The high price of medicine
It is amazing the amount of money involved in pushing drugs and the disasterous results that stem from all the drug use.
While there are likely many things contributing to the high price of medicine these days, there are a couple of obvious simple steps that could be taken to immediate reduce overall costs:
- Knock off the straight to the public advertising of drugs -- the public should have all the INFORMATION and DATA available about presciption drugs -- but advertising is not information, it is advertising. They are different things.
- Knock off the widespread drugging of Americans, particularly children, with psych drugs. Just saving the cost of the drugs would be a good thing but the drop in overall medical cost would far exceed the cost of the drugs -- which is not inconsiderable -- as it would also lessen so much other collateral damage.
As a small business owner, I know how much it would help to have more affordable health insurance -- it is about time that obvious areas of greed and no results be cut out of the medical systems for which we all pay too much.
How to Force an Expensive Drug on the Unsuspecting...
Drug research: To test or to tout?
It's a good article, though a point missing from this is that none of these drugs actually cure anything that has an proven reality.
So, while the marketing ploys are criminal and should be prosecuted, the bigger picture is that the whole question is a sham: none of these drugs (neither the old nor the new) cure anything that has any identifiable physical basis.
More government sleaze
Here's my letter:
News reports indicate that Mental Health Parity has been stuffed into the economic bail-out bill.
WHEN WILL CONGRESS GET AN OUNCE OF INTEGRITY AND STOP SLEAZING CONTROVERSIAL THINGS THROUGH BY BURYING THEM IN OTHER ISSUES?
Right now Congress is under scrutiny to do the right thing. In this moment of intense scrutiny and national crisis, it should make a least an attempt to climb out of the gutter.
Mental health parity is a bad idea, is controversial, has broad and credible opposition and will cost businesses and the taxpayer alike. It should die a deserved death.
But apparently, Congress doesn't take the national economic crisis seriously enough to deal with it head-on; instead it is used as an opportunity to get through pork-barrel for an industry (Big Pharma and psychiatry) which itself is under attack.
Please quit playing around -- get mental health parity and any other pork and sleaze out of the economic bail-out and deal with the issue to hand.
And, by the way, I don't think the economic bail-out has had enough study. It should NOT be passed now until we have had a chance to examine the current problem and the proposed solution thoroughly.
Alabama takes it to Big Pharma
He's won some great cases and now the state is offering the drug pushers a one-time only opportunity to settle.
Here's the first couple of paragraphs:
"Having won multi-million-dollar awards against three large drug manufacturers, the state of Alabama is now offering 67 other pharmaceutical companies the opportunity to settle out of court and save the companies millions of dollars. At the same time, the state could add more than $1 billion to its bottom line and markedly improve funding for Medicaid which serves the poor, the elderly, children and the disabled in Alabama.
"Lead attorney Jere Beasley of Montgomery says that Attorney General Troy King has sent letters to the remaining drug companies, giving them 30 days to settle all claims or face trial in Montgomery County Circuit Court. "After 30 days, we ain't going to negotiate with any of them," Beasley said."
This guy should be applauded and the rest of the states should get in line and do the same -- only then might the drug pushers begin to realize that they can't push drugs the way they have been.
Polar opposites
So, if you wanted to try to help someone who is obviously psychotic, your approach or the technique that you might use must be that much more gentle and "light" than your approach could be to someone in good shape. The basic idea is that someone in good shape is better able to handle more things and so is more capable of confronting serious problems or difficulties they may have.
This seems so obvious that it almost seems trivial to say.
It even applies in life -- and we apply it intuitively. You meet a guy you'd known in high school and he's doing well at his job, family is fine and you can tell he likes to joke around. You might exchange friendly insults with him, perhaps even crack on his momma, the loss of his hair of the new belly he's sporting.
A week later you run into him again and he looks horrible. You find out his wife and children were killed by a drunk driver.
