Thursday, January 11, 2007

The Big Business of Medicine :
THE USA'S FDA (FEDERAL FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION) IS NOW PARTNER IN THE CRIMES OF BIG PHARMA (THE TRANSNATIONAL DRUG CORPORATIONS)
by Justice Lover

The following article reveals what has been suspected for a long time now, namely, that the FDA, the USA government body which is supposed to protect the USA public, is actually aiding and abetting the colossal crimes perpetrated by Big Pharma worldwide against the people. This is terrorism, fascist terrorism of the worst kind, against millions of innocent victims.

There is, of course, one more partner to those crimes : the profession of psychiatry, and its individual practitioners, particularly the various states' psychitarists. Without this partner most of Big Pharma's crimes could not have been committed and "justified" in the name of medicine.

Here is the article as published today by counterpunch.com :

January 10, 2007
The Big Business of Medicine
How the FDA Protects Big Pharma

by EVELYN PRINGLE

Why would Americans trust the FDA to regulate the pharmaceutical industry? Since the Bush administration took office the FDA has become the industry's partner in crime.

The most notorious protection scheme put in place by the FDA and Big Pharma is the preemption policy that bans private lawsuits against drug companies in state courts once a drug and its label have been approved by the FDA.

On January 18, 2006, the FDA issued new rules for the labeling of prescription drugs, and in the preamble to the rules on page 43, the FDA says, State law actions "threaten FDA's statutorily prescribed role as the expert Federal agency responsible for evaluating and regulating drugs," requiring lay persons to second-guess its expert assessments of a drug's risks and benefits.

So, after all of the concerns raised about the FDA's failure to protect consumers against dangerous products over the last several year, by top experts from all over the world, the FDA has hereby declared itself the sole authority on decisions regarding prescription drugs, including whether a drug's label contains adequate descriptions of indications for use, risks and benefits.

In an October 6, 2006, articled titled, "The Doctrine of Preemption," Stan Kaufman aptly refers to the new policy as the "Doctrine of Preemptive Crony Capitalism." When announcing this multi-billion dollar immunization gift to Big Pharma, the FDA told drug makers:

"We think that if your company complies with the FDA processes, if you bring forward the benefits and risks of your drug, and let your information be judged through a process with highly trained scientists, you should not be second-guessed by state courts that don't have the same scientific knowledge."

The preemption claim reverses a long-standing policy of permitting State actions intended to protect consumers and undermines the States' ability to protect their citizens, yet State and local entities were given no opportunity to object to it.

Under Executive Order 13132, issued first by President Reagan, and then reissued by President Clinton, the FDA is supposed to consult with State and local authorities about the effects of each regulation it issues that affects the States.

Nowhere in the proposed rule did the FDA provide notice or seek comment on the preemption provisions added to the preamble. In the only proposed rule known to State and local officials, the FDA said that the regulation would not preempt State law. In fact, the language published in the Federal Register on December 22, 2000, explicitly stated that "this proposed rule does not preempt state law."

The rule requested comment on products liability issues, but only by asking whether the new "Highlights" section raised liability concerns and, if so, how the FDA might alleviate those concerns without eliminating the Highlights section. This request can hardly be called "notice" of the preemption statement that suddenly appeared in the preamble in 2006.

By relying on this false representation, State and local authorities were robbed of any opportunity to object to the preamble. In a January 2006, letter to Michael Leavitt, Secretary of Health and Human Services, the National Conference of State Legislators called the regulation a "thinly veiled attempt on the part of FDA to confer upon itself authority it does not have by statute."
The NCSL also stated the failure to allow for an appropriate comment period constitutes "an abuse of agency process and complete disregard for dual system of government."

Ken Suggs, president of the Association of Trial Lawyers of America, was quoted in the January 19, 2006 Washington Post, as saying, the "fact that the drug industry can get the FDA to rewrite the rules so that CEOs can escape accountability for putting dangerous and deadly drugs on the market is the scariest example yet of how much control these big corporations have over the political process."

Legal experts point out that it was never the intent of Congress to preempt private lawsuits in State courts, and that in fact, when Congress was considering the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act of 1938, it specifically rejected a proposal to include a private right of action for damages on the ground that such a right already existed under State common law.

According to Houston attorney, Robert Kwok, who handles complex pharmaceutical litigation involving drugs such Fosamax, Norvasc and SSRI antidepressants like Celexa:

"The real losers from this attempted power grab would be the millions of Americans who depend on safe drugs. Without the protection of state laws Big Pharma can ride shipshod over Americans who are injured by their unsafe drugs. That's unacceptable and I'm seeing even conservative judges resist it."

Many members of Congress have also weighed in on the issue and reaffirmed that Congress never intended to preempt State claims in a February 23, 2006, letter to Michael Leavitt, Secretary of Health and Human Services, from Representatives Henry Waxman (D-Calif.), John Dingell (D-Mi.), and Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio).

Rep. Maurice Hinchey (R-NY) and Senator Edward Kennedy (D-MA), have threatened to fight preemption through legislation if necessary. Rep. Hinchey issued a press release on January 18, 2006, immediately after the policy was announced, stating that the "FDA has once again gone to bat for the drug industry by fully endorsing a policy that shelters pharmaceutical companies from Americans who want to file lawsuits because a drug has made them or a loved one seriously ill, or in some cases caused death."

