of "how to deal with" their illness, psychological counselling or maybe just antidepressants - for breakfast, lunch and dinner.

Bush's Texas Medication Algorithm Project has recently run into a problem in Pennsylvania, one of several states it was exported to. Allen Jones, an investigator for the Pennsylvania Office of the Inspector General, found heavy pharmaceutical corruption of State officials and medical experts involved in the original elaboration and the "selling" to Pennsylvania of the TMAP giudelines.

Instead of receiving a citation and help in his investigation, Jones was told to shut up and look the other way. After he went to the press with his findings, Jones was escorted out of his workplace on 28 April 2004 and told not to come back. On 7 May, Jones filed a whistleblower suit against his superiors charging that the Office of the Inspector General's policy of barring employees from talking with the media is unconstitutional. Jones' report is highly interesting - no wonder he is being told to shut up. I have summarised the document and linked it here following:

The Allen Jones whistleblower report
Revised January 20, 2004

This important document has been posted by the Law Project for Psychiatric Rights, a non-profit dedicated to fighting the scourge of forced psychiatric drugging.

Download the original PDF document here.

What follows is my view of the highlights of the 66 page document, with some personal comments and recommendations added at the end
Josef Hasslberger


The Texas Medication Algorithm Project (TMAP) was developed with 1.7 million $ of initial financing from pharmaceutical giant Johnson & Johnson, provided indirectly through a connected Foundation, and subsequent direct cash funneled through subsidiary Janssen Pharmaceutica. It was developed and implemented in the Lone Star State's hospitals, prisons, the Juvenile Justice system and the Foster Care system during George W. Bush's watch as governor. Bush used the "extended mental health care" scheme as a point in his 2000 presidential campaign. Before leaving for the White House, he recommended a 67 million $ spending increase to pay for additional medications for the Texas Prison and Mental Health Systems.

TMAP, the Texas project, was also exported to other states, including Pennsylvania, where an investigation into what is called PENNMAP there, uncovered improper pharmaceutical pressures and financial enticements in connection with the program. The investigator, Allen Jones, was told by superiors to shut up and look the other way. When Jones refused, he was unceremoniously removed from his job and prohibited to talk to the press. Jones has stood up to the pressure and has filed a civil suit to obtain protection under the "whistleblower" statutes. He continued his investigation as a private citizen and has produced a well documented report, which is available for download as a PDF file.

The TMAP medication guide was developed, starting in 1995, in a rather singular way. Instead of reviewing studies that show the relative efficacy of medications, an "expert opinion consensus" was developed, but both the experts and the survey questions were chosen by the pharmaceutical sponsors of the program which included Janssen Pharmaceutica, Johnson & Johnson, Eli Lilly, Astrazeneca, Pfizer, Novartis, Janssen-Ortho-McNeil, GlaxoSmithKline, Abbott, Bristol Myers Squibb, Wyeth-Ayerst and Forrest Laboratories.

The subsequent evaluation of the experts' opinions came to recommend several drugs, including Risperdal, Zyprexa, Seroqual, Geodone, Depakote, Paxil, Zoloft, Celexa, Wellbutron, Zyban, Remeron, Serzone, Effexor, Buspar, Adderall and Prozac, manufactured by - who would have thought so - the same companies that sponsored and controlled the development of the Texas guide. As the guide was adopted, doctors working with state health systems had to prescribe these drugs or face disciplinary action.

In his whistleblower report, Jones not only traces the funding and the influence of the pharmaceutical companies involved in producing and "selling" the Texas Algorithm to other states, but also shows that - according to independent research not financed by the pharma giants - the drugs recommended are neither more effective nor safer than the cheaper ones used before. If anything, their side effects are more serious and of course they are patented and rake in an incredible return for the companies involved - according to one estimate US medicare spends as much as 3.7 billion dollars for the treatment of schizophrenia alone.

Peter J. Weidman MD, one of the participants in the "Expert Consensus" process said in an article published in the Journal of Practice in Psychiatry and Behavioural Health in January 1999, three years after the experience:

“The most important weakness of the EC Guidelines is that the recommendations are based on opinions, not data. History shows that experts' opinions about ”best” treatments have frequently been disproved, and there is no assurance that what the experts recommend is actually the best treatment. One danger here is that clinicians or administrators may misinterpret “current consensus” as truth.
Another limitation involves the development of the survey itself. Treatment options are limited to those items appearing on the questions, and it was not possible to cover all situations. Another problem is potential bias from funding sources. The 1996 Guidelines were funded by Janssen (makers of Risperidone [Risperdal]) and most of the guidelines’ authors have received support from the pharmaceutical industry. This potential conflict of interest may create credibility problems, especially concerning any recommendations supporting the use of atypical antipsychotics."


