tv Documentary RT November 10, 2017 10:30pm-11:01pm EST
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hudson river among the victims are two year old lance peer and his a loving month old sister babs we should take nothing for granted not our loves nor our lives our families or friends even our sanity one minute all is well the next we're plunged into darkness unable to process what is real and what is madness. boredom stringin realized this all too young is the summer after i turned eight she should not be alive and she knows it was the moment. that shattered trust. you know how do you know how to trust anybody after that. forced to confront a mystery beyond our comprehension she spent decades haunted in search of answers in pursuit of peace when something like killing all six of her children. made sense
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enough to put the kids in the bronco and drive into the river i see it. grab it again water fly and kids scream in somehow she managed to dig it out to back out of that. and that's an incredible victory for somebody in that state of mind you know there are other mothers don't win that battle. autumn's mom did eventually die by suicide alone on a country road tony steph and was now widowed with eight children and i'm laying in bed at night in my room listening to your house full of mourning and just shattered the whole family just shattered the children shattered me it has become so commonplace these irrational acts and horrific deeds that we've almost become numb to it we've seen them in schools and public spaces in homes and churches. all over the news try as we might to. to stand them we can't try as we might to ignore
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them they call to us still we called the paramedics and. they tried the roughly the reviver. outside their method i was with those patients but. because your poor body was cold it's two thousand and four and the downings world has just been shattered his daughter a victim of an unimaginable act of violence but it was how this eleven year old girl died that truly horrified the world how cats candace hanged herself when candace first started and we just we asked ourselves how could we not know she was then unhappy the downings didn't realize it at the time of course but her case was not a rare event no candace was far from alone she started on this drug somewhere around january and these things make you
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unafraid they make you do things you wouldn't do normally they make you able to put a rope around your neck and hang yourself. they were still dizzy from death traumatized and broken when they solve the mystery the drugs responsible they say a cold s s r i's and they're among the best selling drugs in the world s s r i's a better known as antidepressants these are some symptoms of the primary psychiatric drugs like assess our eyes have been defended with religious zeal by their believes and damned by others as some of the most dangerous drugs on the planet distinguishing truth from fiction has been a challenge and this is placed the public in the an enviable position of deconstructing the scientific and medical dog on their own in the midst of a thirty years social experiment as director of the national institutes of mental health thomas insel has been at the center of a storm of contradictions about the use of these drugs so i think we have to be
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very humble about this right now because we've often been so self-congratulatory because we have after all many people feel made great strides. the numbers don't really support that dr insoles candor is sure to shock and upset many on all sides of the debate the word failure is one few have dad to utter fundamentally why we failed here why has the suicide rate not come down why have as they measures disability whatever those might be why have those continued to go up instead of down well all the numbers are going in the wrong direction so we're already failed what's gone wrong here a lot of people say it's because of stigma and access the fact is that actually more people are getting more treatment than ever before so it's hard for me to quite believe that i would just submit that from the end i am age perspective. the answer about why we failed is
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a little more disruptive and that answer is that we don't know enough to hear the director of the and i am h. say now that all of the axle taishan about psychotropics. from the media from academia from the profession from governments where not merited is unsettling after billions of prescriptions and hundreds of billions of dollars in drug company profits how did this occur i think that our field has gone off track here by devoting so much of its resources over the last twenty or thirty years both publicly and privately to under trying to understand how the drugs work but you've got medications here that at most reduce some of the symptoms of mood disorders of psychotic disorders they don't in any sense provide a cure this change of heart contradicts what we've been told about psychiatric drugs for a generation now and raises serious questions about how and why these drugs have
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been dispensed so indiscriminately using antidepressants or any of the psychiatric drugs is simply not it's not understood is not explained it's not dwelled upon i think they're in a different class of drugs from most of the drugs that we take for our other elements in the eighty's and ninety's s.-s. our eyes were the first in a class of new mental health potions heralded as wonder drugs and miracle curious they were extolled as safe and effective solutions for the age old problem of depression and were marketed as such thus began an aggressive march towards a new era in psychiatry one which boasted chemicals for the mental health conditions that a dog humankind for millennia thirty years later however the window on that era and its bold proclamations appears to be closing. in the media it can make a huge difference you could have someone going from being psychotic to being