Rep. Hinchey also called it "the latest example of the FDA sticking its nose where it does not belong and treating the drug companies as clients rather than regulated entities."

The FDA's language on page 38 of the preamble that states "whether it be in the old or new format, the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act preempts conflicting or contrary state law," appears to imply that the preemption policy is retroactive.
Part of the language also says that lawsuits against doctors are preempted for failure-to-warn patients of risks associated with a drug, apparently even when a drug is prescribed "off-label," for a use other than those approved by the FDA.

"Pre-emption would include not only claims against manufacturers," the FDA states, "but also against health-care practitioners for claims related to dissemination of risk information to patients beyond what is included in the labeling."

The FDA has never before, in its entire history, claimed that a drug label preempts actions against health care professionals for failure-to-warn patients about risks. In fact, labels carry no information about the risks or benefits of "off-label" uses.

Critics see this language as an attempt to immunize all the doctors who the industry has convinced to over-prescribe drugs to treat conditions or patient populations for which the drugs have never been approved as safe and effective to increase profits.

"Doctors need to be held just as accountable as the drug manufacturers when things go wrong," attorney Kwok says.
"The profession of medicine is in danger of being totally co-oped by the business of medicine," he warns, "with more and more of the burden is being placed on the consumer."

"And with only minimum consumer protection standards set by the FDA, that isn't very reassuring," Mr Kwok notes.
"I predict there could be a flood of litigation," he says, "before FDA policy changes any more."

In any event, restrictions that the FDA places on drug labeling do not prohibit drug companies from disseminating warnings about a danger by other means. When it originally promulgated these regulations, the FDA made clear that:
These labeling requirements do not prohibit a manufacturer, packer, re-labeler, or from warning health care professionals whenever possibly harmful adverse effects associated with the use of the drug are discovered.

The addition to labeling and advertising of additional warnings, as well as contraindications, adverse reactions, and precautions regarding the drug, or the issuance of letters directed to health care professionals (e.g., "Dear Doctor" letters containing such information) is not prohibited by these regulations. 44 Fed. Reg. 37434, 37447 (June 26, 1979).

One of the main authors of the new labeling rules was the FDA's Chief Counsel at the time, Daniel Troy, who in previous employment fought the FDA in court to allow drug companies to promote drugs to doctors for "off label" use.
Its now obvious when looking back, that Mr. Troy was appointed by the Bush administration to implement tort reform under the guise of preemption, and under the cover of the Office of Chief Counsel at the FDA.

In the midst of the Vioxx and SSRI antidepressant disasters, instead of going after the drug makers for knowingly injuring hundreds of thousands of consumers with dangerous products, Mr. Troy devoted the majority of his time on the clock to filing five amicus briefs on behalf of Big Pharma to be used against the very citizens who were paying his salary.

In his briefs, Mr. Troy focused his main attention on protecting the profits of the makers of SSRIs, drugs second only to Vioxx when it comes to the concealment of studies and information about harm that if revealed, could have prevented tens of thousands of deaths and injuries over the past 20 years.

And even though there has been an infinite number of reports over the past decade regarding an increased risk of suicide with SSRIs, instead of withdrawing the approval of the drugs, requiring more studies, or demanding a warning be added to their label, Mr. Troy did nothing to protect potential SSRI victims as Chief Counsel of the FDA.

In late 2004, Mr. Troy quit the FDA to go back into private practice to once again represent pharmaceutical companies openly against private citizens, only with the added benefit of using the preemption defense he put in place.
On October 9, 2006, Mr. Troy published an article in the Legal Times, that said, "I was also at the FDA while January's Physician Labeling Rule, which contains a statement in its preamble about the FDA's pre-emption authority, was written."

"And I now," he states in an obvious ad for new clients, "advise and represent companies confronting state-law claims that implicate the pre-emptive effect of FDA requirements."

In the Times article, Mr. Troy points out the importance of drug companies staying cozy with the FDA to ensure success in future litigation. "Savvy companies," he wrote, "are recognizing that how they interact with the FDA today may profoundly affect their pre-emption defenses in the future."
"They are trying to ensure their communications with the agency are as formal as they can be," he said, "in light of commercial considerations and the need to stay on the FDA's good side."

"More formal communications," he advises, "can help buttress a future case for why a particular state law claim should be pre-empted."

In the article, Mr. Troy brags that his filing of FDA briefs on behalf of Big Pharma "has reduced the negative consequences of the current pharmaceutical-liability regime."

But for once, he at least mentions that it cost the tax payers plenty. "FDA involvement in state-law cases is not an ideal solution," he writes, "not least because each instance of such involvement involves the costly investment of substantial agency resources."

It should be noted that two years before Mr. Troy filed his first brief as a kick-off for the preemption policy, the "costly investment of substantial agency resources" went for an FDA brief, in which the FDA acknowledged "the historic primacy of state regulation of matters of health and safety" and the appropriateness of a presumption against preemption where the state-law claims allege defective design, negligent manufacturing, or failure-to-warn in, Buckman v. Plaintiffs' Legal Committee, 531 US 341 (2001).

In the Legal Times, Mr. Troy goes on to explain that the new labeling rule is intended to limit the direct involvement of the FDA in lawsuits. "The preamble to that rule," he says, "makes an official statement of FDA's views on preemption easily available to courts hearing state-law tort cases."
"If courts give appropriate deference to this statement of FDA's considered judgment," he notes, "FDA will not be forced to file briefs in individual cases."