The original TMAP recommendations, made for adults, were extended unchanged to become recommendations for medicating children - with the same drugs - as TCMAP or Texas Children's Medication Algorithm Project. No studies, no research - the original TMAP "experts" simply met and agreed that it would be a good idea to treat children with the same drugs as adults.

TCMAP, the childrens' drug program, recommended Effexor, Prozac, Serzone and other drugs with deadly side effects. These drugs have been linked to suicides, violence and mayhem - notably school shootings - in young persons. Serzone was withdrawn in Europe when death from liver failure became widespread in users. The use of Effexor in children was banned in the UK last year.

By early 2001, TMAP and TCMAP had all but bankrupted the Texas Medicaid program and the budgets of the state's mental health and prison systems. Nancy San Martin reported on 9 Februay 2001 in the Dallas Morning News:

“Texas now spends more money on medication to treat mental illness for low-income residents than on any other type of prescription drug.”
“Prescription drugs are the fastest growing expense within the health care system. And the cost for mental disorder treatments is rising faster than any type of prescription drug.”

“The costs of treating schizophrenia, bipolar conditions and depression have surpassed expenditures for medications to treat physical ailments, such as bacterial infections, high blood pressure, respiratory problems and even chronic disorders, notably diabetes.”

“According to a report on the state's Medicaid Vendor Drug Program, mental health drugs made up the largest category of expenditures among the top 200 drugs in 1999. They accounted for nearly $148 million. Those costs have more than doubled since 1996.”

“This week, health officials asked for at least $657 million more to help cover Medicaid costs.”


In April 2002, Bush established the President’s New Freedom Commission on Mental Health as part of the "New Freedom Initiative for People with Disabilities". The mental health commission has largely interlocking membership with the TMAP experts and those involved in bringing the Texas prescription guidelines to other states.

According to the Allen Jones report, TMAP appears prominently in New Freedom Commission publications as an example of a program that really works. On July 22, 2003 the New Freedom Commission issued its recommendations for redesigning the mental health network in each of the fifty states. Not surprisingly, TMAP is recommended as the model program for all states to follow.

But not all is going smoothly. According to a Wall Street Journal article on 21 May 2002 by Andrew Caffrey, entitled States Go to Court to Rein in Price of Medicine, legal action by states against pharmaceutical companies is becoming common. The States of Colorado and Nevada initiated lawsuits accusing seventeen drug companies of defrauding consumers.

The Nevada suit alleges deceptive practices that constitute consumer fraud and says, “The drug makers, through a pattern of behavior, operated a racketeering enterprise”.

According to Caffrey, Attorney Generals in thirty-five states are looking at pharmaceutical marketing practices and the states of New York, California and Texas have also filed suits alleging improprieties in Medicaid pricing practices.

I have argued in a recent article (so far only available in Italian) that we have two distinct health systems:

One of these, let's call it the petrochemical model, is based on the use of chemical pharmaceutical remedies that treat symptoms and it is almost entirely supported by governments, spending our taxes. The major features of this system are toxins in the environment such as pesticides, herbicides and pollution from fossil fuels, genetically modified organisms, fluoride in the water supply, lead, uranium and mercury in widespread use, neurotoxic sweeteners such as aspartame in our food chain, antibiotics, hormones, vaccines, and pharmaceutical drugs that have, according to published studies, become the number one killer in the US today.

The other health system - let's call it the biological model - is based on natural means to achieve and maintain good health and it includes proper (organically grown) food, nutritional and herbal supplementation, traditional remedies that have sustained the health of populations for millennia, coming from India, China, as well as other cultures, not to forget homeopathy, chiropractic and other alternatives in medicine, recent breakthroughs in biological and orthomolecular medicine, as well as energetic and spiritual approaches to health. The overriding emphasis in this second health system which, in contrast to the petrochemical model is highly pluralistic, is on disease prevention, with healing interventions targeted, where necessary, at removing the causes of disease, rather than suppressing its symptoms.

The petrochemical model is in a de facto monopoly position, maintained through AMA and similar licensing schemes, persecution of alternatives by so-called quackbusters, and now this monopoly is being reinforced through restrictive legislation designed to relegate the biological sector to a marginal existence. The increased cost in terms of injury and loss of life as well as the financial expenditure is born by consumers all over the world, because governments elect to spend our taxes on one and only one of the two health systems. The petrochemical health model is a commercial cartel, a monopoly that has become so pervasive as to compromise both our health and our financial ability to pay for it. According to the State of Nevada's attorneys it uses what amounts to racketeering practices in securing its profits.

Vigorous action against this Great Medical Monopoly on all levels is probably the only way left to protect our health.

