Add Comment

FORMATTING HELP

All Comments Hide marked as read Mark all as read

  • Posted by DaveM49 9 years, 11 months ago
    Product monographs for almost every antidepressant to reach the market now carry "black box" warnings to the effect that one of the potential "side effects" is suicidal or homicidal ideation in people who have not had such thoughts before. This "side effect" may occur in up to 3% of those taking the drug.

    Also rarely mentioned is that newer antidepressant are de facto addictive and have a "discontinuation syndrome" which can last over a year. In some cases, discontinuation or even a reduction in dosages, can lead to psychotic and at times violent behavior in people who have not exhibited it before.
    Reply | Mark as read | Best of... | Permalink  
  • Posted by jsw225 9 years, 11 months ago
    Which came first, the chicken or the egg? While I do believe that almost all of these killers were taking the drugs, I haven't yet seen enough evidence that says the drugs caused this behavior, or if the behavior was natural to begin with and the drugs were just along for the ride.
    Reply | Mark as read | Best of... | Permalink  
    • Posted by TheRealBill 9 years, 11 months ago
      This is a key question and demonstrates why the linked "analysis" is invalid.

      The approach linked looks at a subset of the population taking the drugs in question. This is now how to determine the effectiveness or the dangers of said drugs. In order to do that you have to look at the entire population and look for patterns.

      While the report is a few years old, it shows enough to demonstrate the problem: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/databriefs/...

      According to this about 10% of Americans 12 and older are on this class of drugs. If these drugs were the cause, mass shootings would be common, not rare. Even if 99% of users were not medicated into mass shootings it would still mean hundreds of thousands of people were.

      Another issue with the OP's article is it says one thing but ignores it in it's listing. One person shooting one other person is not a mass shooting. Approximately two-thirds of their "list" are not mass shooting, and around half of those were suicides without inflicting violence on others.

      It is a characteristic of all extremely rare random events that they do not have predictable causes. There is no "silver bullet", if you'll pardon the phrase, to preventing these mass shooting incidents. Looking at what they have in common is fine, provided you then follow that up with applying the proper reasoning to what you think is the cause. Correlation is not causality.

      After all, they all had water in the previous 72 hours as well.
      Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
      • Posted by plusaf 9 years, 10 months ago
        Thanks, TRB... I was waiting for some sense to enter this thread. I've been a 'chronic depressive' most of my life. I can remember the classic symptoms back into my teens.

        I went to a psychiatrist some time in my 40s and tried several antidepressants before settling on Prozac. One thing I did was read the ENTIRE 'side effects' write-up and concluded that P had one of the lowest incidence of dangerous side effects of just about any competitive product on the market.

        I started at the recommended starting dose of 20mg/d and the effects were astounding (-ly good.)

        As stress levels in my life came and went, I tuned my dosage and today I'm very comfortable at 80mg/d. I've read that after bariatric surgery, which I had last December, many post-op patients discover they need much less Prozac than when they were pre-op. Sometimes that effect doesn't show up for 6-12 months after surgery, and I'm only six months post-op now. We'll see.

        The whole list of coincidence of Prozac-users and shooters/killers really does represent a subgroup of a subgroup and I'm glad you pointed that out.

        It reminds me of the time when I did the est Training back in the 80s. Some 'graduates' suicided. Most didn't. The ones who didn't usually had the reaction to suicide reports of "well, they probably would have anyway..."

        Thanks for a more rational perspective!
        Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
  • Posted by skidance 9 years, 11 months ago
    The first thing I learned in graduate school was that people taking antidepressants typically are more likely to commit suicide or exhibit violent behavior just as they begin to feel better. Generally, depression leads to feelings of powerlessness, as well as lack of energy or motivation. Hence, while the condition has not yet been fully alleviated, the patient then has sufficient energy to harm self or others.