Until reading this article, its likely that most people had never realized that Mr. Troy was "forced" to file briefs on behalf of Big Pharma while he worked at the FDA.

In a March 31, 2006 paper, titled, State-Level Protection for Good-Faith Pharmaceutical Manufacturers, Mr. Troy can be found advising State lawmakers to pass shield laws for Big Pharma based on a Michigan model, to "help to reduce the negative consequences of the current pharmaceutical-liability regime," he says.
"In so doing," he states, "they would help to encourage the development of new drugs, preserve the availability of existing drugs, reduce upward pressure on drug prices, and assure rational prescribing."

Such a statement might be a wee bit credible if it also included a suggestion for the lowering of the multi-million dollar annual salary and benefit packages enjoyed by Big Pharma CEOs or a reduction in the billions of dollars that are spent each year on illegal off-label promotion and marketing schemes.

For all the whining he does about litigation keeping products off the market, Mr. Troy cannot cite a single case in which a failure-to-warn claim interfered with the FDA's federal regulatory authority or kept a drug off the market. In fact, in a lecture to Big Pharma attorneys in December 2003, on how to use the preemption defense, Mr. Troy told the attorneys that the FDA had "no good evidence" showing product liability concerns "keep good products off the market," even though he had "combed the literature" to find such evidence.

Apparently to help resolve this nagging little problem, Mr. Troy told the defense attorneys to pay for research to find some evidence to back this claim even if it was weak, stating: "you guys really shoot yourself in the foot by not funding research to this effect. ... I'll even take anecdotal evidence and stories if you have them."

Mr. Troy filed the FDA's first brief in support of Big Pharma in September 2002, in the California Zoloft case titled Motus v. Pfizer, after he was contacted by Pfizer attorney, Malcolm Wheeler, in the summer of 2002, requesting that he get the government involved to help Pfizer win the preemption argument.

Despite the fact that Pfizer had paid Mr. Troy's law firm over $358,000 in the year before he became Chief Counsel, Mr. Troy argued later that he did not become involved in the case until after the 1-year grace period in which employees may not participate in activities involving former clients. From all public accounts, the time period elapsed less then a month before he entered the case.

In the brief, Mr. Troy argued that any warning that suggested a link between Zoloft and suicidality would have been false and misleading, and the FDA would have rejected any effort to add such a warning. However, that argument contradicts 21 CFR § 314.126(b), which requires warnings to be added based on reasonable evidence of an association, even absent proof of a causal relationship. The preemption issue was never decided in Motus because the case was concluded on unrelated grounds.

Legal experts say the preemption defense will not only be used in SSRI-related suicide cases, it will be applied in SSRI cases involving the failure-to-warn about other types of injuries and deaths caused by these drugs as well.
For instance, Big Pharma will no doubt attempt to preempt cases filed on behalf of infants born with birth defects to mothers who unwittingly took the drugs during pregnancy, such as with Lacee Shore, who was prescribed Celexa during her first trimester of pregnancy and as a result, her baby, Gavin Shore, was born with serious heart birth defects and diagnosed with Shone's Complex, which can lead to the obstruction of blood flowing to the body from the left side of the heart.

Gavin has already gone through several surgeries in attempt to correct the heart defects and will have to undergo more in the future.
The successful use of the preemption argument in a case such as this, where the drug maker, Forest Laboratories, could and should have warned doctors and pregnant women about the possibility of birth defects associated with Celexa, would leave the Shore family strapped with the burden of life-long medical costs related to Gavin's condition.

According to attorney Kwok, who is handling the Shore case, the birth defect situation is even more devastating than with patients harmed by Vioxx because the Celexa victims are so young. "Their whole lives," he says, "if they survive, will be under the threat of illness and additional surgery, with a very poor prognosis."

Mr. Kwok points to a 1990 study conducted at the University of Michigan that shows the outlook for infants born with heart defects like Gavin is very poor. "One quarter of patients die after their second operation," he says.
"The second operations are very often necessary," he explains, "because of the complexity of the heart problem."

Forest Labs knew about the potential for birth defects caused by Celexa because more than two years before Gavin was born, on June 9, 2004, Web MD reported that the FDA was concerned about reports that SSRIs may cause adverse effects to babies born to mothers taking the drugs late in pregnancy.
According to Web MD, the FDA had been receiving reports for 10 years. In fact, it said that hundreds of reports on adverse effects in babies were received involving all the SSRIs sold in the US, which would include Prozac, Paxil, Luvox, Zoloft, and Celexa.

In July 2004, the FDA finally asked the SSRI makers to change the labels, warning that some infants had developed problems requiring tube feeding, respiratory support, and prolonged hospitalizations.
On September 1, 2005, the BBC reported that Danish and U.S. scientists found that cardiac birth defects appeared to be 60% more likely in newborns when women used SSRIs.
Studies show that women are prescribed SSRIs twice as often as men and yet the drug makers have made no effort to evaluate the use of these drugs with pregnant women. And as a result, Mr. Kwok says, "new moms are finding out too late that the Celexa they took was putting their unborn baby in grave danger."