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non-psychotic which is a pretty amazing change in behavior. but i think what we we need to recognize has that's happened over the last fifty years is that they haven't shown to be as good as we thought they were. while the drug companies ruthlessly defended their magic bullets in the courts and through the press they were in effect stigmatizing people who were harmed by using them in the early one nine hundred ninety s. this issue had reached a peak was prozac causing violence and suicide but what happened was that there psychopharmacology committee almost everybody on the committee worked for the drug companies so the conflicts of interest was so enormous that the f.d.a. had to give them all letters forgiving them of their conflicts of interest they can be sued it was a manner of how do we cover it up how do we hide it at every step of the process towards approval and marketing thereafter was designed to hide and mislead the
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public and physicians about the suicide side effect lilly's own secret files implicate the f.d.a. poorly by robert temple and thomas as being complicit in a scheme to whitewash the dark facts about prozac. has been called the house that the president before the drug was introduced clearly reported earnings of six hundred million dollars annually for prozac changeless fortunes and the company banked at least twenty one billion dollars in profits from the drug over the life of the pack and. head. when i say to some people prescription drugs are the fourth leading cause of death in our society that seems to be the dividing line for some people who already know what's true or have read about and understand it and then there's others who think of that's a myth that can't be true they simply can't conceive of that so they stop listening terence young is a member of parliament in canada serving oakville ontario just outside of toronto
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after a prescription drug caused the death of his daughter vanessa he founded an advocacy group drug safety canada vanessa collapsed in front of me her heart had stopped basically she said. it up to go upstairs when you lose a child your world is upside down and i was thrown into a study of medicine of medical jargon power of how the health care system works and when it doesn't work hand i didn't ask for it but it was my way of dealing with the loss of an s. or so it was in a sense my way of grieving and it started the day she died for five years young investigated the practices of the medic on drug industries and in doing so he says he realized have pharmacy influence had permeated every construct of modern society the loss of his daughter coupled with the shocking truth see uncovered through his medical research led him to write death by prescription and
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become one of canada's most od and proponents of informed choice. since. i think. the old situations are coming back i have the stand pulled to the stand that i shot is they are not in favor of a mate who is coming good to that extent of the bordeaux for the shot but on the other side i think if they came back the old impression of confrontation that's
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a mistake on the western side too especially by the americans but also on the other side. it's the cradle of jazz. there are we. know it's just jazz feeling. a city of climatic contest a feast of alligators on the lists of poverty and crime by the least members of my close most. of street racing in the heat of the night this is new orleans itself and the best place in the. box will smith kline just paid the largest fine in the history of the united states
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related to fraud and criminal acts for a drug company paid three big. dollars for illegal marketing of paxil wellbutrin and avandia paxil and avandia both having been drugs that caused a lot of deaths due to adverse drug reactions and they paid it in cash this action constitutes the largest health care settlement in united states history it was in their business plan because those three drugs in the years involved saw twenty five billion dollars worth in the drugs are marked up in the thousands of percent psychiatric and scientific ethics were cast aside in exchange for profits no one went to jail and real people paid the price. worries hard honestly he just my door and social situations he loved to sing from a very young needs music was part of our life and part of what he he adored and
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what i miss most about brennan is kamen it always give me a hug he that. give me a hug i still think to this day he's going to walk to the door we were driving not too long ago nancy myself and our other son hayden and i looked in the backseat and hayden was sleeping and i went to look to see if brennan was there to start a habit if he was sleeping to. i saw brennan walk out of this house he was very robotic. brain and where are you going it's ok mom i just gotta go put on his winter coat brennan it's hot out today it's ok mom i just gotta go put on as winner halle said brennan it's hot out today you won't need that it's ok mom i've just got to go and i said i need you here for a minute no it's ok mom i've just got to go and that ollie could say to me and this was a child who was very articulate who would who is so verbose that sometimes he would just say ok then after an f.o. ready four days prior brennan went to the family doctor with
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a chest cold and inexplicably came home with a sample pack of the antidepressant supreme x. at the time of his disappearance he was exhibiting the classic signs of agathe easier i let him go out the door and that was the last time i some of us have and he brought us rope from the local store. and drove to a conservation area texted us. don't hang them self before long other teens across the canadian province of ontario would dying just like brennan did for terence young the problem hit close to home again when friends and constituents faced the same hora he in the mccartney's had my wife call my son hard to the phone and we heard him say a few words and the bang the phone down and ran upstairs obviously quite upset and we were inside what happened he said sarah curran hanged herself and we had met
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sarah who was eighteen years old just a few weeks before in our back deck they were part of a same social group and overall they played guitar and sing songs and do karaoke or whatever. because in my own research the first thing i thought about when an otherwise healthy young person dies is was a prescription drug involved and of course it was in fact there's no doubt my mind that paxil and withdrawing from paxil was the cause of sarah carland demise her suicide of a young woman hanging herself is an extremely rare thing to happen she went home one saturday night at two o'clock in the morning took off her makeup and hanged herself in her parents' basement i reached out to turn to one point because i was in contact with coroner's office i was starting to put pieces together it wasn't