    As to medications used to treat psychotic conditions--well, if properly diagnosed, such persons were psychotic, after all, which may cause some to be more prone to such behavior.
    Reply | Mark as read | Best of... | Permalink  
    • Posted by scojohnson 9 years, 11 months ago
      I've read the same case studies I think, statistically, that is correct, but you are also talking about a subject group that is "100% Depressed" as compared to the rest of society. I think it would also be difficult to compare depressed people groups with an anti-depressant to depressed people without an antidepressant with a lot of reliability in the outcome. Depression has a lot of causes, some physical, some emotional, some (most I think) environmental. Common sense would expect a higher rate of suicide in either group, quantifying it to a drug would be pretty difficult.. you would have to compare low dosages and medium dosages and high dosages and see a correlation of increase in suicide - if it's "inverse" it blows the theory out of the water. Some antidepressants (Prozac @ 5 mg for example) are used also in low-dosages to compliment a low-dose BP medication for people with high levels of stress that are unlikely to be resolved with exercise & such (such as a high-stress career). There is no such statistical evidence in those groups, so the problem isn't likely to be the antidepressant, so much as it is more likely to be the group being studied.

      Porn stars also take mild antidepressants to extend sexual performance before orgasm for example, and there hasn't been any example of Long Dong Wong running out & shooting people down.

      I have a nephew for example that is a little doped-up to calm his ADHD & other diagnoses. Yeah, he's a little catatonic when on the stuff, and probably a little depressed and probably suicidal, but without the stuff he's certainly violent and practically homocidal. I'll take a "risk to self" versus a "risk to others", I'm pretty sure he'll end up in prison, I don't think anyone will be surprised by it when it comes, but the issue you look at is do the positives outweigh the negatives. In most cases they do.

      The common thread here are very mentally disturbed people, which were certainly detected earlier and being treated with the therapy and pharmaceuticals we currently have available. There are next-gen antidepressants in Europe and overseas, but not yet approved by the FDA.

      My point is, these are troubled people to begin with, and were identified as such. We don't lock them up in asylums like we used to, and as a society, we are also more reluctant to immediately correct deviant behavior in children, which I really don't think works... Letting them roam free in society, and powerful psychotropic drugs is obviously quite a bit more dangerous. In my experience, they often think they are "getting better" and don't like the side effects of their drugs... (poor libido, mental slowness, boring to be around, etc.), so they stop taking the drug in hopes of being more-accepted to society. They rarely seem to remember or willing to admit what happens when they are off the stuff and assume they can "handle" it this time.

      Every one of these stopped taking their meds previously. If you combine whatever they have, with say, bi-polar disorder (common to these as well), they probably stop taking it during a manic period, when they are pretty sure they have the cure for cancer mulling around in their brain, can take on a grizzly in hand-to-hand combat, and don't sleep for 4 or 5 days straight at a time. Then they take Ambien or something to get some rest, and they probably think they are dreaming when they are not... I've even read about a gal on Ambien that got up and cooked a complete Thanksgiving dinner, set the table, got out all the trimmings, etc.. all in her sleep, then went back to bed and woke up to a dinner and table for 16. In July. She had zero recollection of it.

      My opinion is that we will never really be able to integrate these people into society... but its also a small percentage that this occurs with. I don't know what the answer is, other than to say that many of these folks are inherently dangerous. It would be interesting to see the statistic that includes all felonies committed, versus only mass murder, and correlate that to how many of the perps are mentally ill.




      Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
  • Posted by $ puzzlelady 9 years, 11 months ago
    Elliot Rodger refused to take his meds. Not that meds would have eliminated his megalomania and lust for sex and revenge.

    We are on dangerous Orwellian ground when contemplating whom to lock up as mentally ill. It can easily extend to political resisters, critics of the government, harmless eccentrics, and family members standing in the way of inheritances.

    And where does vigilance leave off and paranoia begin? Back in the 1970s many institutionalized were let out and mainstreamed. America's cultural climate with its war mentality and stirring of class envy is not conducive to a healthy society. It is predictable that the more impressionable will become unbalanced and antisocial and end up in the ranks of criminals or the criminally insane. The psycho-epistemology of our culture has become caustic. The outliers are the canaries in the coalmine of worse to come.