In closing, let me give you here the postscript of the Allen Jones whistleblower report, a document which I highly recommend for study. Jones appeals to all of us when he says:

"The pharmaceutical industry has methodically compromised our political system at all levels and has systematically infiltrated the mental health service delivery system of this nation. They are poised to consolidate their grip via the New Freedom Commission and the Texas Medication Algorithm Project. The pervasive manipulation of clinical trials, the nonreporting of negative trials and the cover-up of debilitating and deadly side effects render meaningful informed consent impossible by persons being treated with these drugs. Doctors and patients alike have been betrayed by the governmental entities and officials who are supposed to protect them. To the millions of doctors, parents and patients who are affected: PLEASE: suspend disbelief and realize you are on your own. Educate yourselves. The Internet has many sites that will help you. The Alliance for Human Research Protection, http://www.ahrp.org would be a good place to start.
The above report tells what I fear to be only a small part of a much larger story. But it is a beginning. The fuller story will require the efforts of persons with investigative resources, political authority, legal standing - and the will to use them."


Allen Jones


see also:

Psychiatric Drug Facts - Peter R. Breggin, M.D.

Conspiracy: Eli Lilly, Zyprexa, Prozac, Bush Family

"Imaginary" Illness Costs U.S. Billions Each Year
http://www.newmediaexplorer.org/sepp/20 ... regime.htm

Personally I find it a pretty scary thought to have more of our population, let alone children all drugged up.
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Post by Voronwë »

if it bothers you so much why dont you hire hundreds of lobbiests to go to Washington, and spend billions of dollars in campaign contributions.


I MEAN DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT DUDE!!!

:p
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Post by Winnow »

Drugs are bad and that article is too long to read.
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Post by Midnyte_Ragebringer »

If this is true the people behind this need to die and Bush needs to be voted out of office in November if he pushes for this. Finally something I can dislike him for.
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Post by Lalanae »

Drug companies scare me. They have far too much power over the government and the medical field. I've personally experienced having an expensive popularized drug prescribed to me that ended up making my life miserable for awhile.

Doctors are also a big thorn in my side. I've been to many doctors and it seems that ~75% of them will throw a drug at you with little probing into the cause of the problem. They hardly ever tell what the side effects are or the effects of withdrawal. They almost never explain to you any possible choices or give you the chance to weigh options. They write on their little ACME drug company notepads with their XYZ drug company pens, hand it to you, and tell you how to get back to the front desk.

The last time I switch gynos, the doctor had a "consultation" with me in his office after the examination. It was merely a 15 minute sales speech with him covering new birth control drugs. When I politely refused, he questioned my decision and was somewhat condescending. God forbid I make my own birth control decisions!
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Post by Voronwë »

yeah but Lala, are you sure you dont want to pay $40 a month for New and Improved OrthoLite!!!

it waxes your floors!!

oral contraceptives are so overpriced it is crazy. Just a bit of advice for women who may be enrolled in college or grad school (my wife does this, she's doing an MBA part time), you can go to planned parenthood to get your pills. YOu have to have the pelvic there, and that is like $70 and i am not sure your insurance will cover it, but the money saver is the pills are like $4 a month.

So your total annual cost is like $115.

whereas even with a nice prescription drug plan and great health care plan, my wife would have to pay $15 copay for office visit, then $30 per pack ($40 is the price before prescription discount). so basically $375. anyway, thats real money. At least we have a health care flex spending account so we get those off of pretax earnings.

If you dont have that, you have to earn closer to $550 to actually pay that $375. weee!
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Post by Akaran_D »

For a n00b, define the pelvic method of birth controll, pls :)
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Post by Voronwë »

pelvic exam is what i meant :)

the doctor sticks his/her hand in the hooch and makes sure its all there, etc.

my funny pelvic exam story:
wife's first checkup with Obstitrician after we find out she's pregant, which happens to be my first ever vist to a OB/GYN office. anyway, i'm in the room. Wife is on the table in her paper gown. Doctor comes in.

we have some smalltalk.

Doctor has my wife lay back and put the feet up in the stirrups of the exam table.

my wife makes some joke about the great view i've got

"nothing i havent seen before" I reply
"oh you have stirrups at home?" the doctor replied.

we laughed :)
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Post by Thess »

All drugs have side effects. Any anti-depressent has withdrawal effects - I've had problems with side effects and anti depressents before, and also with going off paxil cold turkey.
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Post by Thess »

Midnyte_Ragebringer wrote:If this is true the people behind this need to die and Bush needs to be voted out of office in November if he pushes for this. Finally something I can dislike him for.
Do I get an "I won vee vee" t-shirt?
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Post by Midnyte_Ragebringer »