Unless you are a complete idiot, you don't start teasing him about his loss of hair. You tread lightly. You let him do the talking, if he wants to. You even tend to talk more quietly and want to try to keep things calm around him. You might even ask if he needs anything like food or help around the house since you know there's a good chance he's ignoring the basics of life at the moment. All natural reactions and appropriate.
He's what the shrink does: If someone is doing okay in life, they might just have a conversation with the person, though they are just as likely to try to find something wrong. But, if the person is having a rough time, the shrink's inclination is to molest the person with mind altering drugs. Not, mind you, the inclination that every other sane person might have which would be to keep things calm and gentle - psych drugs are an assault with horrible, disturbing side effects.
If that doesn't work and the person is doing even worse, the shrink ups the violence and sends 120 volts of electricity through their head to CAUSE a grand mal seizure (something everyone else in the medical profession tries to avoid).
If that doesn't work and the person is even worse off, the shrink might stick the guy in restraints.
And, for the really bad off, the shrink decides it's time to really get serious and permanently maim the person (as if the electric shock didn?t already accomplish that) by cutting out portions of the brain.
It is so absurd, it doesn't compute. It doesn't line up with obvious, common experience.
I think the major mistake the rest of us make is deciding "there must be something I don't know because they are obviously an expert at this" instead of facing up to the obvious which is "these shrinks are so insane that they do the opposite of what any rational human being would do and they do it to the most vulnerable amongst us -- they must be criminally insane themselves."
And, guess what? If we took that second attitude some kindness, gentleness and, yes, even sanity, might enter into the field of mental health and we might start to see success rates as were being achieved in the 1800's when that type of approach WAS used with the mentally ill.
Wouldn't that be a nice change of pace?
What a novel thought - treating those who are having a rough time of it with some kindness!
Psychiatry and Pharma Unholy Alliance Info
The videos are revealing and the conflict disclosure information for psychs speaking at the American Psychiatric Assocation (APA) annual meetings is staggering.
American Pharma Association would be their more correct name.
It is great to see these guys finally beginning to be held responsible though the exposures, investigations, lawsuits, etc. need to go even faster.
Kiddie Drugging Doctor Bribed by Big Pharma
He's the SOB who pushed drugging of little kids, who extended the definition of made-up diseases to little, defenseless babies.
Now it comes out that he and his colleagues received more than a million dollars each from drug companies who benefited from his "research."
Let's be blunt. This guy should be prosecuted criminally, the FDA should put an immediate halt to the drugging of kids based on his "research" and, to the parents whose babies have been screwed up by this guy I say "let the suing begin!"
He should be sued into bankrupcy and beyond just to add variety to his criminal conviction.
The unmitigated criminality of taking that much money from companies who then profit by drugging babies is unbelievable.
Next should come the stoogies who have been standing up for him, praising him and using his "research" to justify mutilation of kids.
When are we going to get the message that the "drug every problem" mentality is a created marketing idea that only serves big financial interests?
Reality of psychiatric think
The bottom line of Big Pharma-driven psych theory is that chemical imbalances are the cause of mental "illnesses."
Not experience, not our decisions, not what we do, not our viewpoints of things, just chemical imbalances.
That is SO contrary to what the average person believes and the way the average person views the world that keeping it in place takes billions and billions of dollars of promotion and PR.
Here's what it means -- that none of the following are causes of anything:
1) If your wife runs off with your best friend and your feel devastated.
2) Your business fails and your feel disgraced and lost.
3) Your child dies in a horrible car accident.
4) You see your country alienating the entire world through an inability to think creatively and constructively.
If these or other things occur and you feel depressed, they are not the cause of feeling depressed, some chemical imbalance in your brain (which can't be verified objectively) is the cause.
That this is their view is obvious because the prescription to deal with any of the above is not to help you deal with the experience or the reality but is to drug you to to treat a mythical chemical imbalance.
No one in their right mind -- and without a huge vested interest -- would deny implicitly or overtly that those kinds of experiences might affect a person.
