Vatic Note: Is this a surprise to anyone? They call it suicide in the military when a soldier dies from overdosing from over prescribing, but in civilian life, its called an overdose, which is exactly what it is. But when one kills a soldier, its treated differently than when one kills a civilian with overdosing. In either case, the drug companies are never held accountable.
In the civilian arena, its the drug companies that advertise, (before they were not allowed to do that since it interfered with the Dr.'s job to prescribe) and it pushed the TV watcher to harass his doctor into prescribing that which has been sold to him on TV. In the military, however, the soldier has no say, its whatever the military doctor has prescribed.
In some cases, its a "cocktail" of drugs. Is it these drugs, or A Tilman type death?
In some cases, its a "cocktail" of drugs. Is it these drugs, or A Tilman type death?
They call it suicide so no one has to be accountable for what they have done to cause the death. Doctors in the military were also getting kickbacks for these psychotropic drugs being prescribed and I personally believe it was part of their intentionally induced violence in our soldiers, similar to what we are experiencing in our law enforcement as we read about everyday. They are trying to convert our society and culture into a brutal inhuman and dangerous culture with no humanity. The Zionists are doing a "NAZIFICATION OF AMERICA". And it won't work. They make way too many mistakes to have it work.
We never did advertising before because the consequences of an unethical company or person using the TV for such unethical practices, may well result in the damage or death of the person watching the ad. Remember, the PTB are thoroughly convinced that the goyim such as TV watchers, will believe everything they are told on the news or TV. Its the same owners of the drug companies that are also trying to kill anything that makes us human, compassionate and moral.
Believe it or not, it was not that long ago, and during MY LIFETIME, that many of these harmful items we now have haunting us, were never allowed. We had no regulation of the peoples behavior and tons on the dangerous actions of companies who had proven more than once, they only cared about profits and not their fiduciary responsibility to their clients. All was fair "In Love and Profits" where these international companies were concerned.
Many corporations used to be good corporate citizens of our community, but that has long gone by the wayside, since the Bush nazi Zionists have taken control. Now its what is good ONLY for the corporation and be damned about what happens to us. We don't even enforce laws on the books anymore, like the Sherman Antitrust act.
Did you know it was illegal and still is, TO PRICE FIX? Oil executives should be in jail right now for rigging and price fixing gas prices per gal. There is virtually nothing anymore based on market factors, like demand, supply, and costs to produce. Now its just forced pricing to grab what little wealth we have from us. That is patently illegal. But then so are derivatives bets, and that didn't stop the greedy honkers from doing it illegally.
I would recommend to all families of all service men and women, to encourage them to get out of the service while its under the control of these insane mafia criminals that run our globe and "get out" now as soon as possible. Save the lives of your loved ones. If they want us to be in the military, then they better create one that we would be proud to serve in.
The Military’s Prescription Drug Addiction
, The American Conservative •
Overmedication is an epidemic in our armed forces—and claims lives far from the battlefield.
Photo by Staff Sgt. Andrew H. Owen, Virginia Guard Public Affairs
The pattern is relentless: young veteran, barely 30, over-medicated, and not only uncertain but grim about his future. He may still be married, but is likely divorced, possibly estranged from his children. His family frets over his physical and mental health, while taking careful note of his ups and his downs.
Then one day, he dies. The veteran may have taken his own life deliberately. In an increasing number of cases, however, he may have simply gone to sleep and never woken up following a fatal reaction to one of the drugs or cocktails of pills he was prescribed by military doctors.
As our nation has come to rely more heavily on pharmaceutical drugs to manage chronic pain and psychological health, the U.S. military has followed suit, doling out drugs on the battlefield and now back on the home front in a vast network of veterans (VA) hospitals and clinics. But as the rates of sudden death and suicide have spiked over the past decade, it’s become clearer to mental health and military advocates that this heavy reliance on prescription drugs may be partly to blame.
“You get a cocktail, and it’s usually a sleeping pill, anti-anxiety medication, an anti-depressant, and an anti-psychotic—and sometimes even a stimulant like Ritalin or Adderall,” noted Lt. Col. Charles Ruby, who retired from the Air Force and is now working as a clinical psychologist and advocate for veterans. “You have no idea what can happen,” tells TAC.
“Prescription drugs have become the catchall—‘take this and if it makes you feel better, we’ll increase the dosage’,” according to (Ret.) Brigadier Gen. Becky Halstead, a public proponent of alternative medicine following her own two-year stint on medications for chronic fibromyalgia.