    Objectivists have a major uphill struggle if we are going to reverse current trends. And the future does hang on the power of ideas today.
    Reply | Mark as read | Best of... | Permalink  
  • Posted by $ Stormi 9 years, 11 months ago
    And who is behind putting the shooters on the drugs - school systems which threaten to not let them back in without medication! What is Obama calling for, psychological checks before letting people have guns. A drugged up person will find a weapon, be it a bomb, poison, or pencil if they really are aimed in that direction. Our nation's youth are being used and abused via psychotropic drugs, to meet the end of unscrupulous people.
    Reply | Mark as read | Best of... | Permalink  
  • Posted by RonC 9 years, 11 months ago
    Mental health issues are the elephant in the room. The PC of this world can't bring themselves to the conclusion that mental health plays the major role in mass killings. First, you might offend someone, maybe the patient, certainly the family. Second, you'd have to do something about it. As someone with a family member that needs assisted living because of mental health issues, I can tell you there is no good way to get them off the street and into a facility.

    To do that, you have to go to court and have them adjudicated incompetent, strip them of their civil rights, and put them in a key coded secure environment. Even progressives shy away from stripping rights, unless it's our right to assemble, own firearms, have some privacy, etc. The alternative is to leave them where they live to wreck havoc on the neighborhood, forget to take their medication, drive on public highways, become paranoid, call local police on unwarranted calls, react to auditory hallucinations, have a psychotic break, then reset and start over.

    Having gone through that process with my wife's Aunt, it's terrible. You are sitting in a court room presenting evidence against your own family member that will most likely take away their rights, permanently. Of course the family is divided over this. The other side says she could get along fine on her own with a little help. Well, that's where she was when she stopped taking her meds and started hearing voices.

    And that, I offer, is exactly how the family, friends, and physicians of these nut jobs feel when they don't turn them in. The latest one, in California, Police paid a visit, and it went just like it did for us. Without probable cause of a crime or permission they cannot enter your home. The young lad seemed "normal enough" to be ok on his own. He didn't resist or strike the officers. Without a crime being committed, the Police are only professional observers of the insanity before them. Even if the emergency squad is called, they could not make my wife's Aunt go for a medical/pshych evaluation. They could only try to persuade her. The last time, #17, she got angry with the county officer for the aged and struck her. That allowed police to take her in, take her to hospital, get an emergency evaluation, and admit her to a locked down unit. It really is another kind of prison.

    Applying all this personal experience to the mass shootings. If someone is mentally ill, if they are paranoid, if they are hearing auditory hallucinations, (some think God is talking to them) if the have access to weapons, if they have access to unarmed groups, ...something bad is probably going to happen. Progressives would like to think we can medicate this problem, it's a lot less expensive that institutionalizing them. The trouble is, they either don't like the way the medication makes them feel, or they begin to approach normal and tell themselves "I don't need to take that." Either way, they quit taking their medication and the time bomb is ticking.

    In the 70's I was going to Barber School in a downtown area. We had homeless guys that came in all the time for the very inexpensive services offered by new students. These guys were not crazy, being a hobo or living off the land in the city was a lifestyle choice for them. Ohio had State hospitals for the mentally ill, as did some counties and cities. Those with mental problems were taken somewhere. Of course the terrible stories about abuse caused the hand wringing liberals to do away with State Hospitals. Today, most of the homeless have serious mental problems, no medication, no family contact, and no place to go except the streets. As one of my Doctor friends said to me, "Psychiatry has been removed from healthcare, most insurance allows 2 weeks care. You should try to be a Psychiatrist today..."

    So....Obviously, if there is no political will to create a place for the mentally ill in the system, and which party wants to be blamed for making those decisions, it would just be perfect and so much easier, if we did away with guns. Then the insane could just walk among us and nobody would know or dare say.
    Reply | Mark as read | Best of... | Permalink  
  • Posted by H6163741 9 years, 11 months ago
    This article has a fundamental flaw. It fails to take into account the mental condition that prompted the prescribing of these drugs. This, not the drugs themselves, is the common factor...
    Reply | Mark as read | Best of... | Permalink  
    • Posted by $ Abaco 9 years, 11 months ago
      I completely understand that take. However...for me, it's the increase in these types of crimes in the past couple decades that might poopoo that theory. Back in the 70s how many of these school mass shootings did we have? If memory serves me, zilch. It was the increase in the use of these drugs that accompanied this maniacal behavior... Yet, we've always had mentally ill people.
      Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
      • Posted by $ blarman 9 years, 11 months ago
        Actually, the NRA has done a study on "mass" shootings and the incidences are actually going down now - not up. The reason they are a "greater" concern now is because our information systems are so much better it can become a major topic in the national news media the same day - where before it would be several weeks old before someone could re-print it, ie Old News. The number of shootings isn't going up - our access to information is.
        Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
        • Posted by $ Abaco 9 years, 11 months ago
          I understand that gun violence is on the decline. I didn't hear that "mass shootings" are. I'd love a reference to that (too busy to look for one right now). I'm old enough to remember newspapers and scratchy nightly news on the rabbit ears. I don't think the enhanced media is the issue. I am certain that the increased use of certain meds will surely result in more violence - the drug manufacturers even say so.
          Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
          • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
          • Posted by Hiraghm 9 years, 11 months ago
            I am curious, myself... is violence on the decline, or simply the use of guns for purposes of violence on the decline?