A successful preemption ruling would go a long way as far as protecting profits against damage awards based birth defects, because pregnant women represent a major share of the market. According to a May 2005, study in the Journal of American Medical Association, 80,000 pregnant women are prescribed SSRIs in any given year in the U.S., which means there are bound to be many cases where babies were born with birth defects.

The majority of courts that have addressed the preemption argument have ruled against it. One of the first federal courts to specifically rule against the FDA's preamble position was a Nebraska District Court on May 31, 2006, in Jackson v. Pfizer, where the plaintiffs' son took both Zoloft and Effexor and then committed suicide.

The parents alleged that the drugs caused their son to commit suicide and Nebraska law required additional warnings about the suicide risk. The drug maker defendants moved for summary judgment claiming that the State law claims were preempted by the FDA.

The court said that the claims were not preempted because the federal regulations did not conflict with State law and specifically held that there was no Congressional directive that the field was preempted.

The court stated the FDA preamble was not persuasive and pointed out that the Eighth Circuit had adopted the proposition that the FDA prescribes only minimum standards and the Fourth Circuit had declared that complying with federal regulations does not release a manufacturer from liability.
The court also noted that the FDA "failed . . . to allow the states an opportunity to participate in the proceedings prior to a preemption decision," and dismissed the FDA's brief stating that it "will not treat amicus briefs as the force of law."

On May 25, 2006, a federal court in Pennsylvania was the first to grant the FDA's preemption rule full deference in a wrongful death and survival action, with failure-to-warn claims against Paxil maker GlaxoSmithKline, and generic Paxil maker Apotex, in Colacicco v. Apotex, Inc, Civ No 05-cv-5500, 2006 WL 1443357 (E.D. Pa. May 26, 2006).

In this case, the plaintiff alleged that his wife's suicide resulted from the drug makers' failure-to-warn of the increased risk of suicide linked to Paxil and its generic equivalent.
The judge on his own initiative, invited the FDA to file a brief. The current Chief Counsel, Sheldon Bradshaw, went to bat for the drug makers and filed a brief at record speed within 20 days, urging the court to dismiss the lawsuit on the basis of preemption, stating that in October 2003, when Paxil was prescribed to the suicide victim, "there was no reasonable evidence available at the time of an association between adult use of the drug and suicide."
The FDA argued that any such warning regarding an association between Paxil and suicide would have been false or misleading, and thus would have constituted misbranding under the FDCA.


The plaintiff responded by arguing that the court should not afford deference to the brief because 21 C.F.R. § 314.70, does permit manufacturers to strengthen labels without FDA approval and the FDA has no authority to simply declare that a drug is misbranded.

The court disagreed and determined that it was to give significant deference to the amicus brief based on the U.S. Supreme Court's decisions in Chevron, Medtronic, and Geier which state that an amicus brief is an appropriate form to express preemptive intent and held that the principles of deference do not permit a court to question the FDA's interpretation of its own regulations.
The plaintiff argued that the preamble which was promulgated in 2006 could not be retroactively applied to the October 2003, death of his wife. However, the Court said that preemption could be applied retroactively because the preamble simply clarified the FDA's "longstanding views on preemption," and characterized the preamble as an "interpretive rule," rendering retroactivity concerns "irrelevant."

The Court went on to say that even if the preamble did not apply retroactively, it would have found preemption anyway based on the views previously expressed in amicus briefs by the FDA.

An appeal is pending on the Colacicco decision, and the case has drawn amicus support from a dozen scientists and doctors who contend that preemption "would threaten the public health and eliminate an important counterpart to the public health objectives of the FDA."

The national non-profit consumer advocacy organization, Public Citizen, the Trial Lawyers for Public Justice, a national public interest law firm, and the Association of Trial Lawyers of America, an international coalition of attorneys, law professors, paralegals, and law students, have together filed an amicus brief supporting Mr Colacicco, stating:
"Products liability lawsuits help to protect patients from drugs with undisclosed risks because the potential for being held liable for harm caused by their products provides a powerful incentive for drug companies to make their products as safe and effective as possible and to revise labels as soon as new risks become apparent.


"Furthermore, because FDA lacks authority to subpoena documents from the companies it regulates, products liability lawsuits help to uncover information that can lead to safer products."

In fact, the group points out, since at least several months before the victim's suicide, the FDA had been reviewing data about a possible link between SSRIs and suicidality, and the agency issued a Public Health Advisory on the topic in October 2003, the same month that Mrs. Colacicco died.
The amicus brief also notes that the FDA's preemption statement lacks the "consistency" needed to warrant any degree of deference because prior to 2002, the FDA's consistent view was that State common law was not preempted by federal drug regulation. "For example," the brief wrote, "in both 1979 and 1998, in preambles accompanying various drug regulations, FDA stated that state tort law did not interfere with federal regulation."

In 1998, when addressing pharmacists' provision of written patient information for "Medication Guides," when issuing the final rule, the FDA rejected calls for the agency to express an intent to preempt State regulation of labeling requirements stating:
"FDA regulations establish minimal standards necessary, but were not intended to preclude states from imposing additional labeling requirements. States may authorize additional labeling but they cannot reduce, alter, or eliminate FDA-required labeling." 63 Fed. Reg. at 66384.
According to the amicus brief, "The authority to regulate drug labeling may carry with it the authority to address state drug labeling regulations, but it does not carry with it authority to determine the preemptive effect of federal regulation on state common-law compensation systems."