We use prescription drugs because it is a quick fix. It started because our military was strained and it was just keeping more people propped up to do their jobs. But the long-term danger is we made people too dependent on it. It’s alarming to me.Nationally, prescription drug overdoses have risen significantly. According to the National Center for Health Statistics, for example, the number of Americans who died from painkillers rose to 14,800 in 2008 from 4,000 in 1999—the vast majority being unintentional.
In 2008, Lt. Gen. Eric B. Schoomaker, then the Army’s Surgeon General, raised eyebrows when he mentioned that there had been “a series, a sequence of deaths” in the new warrior transition units (WTU) military-wide. The units are supposed to help wounded and sick soldiers transition back into uniform or out of the military, but they’ve been beset with drug problems and low morale for years.
“Half of the warriors are ‘stoned’ on psychotropic drugs,” said one report about the WTU at Fort Drum, NY, in 2012. Another Army report in 2011 said 25 to 35 percent of the soldiers in these units nationwide were “addicted to drugs.”
Reporters obtained an internal study in 2010 that revealed 32 soldiers and Marines in the WTUs had died from accidental overdoses since 2007. (VN: are these the so called "Suicides in the military" they are always talking about? If you care about your children, spouse, relative, then you better start to question every single death, since I do not trust these Zionists occupying our government)
Meanwhile, the drug Seroquel has been implicated in the deaths of several veterans whose families say were using the drug when they died in their sleep. Seroquel is the brand name for Quetiapine, and although it is supposed to be prescribed for schizophrenia and bi-polar disorder, military and VA doctors have used it for years to treat stress-induced insomnia.
According to at 2010 report by the Military Times, orders for antipsychotic medications like Seroquel and Risperdal (another anti-psychotic) jumped 200 percent between 2001 and 2009, the war’s peak. In fact, before the company was successfully sued (for paying kickbacks to doctors in a scheme to promote Seroquel for uses not approved by the FDA, otherwise known as “off label”), drug-maker AstraZeneca sold $340 million worth of it to the Armed Forces. Some 54,581 prescriptions for Seroquel were written for active duty servicemembers in 2011 alone—the vast majority as a sleep aid.
While off-label prescriptions are legal and common, critics like Harvard University research psychologist Dr. Paula Caplan, say the unknowns outweigh the benefits. When some veterans could be taking upwards of 20 to 40 different pills a day, half of them psychotropic, the results can be unpredictable. “You don’t know what effect the drug may have on them.”
At high dosages and in concert with other drugs, Seroquel, for example, has been found to cause an irregular heartbeat and a higher risk of heart attack.
“I have never been one to say I’m opposed to medication—I’m just opposed to these medications, which have a side effect of causing cardiac arrest,” said Stan White, whose son, Marine Cpl. Andrew White, 23, died from a heart attack in his sleep in 2008. He blames Seroquel for his son’s unexpected death.
The young White was on a variety of medications for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), mainly a clonazepam (anti-anxiety) and a paroxetine (anti-depressant), along with Seroquel (for his nightmares he was given 1,600 milligrams a day, double the maximum dosage given for schizophrenia, his father said).
Seroquel was taken off the Pentagon’s regular formulary in 2012, but it can still be prescribed with a waiver.
Meanwhile, numerous reports show how pervasive the overmedication problem has become:
- According to an investigation by the American-Statesman, the military has spent at least $2.7 billion on antidepressants, and $1.6 billion in narcotic painkillers like Oxycontin over the last decade. According to the Military Times, DoD orders for anxiety medications and sedatives like Valium and Ambien increased 170 percent from 2001 to 2009. By 2009, 1 in 6 active duty service members were on some form of psychiatric drug, including 17 percent on antidepressants.
- In 2010, a significant Army report on suicide found that in 2009, 20 percent of the active duty force (106,000) had been prescribed at least one medication for pain, anxiety or depression, while prescription drugs were involved in one-third of the 160 active duty suicides that year. Of the 188 accidental/undetermined deaths from 2006 to 2009 caused by drugs and alcohol, 74 percent involved prescription medications.
- According to an Institute of Medicine report in 2012, 11 percent of service members in 2008 acknowledged they were abusing prescription pills—up from 2 percent in 2002.
- An American-Statesman investigation found that of the 277 Texan Iraq and Afghanistan vets for whom they could establish a cause of death between 2003 and 2011, one in five had died accidentally due to toxic prescription cocktails.
- According to the Center for Public Integrity, 49,000 veterans (all wars) killed themselves from 2005 to 2011—more than double the rate of the civilian population. Some wonder how much the drugs had to do with it—many of these powerful medication popular with doctors carry warnings of increased suicidal thoughts, anxiety, insomnia, and psychosis, especially with high dosages or when stopped abruptly.