            In other words, are people committing less acts of violence, or are they resorting to means other than guns?
            Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
            • Posted by $ blarman 9 years, 11 months ago
              Gun violence actually increased briefly during the effects of the "Brady Bill", which was a light version of a gun control bill at the national level. Gun violence then retreated following it's expiration.

              As to gun violence in general, the violence seems to be inversely proportional to the rights accorded individual citizens to exercise their Second Amendment rights. Look no further than Washington, D.C., which has extremely restrictive concealed carry laws and (not surprisingly) a very high rate of armed crime - especially gang violence. Chicago is a similar case, as is Detroit. Compare those to Houston and Dallas, however, (cities in a state that supports gun rights) and you see very low incidences of firearm-assisted crimes.

              Note that neither of these combines drugs (either prescribed or non-prescribed) into the picture. That is an additional variable that I haven't seen too much study on.
              Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
  • Posted by RobertFl 9 years, 11 months ago
    It also appears as though they have wild-staring eyes.

    nothing about them being Conservative, right wing, Tea Party, racist, bible thumpers.
    Only drugs. We should definitely legalize pot. What could go wrong?
    Reply | Mark as read | Best of... | Permalink  
    • Posted by plusaf 9 years, 10 months ago
      Probably not much more than went wrong when alcohol was re-legalized.

      There are risks associated with EVERYTHING in the world you can do. The question is whether it's a large or small risk and whether it's to you, yourself or to others around you.

      Most pot smokers do NOT engage in violent acts... quite the opposite. Unlike alcohol.

      Have you tried pot or just drawn a conclusion/opinion about it. I've tried it. No negative side effects and one very interesting positive side effect. Try it, then decide.
      Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
      • Posted by RobertFl 9 years, 10 months ago
        Yes, I have, it's a waste of time, unless you're a dumb-ass, or have a medical need.
        In this, and every other shooting case like this, the problem has been SRI drugs. That was the "drug" I was referring to.
        The gov't is focused on guns being the problem, and not SRIs.
        We know what happened when alcohol was legalized...DUIs. Before the car was invented being drunk wasn't lethal to the population.
        As for pot itself, I don't care if someone wants to smoke pot. As long as it's on their time, and not our roads. I want harsh penalties for it. The problem is, we're legalizing without any concerns of public safety. We're going to rely on alcohol laws - that works great. How many times have you seen a person with numbers DUI arrest with no penalties.
        Will being high on pot become a twinkie defense?
        Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
        • Posted by plusaf 9 years, 10 months ago
          Yes, I understand that any examples from 'the other side' are anecdotal, but one of the nicest co-workers I've ever worked with was killed one day by a DUI-repeat-offender speeder doing about 65 in a 35 zone. Said hi to her on the way in to work that day and by the end of lunch time she was dead.

          And those laws have been on the books all my life. Now, everyone compares pot to alcohol in terms of risk and likely outcomes of legalization, but where are the controlled studies to prove it.

          And yeah, as an engineering college grad, I can be a dumbass, too, just like I can be a college grad, dumbass and Producer here... and I HAVE tried pot on several occasions, and nothing bad happened as a result, including one very interesting positive effect, but hey, catastrophization of assumed future events is the new American Way.

          Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
  • Comment deleted.
    • Posted by $ winterwind 9 years, 11 months ago
      If you believe that background checks keep guns away from "criminals and the mentally ill", they are as valid at gun shows as they are in gun shoppes.