It appears that the FDA's own regulations acknowledge that preambles are not statements of law and that they should not be presented as such in legal proceedings.
The amicus group states that the preamble is not part of the regulation, will not appear in the Code of Federal Regulations, and does not have the force of law. "In fact," the brief notes citing FDA regulations, "a longstanding FDA regulation provides that a statement in a regulatory preamble constitutes only an "advisory opinion."

The FDA recognizes that an advisory opinion may be used to "illustrate acceptable . . . procedures or standard, but not as a legal requirement," the brief points out.
"Having made no effort to legislate on the topic of drug-related damages remedies," the brief concludes, "Congress can hardly be said to have authorized FDA to supersede the damages remedies traditionally provided by the states."

There was an extremely important preemption ruling handed down on June 9, 2006, in the Vioxx case of Doherty v. Merck prior to the beginning of the actual jury trial. Merck moved to dismiss the failure-to-warn claim arguing that the preamble barred claims with respect to FDA approved drugs.
The June 9, ruling from the bench, drew massive attention to the case when New Jersey Superior Court Judge, Carol Higbee, refused to exclude the claims.
"The preamble, as I see it, is a political statement by the FDA," she said.
"The primary purpose of it," she stated, "is to criticize state courts and to set forth the FDA's position, not to criticize state courts so much as to set forth the FDA's position that they believe there should be federal preemption of all tort actions."

"What the preamble is saying," Judge Higbee noted, "is the FDA should be the final word."

She refused to dismiss the claims based on the preamble she said, because it "has nothing to do with science." In conclusion, she told Merck defense attorneys:
"It has nothing to do with what happened back in 2000, 2001, 2002, when these issues were being debated. It is contrary to the U.S. Supreme Court's decisions. It is contrary to all the law on preemption.
"And I am not going to allow you to use it."
Merck later enjoyed a victory at trial when a jury decided that Vioxx was not the main cause of Elaine Doherty's heart attack, but a favorable ruling on the preemption issue prior to trial could have potentially saved the company billions of dollars. According to the company's SEC filings, as of October 9, 2006, Merck is a named defendant in about 13,850 Vioxx cases in the New Jersey State court coordinated litigation.

The next victory using the preemption argument was a major win in August, 2006, when a California court dismissed the Celebrex failure-to-warn claims against Pfizer, In re Bextra and Celebrex Marketing Sales Practices and Product Liability Litigation, No M: 05-1699 CRB, 2006 WL 2374742 (N.D. CA, August 16, 2006).
In opposing the motion, the plaintiffs argued that because the FDCA does not provide a monetary remedy, Congress must not have intended the FDA to have authority over damage claims and that the FDA's position on preemption was not entitled to deference because it was clearly erroneous and inconsistent with the regulations.

Saying the FDA specifically considered the safety risks about Celebrex alleged in the lawsuit and determined the risks should not be included on the label, the court said the failure-to-warn claims "conflict with the FDA's determination of the proper warning and pose an obstacle to the full accomplishment of the objectives of the FDCA."
But the judge refused to dismiss the false advertising claims. The plaintiffs argued that the Celebrex ads were false and misleading because they exceeded the labeled and approved gastrointestinal benefits and also minimized the established risks of the drug.
Pfizer claimed that because it submitted the ads for FDA approval, and the FDA did not object, the FDA had determined that the ads were accurate and struck a fair balance of the risks and the benefits of Celebrex.
However, the court refused to preempt the claims without a record showing that the FDA had reviewed each ad and approved it. The court also pointed out the FDA's silence about whether its regulations preempt false advertising claims, in contrast to its stated position on failure-to-warn claims.
A little over a month later, on September 29, 2006, across the country in New Jersey, the court in McNellis v. Pfizer, refused to allow the preemption defense based in part on the fact that the text of FDA regulations had remained unchanged for years, and the regulations did not conflict with New Jersey's failure-to-warn laws.

The McNellis Zoloft-suicide case comes with a history. On December 29, 2005, the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey had also denied Pfizer's original motion for summary judgment. The court reasoned that the FDA's approval of a label creates only a minimum standard and that the drug maker may strengthen the warnings as long as the new warning is not false or misleading.

* * *

After the FDA published the new rule and preamble with the preemptive language in January 2006, Pfizer filed another motion asking the court to vacate the order denying summary judgment, or to certify the question for interlocutory appeal
In opposing the motion, Ms. McNellis said that the preamble amounted to nothing more than the FDA's opinion on preemption; the same opinion expressed previously by the FDA in amicus briefs, and the same opinion already rejected by the court. It is irrelevant that this opinion now comes in the form of a preamble to a regulation rather than an amicus brief, she said.
In her brief filed on March 2, 2006, Ms. McNellis argued that the FDA had also exceeded its authority, stating:

"In this instance, an executive agency, the FDA, has expressed an opinion that Congress has never agreed to. Without notice or comment, the FDA found it within its jurisdiction to go against the wishes of Congress as well as the wishes of those states which have product liability failure-to-warn statutes."

Ms. McNellis also pointed out that the last six courts to decide the issue "have found, consistent with this Court's finding, that the FDA regulations establish minimum requirements such that they do not preempt state tort laws."
She also noted that the preamble was not in effect at the time that her father committed suicide as a result of taking Zoloft.