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until after sarah is death. that we actually started connect the dots were brief others we have a great connection with terrence hope you got the inquest doctors would talk to us after we fought hard for an inquest because we needed to understand and after syria had died then we started doing research on the drug that's were really found out about the drug that's the first time we realised that paxil one of the side effects was suicidal thinking there's videotape of the coroner's council saying on the very first day of the inquest we will show that paxil didn't play a part as a recurrence death well the whole point of the inquest was to see whether or not and the presence played a part in series death the courts acknowledge that this medication can increase thoughts of suicide in particular patients but they don't think that the medication played a role in sarah karl and that the inquest the odds were stacked against the condoms
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the jury i think was very courageous but they were specifically instructed by the coroner that they couldn't actually find paxil as a cause the jury made twelve key recommendations these were detailed recommendations to prevent similar deaths six of them were aimed at the drug industry and of the drug company so if they didn't think that paxil caused or played a critical role in sarah carlin's death they certainly wouldn't put six recommendations aimed at the pharmaceutical industry in there are a good decision. rejoinder forty pounds of fury oh goodness yes and i was not easy to deal with my son joseph at that time was fifteen years of age extremely ill it didn't matter what it was very very violent the drop of a pin would set me off you could actually say he would be everything that a schoolyard shooting is made out of. in the years after debbie stephan drove the
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family's nine hundred ninety into a raging river with her children inside the mental states of both autumn string him and her brother joseph steffen deteriorated whether the cause was genetics or sheer trauma they both were diagnosed with bipolar disorder just like them mom joseph in particular seemed headed for disaster he was just a sweetheart but boy when he hit puberty he he really went over and became incredibly manic and incredibly violent and his mania he was he was scary my dad was scared joseph was medicated with lithium i believe he was taking seven hundred fifty milligrams of of lithium and he was up to nine hundred milligrams of let him . for a period of time to try and control it was i having huge mood swings yeah that stuff definitely started i mean i've been through a lot of pain with the death of my mother and various events that happened in my
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life after my mother had committed suicide. i was the most violent person that i knew. i used to wander the streets at night and i'd go pick fights with the local people and i had this aluminum bat that i had found and i beat it against the curb so it was just jagat and torn up and you know that was my weapon of choice and i mean i'm lucky i never touched anybody with that thing. my children are already saying to me come on. you've got to get them out of the house he's going to kill somebody you've got to do something dad didn't matter what we threw at this situation it wasn't going to get better and i'm going to lose him to a suicide or he's going to have to be institutionalized a thousand miles away or tim was also struggling desperately now married with a child she too was caught in the grip of a mother's madness at that point in my life i just felt like everything was ashes
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you know i just lost my mom to suicide my diagnosis had been upgraded so now is rapid cycling bipolar one with schizophrenia tendencies which was it seemed really dark like i wasn't going to get over that. and so i had actually planned to commit suicide with one child ingesting a five drug cocktail and contemplating suicide and the other engulfed by violent thoughts tony stephens family was under siege. so i was left in a terrible state a terrible state where i had to find an answer because you see my family was literally coming unglued before my eyes i was going to lose my family stephan resolved to find an answer and prevent any further suicides in his family. as part of the research for his book called the book of woe gary greenberg was
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imbedded with psychiatrists as they debated the new edition of the diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders the d.s. and five all along it's been clear that the d.s.m. is centrally a work of fiction it's the way that psychiatrists have of saying if if there are mental disorders if they exist in nature the ways illnesses like diabetes exist then disease or what they are changing the way we understand ourselves is intimately related to the development of the diagnostic and statistical manual the d.s.m. is often referred to as the bible of psychiatric disorders it is the quintessential diagnostic instrument over four hundred thousand mental health professionals in the united states use the d.s.m. and in order to get third party reimbursement one has to have a d.s.m. diagnosis so the d.s.m. is extremely instrumental in two thousand and five two respected academics lisa kos
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grove of you must boston and sheldon crim ski of tufts released their investigation into conflicts of interest between d.s.m. four panel members and the pharmaceutical industry i think the data really speak for themselves the strongest statistics include the panel members for the mood disorders and schizophrenia and psychotic disorders one hundred percent of those panel members and yes that's right every single panel member has financial says with the pharmaceutical industry and if you look at it in terms of the sheer amount of money the antidepressant market and the anti-psychotic markets are the fourth and fifth leading therapy classes of drugs with annual sales of twenty billion in fourteen billion respectively there are one hundred seventy d.s.m. panel members that's the total inclusive of all the working groups of those one hundred seventy panel members fifty six percent had. at least one financial says yes or the pharmaceutical company.