      Colorado has "instant" checks, and dealers can, and must, do them at shows as well. This is the much-touted "gun show loophole".

      Conversely, if someone is buying from a private citizen, whether it's their Uncle Bob or a stranger, they are governed by the same laws at a show as at anywhere else.
      Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
  • Posted by Kath 9 years, 11 months ago
    And now there is a political crusade to force medical treatment on emotional and mental illnesses. Their methods have failed, and with many catastrophic events, but we're supposed to find more ways to diagnose mental illness? That is insane. But that's how things are done today with our crony approach to laws.
    Reply | Mark as read | Best of... | Permalink  
  • Posted by CircuitGuy 9 years, 11 months ago
    We don't know which way the causal vectors go. Maybe people took psychotropic meds and they didn't work or didn't work well enough. Probably most people who present at a clinic with a serious illness attempted to treat it with OTC pain relievers first.

    Focusing on mass shootings is focusing on the wrong problem. They're very rare. Most shootings involve one or two victims. Even if laws geared toward stopping mass shootings were effective, it would be a small change in the overall number of shootings.
    Reply | Mark as read | Best of... | Permalink  
    • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
    • Posted by Hiraghm 9 years, 11 months ago
      I've recently formed the theory that we have so much illness and need for treatment from side effects of the cocktails of drugs so many of us take all the time.

      I mean, have you seen the commercials for various drugs and the possible side effects they cite, including... death? What sane person takes a drug that can kill them to treat insomnia, or constipation, or impotence? (well, maybe impotence...) And I hear people all the time talking about the variety of drugs they take for a variety of maladies. What if some combinations of very common drugs, or combinations of common drugs (maybe even OTC) with psychotropics caused adverse, psychotic reactions?

      Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
      • Posted by NealS 9 years, 11 months ago
        Another issue may come up on drug use that will tie to the VA. It seems that the VA likes to use drugs to resolve many problems. Like you said, an after effect of "death", who would take that? I refused such a drug even before I read about the death part, I refused at the part about sexual dysfunction. Who needs that?
        Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
        • Posted by scojohnson 9 years, 11 months ago
          Medication is the way we treat mental illness. In most cases, the patient sees a psychiatrist for only medication regulation purposes - maybe once a month for 15 minutes. They look for signs of agitation, etc. Then the patient would also see a therapist for an hour or two at least once a week. Only a psychiatrist can prescribe meds though, and there are really not enough of those to go around - so the system relies on master's degrees to do the heavy-lifting and reserves the MD's to medications.
          Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
          • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
          • Posted by Hiraghm 9 years, 11 months ago
            Some of the drugs I see advertised on tv are for non-psychological problems, such as impotence, constipation, insomnia, etc... and yet some of the side effects cited for these non-psychiatric drugs for non-psychiatric illnesses include such things as depression, possible suicide, etc.
            Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
      • Posted by Kath 9 years, 11 months ago
        That is a healthy theory. Have you heard of the problems with merely taking NSAIDS? Scary. I filled a prescription once in my life. It was after tooth extraction and I never used the drugs. I shudder to think how many drugs other items take to make up the high average.
        Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
        • Posted by scojohnson 9 years, 11 months ago
          Wait until you get older... taking a statin and a BP med is pretty common in later life. I'm expecting to see a shockingly sharp drop in heart attacks and strokes in Gen X versus the baby boomers.

          Having a stroke, or a serious cardiac event in your 60's or 70's is no-joke, and begins the spiral of circling the drain.. but in a very bad way... your life takes on the glide path of a paper airplane with no hope in sight of getting better, or only a slow decline in quality of life. My father-in-law drools on himself, craps his bed, and pisses his pants daily.... no thanks... I'm fine with staying healthy until I die suddenly of something else.
          Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
          • Posted by $ Abaco 9 years, 11 months ago
            Naw. Instead, we are already seeing a massive explosion in adult onset diabetes. Some estimates are that in 10 years roughly half the population will have it. Early onset of serious illness is on the increase now. You know what's linked to type 2 diabetes?....statins.

            Maybe more people should just watch what they put in their pie hole.
            Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  

FORMATTING HELP

  • Comment hidden. Undo