The court held that regulations allow a drug company to increase warnings when new risks emerge, that the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act does not contain a preemption clause, and that Congress gave no implicit empowerment to the FDA to preempt State law.

Following the McNellis decision, on October 16, 2006, a federal court in Pennsylvania refused to grant the drug maker's preemption motion on the failure-to-warn claims in Perry v. Novartis Pharma Corp, --- F Supp 2d ----, 2006 WL 2979388.

This case involved Elidel, a drug used to treat eczema, prescribed to Andreas Perry when he was 2-years-old. Six months after he began using the cream, in October, 2003, Andreas was diagnosed with a form of cancer known as lymphoblastic lymphoma.

Elidel belongs to a class of drugs known as calcineurin inhibitors, so called because they reduce immune activity by inhibiting the activity of the enzyme calcineurin. Prior to the approval of Elidel for treating skin conditions in children over 2 years of age, calcineurin inhibitors were used as systemic immunosuppressants in organ transplant patients.

Systemic use of the drugs has long been known to increase the risk of cancer and the labels on the drugs prescribed to organ transplant patients say so. But because Elidel is applied topically for eczema, it was not known at the time of approval in December 2001, whether long-term use posed a risk of cancer.

This case illustrates why drug companies must be made to alert the public of known dangers as soon as they are known. On February 15, 2005, an FDA advisory committee met to discuss calcineurin inhibitors. In particular, reports of "off label" use of the drugs in children under two caused concern for some members of the committee.

At the meeting, the committee voted to add a "Black Box" warning about the possible increased risk of cancer associated with the topical use of Elidel, and the lack of long-term safety data on the use of the drug.

On March 10, 2005, the FDA told the drug maker to add a "Black Box" warning and issued a public health advisory about the possible cancer risk. However, it was nearly a year later when Novartis finally got around to adding a "Black Box" warning to Elidel's label on January 19, 2006.

In their brief in opposition to the preemption motion to dismiss, the plaintiffs said that the FDA's broad claim of preemption is not entitled to deference, "whether it is expressed in the January 2006 Preamble to the Final Rule," or "in amicus curiae briefs filed by the agency in support of drug manufacturers."
"The FDA's claims," the brief wrote, "which are tantamount to an advisory opinion, lack the force of law and contradict the FDA's governing statute, its regulations, and its regulatory purpose."
It also noted that the FDA's current opinion directly opposes the FDA's longstanding views on preemption. "For these reasons," the brief pointed out, "a majority of courts that have considered this issue, both before and after the FDA issued the Preamble, have held that FDA approval of labeling does not preempt state failure-to-warn claims."

In denying Novartis' preemption motion, U.S. District Court Judge, Stewart Dalzell, of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, wrote in the decision that the FDA's new "Preamble is not entitled to any special consideration in our analysis."
Where the agency attempts to "supply, on Congress's behalf, the clear legislative statement of intent required to overcome the presumption against preemption," no deference is warranted, he noted.

In reaching its decision, the court said preemption would only apply if a specific warning about Elidel and pediatric cancer had been considered by the FDA and found to be unnecessary and that had not happened in this case.
In discussing the FDA's assertions in its amicus brief, the court stated, "To be sure, because of its expertise in the area, the FDA's construction of its own regulations is likely to carry great weight."
"But where an interpretation has changed frequently in significant respects," it wrote, "the persuasive force of the argument diminishes."
The court also said that even if the Preamble represents a change of policy with the force of law, it would not apply to this case. "The FDA cannot retroactively absolve Novartis of a duty it may have owed the Perrys in 2003," it wrote.
The court also noted that the FDCA provides no remedy for an injured consumer and said, "a finding of preemption here will foreclose a remedy that was traditionally available and for which federal law provides no substitute."
In its decision, the court made an interesting observation about the viability of the preemption defense on failure-to-warn claims based on other available methods of warning the public about the dangers of a drug, stating:
"It is worth noting that, even where FDA regulations or other federal law prevent a manufacturer from modifying the approved labeling, a modification of the label is not the only form that a warning could take.
"If, for example, a plaintiff claimed that a manufacturer was negligent in not sending a letter to prescribing physicians or other health care professionals, that might present a different case, even if modification of the approved labeling were prohibited."
In conclusion, citing a September 23, 2006, New York Times report by Gardiner Harris, the court said, "given the recent concerns about the effectiveness of the FDA's safety monitoring of recently approved drugs, . . . the availability of state law tort suits provides an important backstop to the federal regulatory scheme," and further stated:
"If, at some future date, Congress determines that FDA monitoring is sufficiently effective on its own to warrant the elimination of state law incentives for manufacturers to provide adequate warnings, it also has the authority to declare that failure-to-warn suits, like the Perrys' action, are preempted."
"Until it does so, however," the court said, "in the absence of a specific FDA safety determination, such suits can go forward." (Emphasis added - B.M.)

Families seeking legal advice for infants born with birth defects to mothers who were prescribed Celexa during pregnancy can contact Robert Kwok & Associates, LLP at (713) 773-3380; http://www.kwoklaw.com/about.php
Evelyn Pringle is an investigative journalist. She can be reached at: evelyn.pringle@sbcglobal.net
(

Friday, January 05, 2007

British Psychiatrist Slams TeenScreen
Excerpts From BBC Interview of Joanna Moncrieff, MD, Senior Lecturer in Psychiatry at University College London
emailed by parents_against_teenscreen@earthlink.net


Date:
Thu, 4 Jan 2007 17:10:17 -0500

British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) Radio Excerpted from Interview of Joanna Moncrieff, MD. Interviewer: Claudia HammondJanuary 3, 2007Audio can be found here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vBfA2OBirBI “All in the Mind” reports from the U.S.A. on the increasing controversial mental health screening programs for school children.