Of course any of those problem and a thousand more that could be named have an effect on people. It is obvious that the experience and reality of being human and being alive includes things that affect us mentally and emotionally.
Everyone knows and understands that.
The shrink is so incapable of helping a person with any of those things that he has moved to the point of denying they have any importance, opting to say instead that chemistry is all important.
No wonder it takes billions of PR dollars to try to make us think their way, to try to convince us that chemical imbalances are "real diseases" that should be legislated into existence (an actual effort on Big Pharma's part).
Strip away the "I'm smarter than you claptrap", the holy authority in which they wrap themselves, the complicated latin mumbo jumbo and you see that their view on life is so warped and foreign to common experience that it is unbelievable.
Psychiatric insanity
A young boy was molested by the father of one of his friends. The victim became very skittish, unable to deal with life, constantly on edge, withdrawn, etc.
He was about to be put on pills prescribed by a psych when a family member managed to intervene and direct the kid's mother down a safer path.
Let's think this through a bit. According to shrinks, mental illness is caused by a chemical imbalance that is remedied by giving their victims powerful mind-alterning, brain chemistry impacting drugs. At least that is the justification for paying them billions of dollars to drug 8 million US kids and countless millions of other people around the world.
So, if the kid needed drugs to handle the condition, the shrink was obviously saying that a chemical imbalance was present. If not, there would be no justification for attacking the kids brain.
But, doesn't that mean that the emotional experience of being molested caused the chemical imbalance?
The kid was fine before being molested. He was not fine afterwards -- the molestation is the obvious point that lead to the change.
So, how do they reconcile giving a kid drugs that don't help deal with the experience but only adjust a supposed chemical imbalance? The molestation is the obvious starting point for the problems.
I guess we can only conclude that experience causes chemical imbalances.
But, if experience causes chemical imbalance, then the chemical imbalance is obviously NOT the cause of the mental problems, the experience is.
In that case, where do they get off saying that chemical imbalances are the cause of mental illness and why don't they pay more attention to the experiences that might underlie problems?
Perhaps they might say that the chemical imbalance was latent, just waiting for something to mysteriously cause it to kick in. Even then, wouldn't the logical point of address still be the experience?
I mean if experience can cause a chemical imbalance to kick in, why couldn't a different kind of experience cause the chemical imbalance to "kick out"?
In either case, the real point of attack, the real point of interest is the experience, not the chemistry.
Unless of course, the chemical imbalance has nothing to do with it and the only real intent is to just drug the kid into a stupor that denies the whole experience. In that case, why not give him a daily healthy dose of bourbon? It's cheaper and less immediately brain-damaging.
Even with that suggestion I'm probably being generous and assuming that care for the kid enters into it at all.
Perhaps the intent is closer to: "let's put the kid on a drug that will make him a patient and cash cow for life. The drug has to stifle him enough or deaden his feelings enough so he's less trouble because then no one will notice there's a problem and they'll keep paying for the drugs and for my high boat payments."
7 killed in Japan
This is typical media -- make things as scary as possible, make the threat to life and limb appear to be as widespread as possible and don't ever get close to trying to trace the problem or solve anything.
With even some slight intent to make things better, media could use the large set of data available to them to help identify patterns, to identify some underlying causes and perhaps improve something.
Obviously, that is a suggestion of a possible purpose for the media that is WAY off the line of current media actions; instead, they revel in making causes as obscure as possible so as to promote more fear and death.
Having said that, he's a prediction -- the man was on psych drugs. And so were a good number of the other stabbers listed by the article.
Here's a pattern they could observe if they had a couple of brain cells to rub together: a remarkably high percentage of the horribly violent criminals that do these kinds of things are on psych drugs that -- wait for it -- are consistently linked to this kind of violence.
Doesn't mean there aren't crazy people in the world who are in a pitiful state, just that they don't very often seem to take up arms to kill multiple innocents without being on psych drugs that drive them to it.
As the data rolls out about this story, we'll see if the psych drug record of the perpetrator is released.