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the d.s.m. decision makers actions over the last thirty years have reverberated in some profound ways. my dad and i have always been really close you know both my parents did everything for my brother and i was you know if there's a spot he wanted to pick up or if there is something that we wanted to do we did everything my dad built my brother halfpipe in our backyard and it was like a professionally built half pipe like this thing was phenomenal and we had kids from all over the neighborhood come there to ride it because it was huge there's nothing more accelerating the being at that high in everything that i've ever done it was magical moments our daughter jim was born in one thousand nine hundred and our son he was born in one thousand nine hundred two and both my wife and i took a nurturing approach to parenting didn't get everything they wanted but it certainly had a lot of opportunity when they were young and it was it was wonderful the car
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michael's perfect family began to run hinge shortly after david began taking paxil i really didn't know very much more mental illness until when i was forty five years older than i had my first major depression and i was treated with paxil and in fact when i look back on it now there's no question i was manic when i was on packs of the first time that was the very first time that i were even looked at issues around drugs and side effects of drugs i noticed that there was a big difference before he started taking medication and then while he was taking the medication i remember him snapping on me about something very small and i remember him spending so much time in his office i remember him just being just being more quiet and not being himself and looking stressed out and. just fucking different should be just this tremendous discomfort with being on that particular truck and really made me wonder you know should i be on it.
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here's what people have been saying about redacted in the navy throughout the sixty's full on awesome well the only show i go out of my way to find generally what it is that really packs a punch at least yampa is the john oliver of marty americans do the same thing we are apparently better than blue that i see nothing but you never heard of love redacted the night not the president of the world bank so take time to write me seriously send us an e-mail we'll willingly accepted the risk of being shot wounded taken prisoner but noone signed up to be friggin poisoned by our own people i've seen stuff that was nuclear biological and chemical products the said do not truck tires all types of styrofoam polystyrene batteries trucks there
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was a complete denial i think at all levels of government that there was any connection between berm pits and what these brave soldiers were suffering from to compensate every soldier marine airman and sailor that was on the ground that are complaining about illnesses from their exposure from the berm pits would really literally send a be a broke and they don't want to pay it so the waiting in decades a lot of those soldiers will die in time and they will have to pay and. cultural and get the middle finger to the b.s. and finally. delayed and i hope you die. when the make this manufacture come sentenced him to the public wealthy. when the ruling classes to protect themselves. with the find.
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politics that's what many are saying. bernie sanders was cheated in the primaries but the rigging goes further the g.o.p. establishment. parties. with themselves. about your sudden passing i've only just learned you worry yourself and taken your last wrong turn. your attitude up to you as we all knew it would i tell you i'm sorry suddenly i could so i write these last words in hopes to put to rest these things that i never got off my chest. i remember when we first met my life turned
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on each friend. but then my feeling started change you talked about war like it was a cave still some are fond of you those that didn't like to question our ark and i secretly promised to never be like it said one does not leave a funeral the same as one enters the mind it's consumed with death this one to. speak to us there are no other takers. claimed that mainstream media has met its maker. the the. i'm not supposed to. i my little mother was.
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sorry lead a coalition airplanes carry out an air strike on the ministry of defense and in the yemen old cat yemeni capital of sanaa. u.s. air force claims a missile that was all launched at saudi arabia from yemen on saturday was iranian made that despite her problems with dolls it had supplied any such hardware to rebels in yemen. regulars' founder join. song says that u.k. prosecutors have admitted to deleting e-mail exchanges concerning his case. my colleague takes the helm and next hour for an in-depth look at today's top stories but for now it's cross talk where they tackle the dysfunction gripping both political parties in washington stay with us.
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