Thess wrote:
Midnyte_Ragebringer wrote:If this is true the people behind this need to die and Bush needs to be voted out of office in November if he pushes for this. Finally something I can dislike him for.
Do I get an "I won vee vee" t-shirt?
LOL you sure as shit should.
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Post by Jice Virago »

This is pretty fucking dangerous if it were to go forward. I mean this takes the whole "dumbing down the masses" thing to a whole new level. I personally think that far too many children are getting fucked up by parents who decide its too much work to raise them properly and much easier to just call them "hyper" and pump them full of drugs. It scares me because I know if I had been born in 1990 instead of 1970, I would be one of those fucked up kids pumped full of ritilin, just because I had an active imagination and high IQ (making me bored in classes, and therefore often a troublemaker in the teachers eyes), which would have made me a fucking ritilin zombie and probably mentally fucked up for life. It scares me a lot more than any other current problem of society. I saw some of this bullshit starting when I lived in Wisconsin, but out in Cali its practically an epidemic. I don't know how these think tanks expect the US to maintain their edge in the world without imaginitive people, but they sure like to squash them out.
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Post by Winnow »

Some people these days pop pills like candy. The only drugs I want in me are alchohol and the occasional nitrous oxide when my whipped cream can runs out.

The fault for doping up children lies equally with the parents and the physicians. Parent's lack the ability to actually parent so they bring their kid to see a professional. The easiest way for the physician to look like they are making an immediate impact is to dope up the kid.

I've said this before but solving many of our problems can be accomplished by a major change in what our high schools teach. Along with the fundamentals, there should be required classes in real life finance (how to handle credit cards, make a budget, etc), required courses in parenting...yes, high schools need to teach how to parent...where else are the kids that don't go on to college or won't bother to pick up a book on it learn what's right and what's wrong? Their parents probably didn't know either so it's our education system that needs to change. The third required class needs to deal with bigotry and racism.

You can't rely on parents to teach their children these topics as they weren't taught themselves. It's all about revamping our educational system to focus on real life education that will may save high school graduates from debt issues, poor parenting that leads to drugged up kids, and teach them how to understand and detect bigotry and racism.
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Post by masteen »

This is yet another symptom of our national refusal to take responsibility for our lives.
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Post by Lalanae »

Well winnow, I know that when I was in school they offered such instruction, but it was always in Home Ec electives. It would just be a matter of making some of these courses required. I agree that high school does little to prepare kids for the REAL WORLD and that it should be reformed.

But what doesn't need reform these days :/
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Post by Voronwë »

you can't expect children to think it isn't OK to take drugs for fun once they have some personal freedom, if you are teaching them that they can't behave themselves without pharmaceutical help.

i agree that there are very real conditions that there are useful pharmaceuticals for, but we have major overdiagnosis and overprescription right now.
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Post by Winnow »

Lalanae wrote:Well winnow, I know that when I was in school they offered such instruction, but it was always in Home Ec electives. It would just be a matter of making some of these courses required. I agree that high school does little to prepare kids for the REAL WORLD and that it should be reformed.

But what doesn't need reform these days :/
I understand it's not as easy as just making the classes a requirement. The problem goes deeper. We need to reevaluate our methods of teaching and how our school teachers are taught themselves. I'm well aware of the endorsements, certificates, and recertifications that current teachers are required to have as I'm involved in an area that deals with Teacher Education.

Everyone here has most likely been through high school and I'd hazard a guess that the majority would agree that high school doesn't help prepare you for the real world save for the occassional rare teacher that cares enough to try.

For long term change, it has to start with education. That's not some startling revelation but it has to be acted upon. I'm sure Al Gore has said it in the past!
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Post by masteen »

Winnow wrote:For long term change, it has to start with education. That's not some startling revelation but it has to be acted upon. I'm sure Al Gore has said it in the past!
I bet he was thinking of this when he invented the Internet.
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Post by Rivera Bladestrike »

I wonder if they'll call this "Freedom Mind-Altering Drug Homeland Pact"
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Post by kyoukan »

where is the article where the bush administration announces it's new grammaton cleric law enforcement program
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ala Equalibrium
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Post by Rekaar. »

masteen wrote:This is yet another symptom of our national refusal to take responsibility for our lives.
So true.

That's a hefty story for the anti-president media to sink their teeth into. Maybe I won't have to hear about the panties on heads in Abu Ghraib anymore as this develops.

That opinion piece may also be really screwy. More to come from our gal in the trenches I'm sure!
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Post by Dregor Thule »

Voronwë wrote:"oh you have stirrups at home?" the doctor replied.
Hehe, priceless. You have a great party joke now for the rest of your life.
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Post by Siji »

Further proof that greed is the root of all evil.
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Post by Drasta »

sorry we need to "protect the sancity of marriage" instead of raising our children properly.
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