Now, here’s Claudia Hammond with “All in the Mind”.

Claudia Hammond: The biggest screening program is TeenScreen; it’s a quick questionnaire designed for 9-18 year olds. And the idea is to highlight anyone who might have symptoms of a psychiatric problem.But not everyone is happy with the idea. Everyday teenage behaviour might be pathologized as illness and that the more children who are screened the more children will end up on psychiatric medication. And some parents are unhappy that their children were given the test at all.

Claudia Hammond: Joanna, in Chelsea’s case, the issue of consent did seem to be a big problem. But if in principal, if parental consent is obtained and it’s all voluntary, I mean it sounds like a kind of laudable aim to try and screen individuals.

Joanna Moncrieff: Well firstly on the issue of consent, in order for it to be informed consent, parents really ought to be told that there is no evidence that screening is actually going to prevent suicide, which is one of the main reasons it was introduced and also that the evidence about standard psychiatric treatment; such as drug treatments in children is questionable.For example the trials on the use of antidepressants in children are inconsistent and many of them show that antidepressants do not have good effects in children. So parental consent needs to be properly informed consent. And I’m not at all convinced that the parents are getting the full facts when they’re being asked about whether to submit their children to this screening program.I think the problem with screening is that, it’s already suggesting way before you get into a clinical interview ,that it’s already starting to reframe peoples’ problems in medical terms, and so even if the people who do this screening test don’t actually say explicitly to the children that they’ve got a psychiatric disorder called “this”. The children will take away from the experience of screening that they have a psychiatric problem and that they’re psychiatrically ill and in today’s’ climate many people will assume that that means that they need drug treatment. One test of the screening instrument that happened in Colorado diagnosed 50% of children as having evidence of possibly having some psychiatric disorder.

Claudia Hammond: 50%? That really is quite high isn’t it?

Joanna Moncrieff: It is indeed. And although not all of those people would probably have a confirmed diagnoses after a clinical interview, you’ve already started to suggest to them and their families that there’s something’s wrong and that what is wrong is a medical or psychiatric problem.

Claudia Hammond: So Joanna, if it’s all voluntary like that and it’s framed in such a way that the children themselves and their parents know exactly what it is they’re filling in and what this test can do and can’t do; isn’t that sort of reasonable to sort of highlight things if you can do it in a very sensitive way?

Joanna Moncrieff: Well first of all, as you know it hasn’t always been done in a voluntary way; often the screening has been implemented when parents haven’t objected to it rather then actually parents actively agreeing to their children to be screened. But secondly I think although many children will attend a clinical interview and won’t necessarily go on to be diagnosed and put on drug treatment. Actually even the experience of going to see a psychiatrist may be very frightening and very stigmatizing for some people, especially some young people. I think as psychiatrists we get immune to that and loose sight of how perturbing it is to be told that even might have a psychiatric problem. And of course some children will end up on drug treatment and we know that more and more children are being put on drug treatment. And I think that there is not enough concern about that at the moment.

Claudia Hammond: Joanna , what do you think will happen here? Will we see this coming across the Atlantic and being introduced in schools in the U.K. do you think?

Joanna Moncrieff: I don’t know whether we’ll actually get the full screening, with use of screening instruments. But we already see evidence in the U.K. of the sort of attitudes that inspired screening in the U.S.For example, many more childhood behavioural problems are being labelled as psychiatric disorders, are being given diagnostic labels and the use of a range of psychiatric drugs such as Ritalin and stimulants, antidepressants and antipsychotics; their uses all increasing in line with trends in the United States albeit not as dramatically.


Claudia Hammond: If screening programs do start to appear over here we’ll keep you up to date on “All in the Mind” But in the meantime do let us know what you think about the idea of screening teenagers in schools. You can email us at allinthemind@bbc.co

Joanna is a Senior Lecturer in Psychiatry at University College London, department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Science. She has published several critical reviews of psychiatric drug treatments, as well as papers on the history of psychiatry. She is the founding member and co chair person of the Critical Psychiatry Network (web site: www.critpsynet.freeuk.com). This is a network of psychiatrists in the UK who challenge some of the orthodox thinking in psychiatry, especially the emphasis on the medical model of psychiatric disorder, and the link between psychiatry and coercion.
(Emphasis added - Justice Lover)

Sunday, December 24, 2006

The following press cutting was emailed to me today by Parents Against TeenScreen.
(Emphasis added).


http://www.dailydem.com/articles/2006/12/08/opinion/opinion1.txt


There are “facts” and then there is the truth

Your recently published a letter from two social workers - Ms. Gutman and Ms. Jarvis - on the subject of TeenScreen. Curiously, it was entitled the "facts" about the TeenScreen program.I think the social workers should crack open a dictionary and look up what a "fact" is. Obviously with no investigation of their own, they accept and spew the "facts" given to them by TeenScreen.