[It’s been] shown through lawsuits that [drug companies] minimize and even conceal various kinds of harm from their drugs, including that they increase or can increase the risk of suicide or homicide.DoD drug spending has ballooned from $3 billion in 2002 to $6.8 billion in 2011. Critics charge that this partly reflects a shift to the “quick fix” of drugs for treating mental health conditions and chronic pain, a mindset they say is crippling full recovery.
“It’s a very significant problem,” Tom Tarantino, a former Army Captain who served as a platoon leader in Iraq in 2006, and is now spokesman and policy associate for IAVA.
“It’s one of those things that really starts with medicine on the battlefield, and in deployment you are just trying to treat symptoms so people can keep going,” he tells TAC, describing how pills were handed out in Ziploc bags in the field. “The availability is so much easier than when you are at home. When you get home, they say ‘we’re not giving you a bag full of Oxycontin, no.”
But the medications continue. “I don’t think it’s nefarious, but I do think there is an addiction problem,” Tarantino added. The latest statistics obtained by Veterans for Common Sense indicate that over 486,000 Iraq and Afghanistan veterans have been treated for a mental health issue at the VA. Many have other injuries, too, like traumatic brain injury (TBI) and musculoskeletal injuries—all requiring a battery of prescriptions.
“I have a very close friend who I served with. He has pretty severe post-traumatic stress and pretty severe TBI, and every time he walks into the VA to get treatment he’s given drugs. He’s a very active person so this really frustrates him,” said Tarantino.
Dr. Ruby, who recently launched Operation Speak Up, said medication dulls but does not dispel the painful memories of PTSD sufferers. His campaign hopes to establish group settings for veterans to talk about their combat stress, based on the Alcoholics Anonymous model. “Our view is that psychiatric drugs do nothing but sedate people. We believe that speaking out is a much better way to treat these people and to find a way to integrate back into their communities.”
While officials stand by the positive uses for medication, some 89 percent of VA facilities now also offer some form of complementary and alternative medicine. In addition to medication, the VA provides psychotherapy, as well as cognitive and exposure therapies for PTSD, according to its website. Meanwhile, the Pentagon has been funding yoga and acupuncture and any alternative “that showed even an iota of promise.”
To address prescription drug abuse, both agencies have upgraded procedures for monitoring prescriptions and their various interactions for individual patients. There’s been some success at reducing the use of the most addictive painkillers and anti-depressants. Buy-back efforts at hospitals prove useful—but are sporadic—for collecting thousands of unwanted, unused pills.
In June, Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) introduced a bill that would allow permanent buy-backs system-wide. “There is substantial evidence that prescription drug use and abuse is a major contributing factor to military and veteran suicides,” he told TAC in a statement, “and this bill would address that problem head on.”
Kelley Beaucar Vlahos is a Washington, D.C.-based freelance reporter and TAC contributing editor.
The article is reproduced in accordance with Section 107 of title 17 of the Copyright Law of the United States relating to fair-use and is for the purposes of criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research.
2 comments:
Vatic Master: Keep in mind that over 100 thousand Vietnam Vets committed suicide on their return from Nam due to Agent Orange and Dioxin...The Governement uses the SMOKE SCREEN Posat Tramatic Strees Syndrome aa a Cover Up of the true effects of Chemicals. They use this shell shock crap on the soldiers exposed to Depleted Uranium also to cover up its true cause and effects. Yes the military is doped up...so is the general popluation who take the poison junk of big pharma that stooges called DOCTORS give out...Kids are also doped up with Ritilin...Alot of young people take Pergosets Presacriptioon pain killers then smoke the GMO Hybrid matijuana..its epidemic!!! Most Ameriocans are on some type of poison fhat Doctors dose out. By the way Molley the estacesy drug that Miley Cyrus sings about causes Cannibalism..The whole population is drugged by the EVIL ONES in some way...Good article Vatic Master about the Drugs in Military,,,
I hear you and so wholeheartedly agree. So, how do we combat this.....?? Spread this far and wide to every corner of the nation and tell these parents, brothers and sisters, spouses of the military that they need to take a stand for their loved ones and we will be right behind them, and then DO IT.... DO IT WITH A PASSION. OUR CHILDREN ARE AT RISK AS ARE OUR MILTIARY AND ITS ALL PART OF BRINGING US DOWN THROUGH WW III. WE ARE THE DESIGNATED LOSERS and this is how they are doing it by attacking our military readiness.
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