One of the definitions for facts is "something said to be true or supposed to have happened," as in this example: "The facts given by the witness are highly questionable." Yet the public doesn't want or need that kind of "facts" to be presented as truth. They need real facts, as in this definition: "something that actually exists; reality; truth."

Ms. Gutman's and Ms. Jarvis' letter is full of assertions, none of which can be proven by evidence. TeenScreen spawned a lawsuit in Indiana because a teen was screened and labeled with a mental disorder without her parents' knowledge.TeenScreen refuses to release the identity of their mysterious donors.

Many members of TeenScreen's executive board have connections to drug companies. TeenScreen's biggest supporter and co-conspirator is NAMI, which receives millions from drug companies, a verifiable fact because NAMI is a non-profit organization required to reveal its contributors.TeenScreen is intimately involved in treatment, as evidenced by the fact that TeenScreen always partners with a local mental health provider so that identified youth can be directed into treatment. That information can be found on TeenScreen's own website.

Suicide IS a horrible tragedy. No one is denying that. Yet, suicide is very, very, very rare. If you want to see how rare, click on http://www.psychsearch.net/rare/iowa.html You'll see that the suicide rate for youth in Iowa as reported by the CDC is 2.62 per 100,000. That's a very small number. Screening identifies 30% or higher youth as needing further evaluation. Screening is obviously good for finding new customers for the mental health system but it's complete folly to pretend that its purpose is finding those at risk and preventing suicide.

Add to that the FACT that the FDA requires a black box warning on antidepressants, the same ones that will be given to some of these kids entering the mental health system via TeenScreen. This warning states that the drugs can CAUSE suicidal tendencies and violence in young people. Ms. Gutman and Ms. Jarvis neglected to mention that fact. Everything I have stated here is verifiable, backed up by evidence. Though this may be an editorial, I am not stating an opinion. I am stating documented, provable fact.

Doyle Mills

Clearwater, FL

Sunday, December 17, 2006

TEENSCREEN EVIL SISTER SUED BY TEXAS ATTORNEY GENERAL
by Parents Against TeenScreen



TeenScreen's Evil Sister - TMAP, Texas Medication Algorithm (guidelines) Project is a dastardly plan concocted by drug companies to influence government officials to push the newest most expensive antipsychotic drugs. The below story is the first of surely many more to come.

Both TMAP and TeenScreen were "recommended" by the President's New Freedom Commission on Mental Health.

Both are going to go down with a thud but your help is needed.

To augment the national controversy, pick a school in your neck of the woods www.teenscreen-locations.com/index.htm and raise the dickens with school board members, legislators, newspapers, radio and your local TV news. Any talk radio show, for example, would be interested in what you have to say about the national controversy of TeenScreen asking kids as young as 9 years old questions about suicide and then referring them to "treatment" (drugs)

http://www.statesman.com/search/content/news/stories/local/12/16/16drugs.html
Austin American Statesman

State's mental facilities duped into using drug, Abbott allegesLawsuit claims state official pushed drug, was rewarded with money
By Jason Embry, W. Gardner Selby
December 16, 2006


A major corporation and several subsidiaries misrepresented the safety and effectiveness of an anti-psychotic drug and unduly influenced at least one state official to make it a standard treatment in public mental health programs, according to a lawsuit the state has joined.Attorney General Greg Abbott joined a lawsuit filed in Travis County district court by Allen Jones, a former investigator for the state of Pennsylvania, against Johnson & Johnson Inc. and five related companies. Jones says in the lawsuit that he learned of payments to at least one Texas mental health official in interviews he conducted as an investigator. No official is named in the lawsuit.

The lawsuit, which came to light Friday, seeks to recover for the state untallied alleged overcharges to the state's Medicaid program, which pays for health care for low-income people. Jones' lawsuit alleges that the companies launched a drug named Risperdal in 1994 to treat schizophrenia. About the same time, the state was developing a protocol, or treatment guidelines, for which drugs should be used in public mental health programs. The defendants "provided substantial financial contributions to and improperly influenced the development" of the protocols, the lawsuit said, and Risperdal took precedence in the protocols over cheaper, equally effective medicines.The drug later received recommendations as the medicine of choice in the state's mental health protocol for treating children and adolescents, even though it lacked a Food and Drug Administration indication for those age groups, the lawsuit says.

It says side effects and health risks include increased chance of stroke, renal failure and hyperglycemia.The companies pushed Risperdal in other states through paid consultants on expert panels, peer-to-peer marketing strategies and "administrative decisions made by a select few public officials," the lawsuit says.

The companies sent an unnamed Texas official around the country as a spokesman for the drug, and they hired third-party contractors to conceal their control and funding of medical education programs, speakers' bureaus and clinical research that promoted the benefits and safety of Risperdal, the lawsuit says.

The lawsuit says at least 17 states, including Texas, have implemented the protocol or are doing so."We allege it's a scheme whereby they passed off as medical science phony representations and misleading facts about the efficacy and appropriateness of these drugs," said Thomas Melsheimer, a lawyer for Jones.

Abbott's office declined to comment on the lawsuit, as did spokesmen for Johnson & Johnson and the state's Health and Human Services Commission, which oversees the Medicaid program. A commission spokesman did say Texas paid 308,000 claims totaling $73.5 million for Risperdal in 2005.

Melsheimer described Jones as a "classic whistle-blower" who filed the lawsuit in 2004 on behalf of Texas to recover the companies' overcharges. Because of his whistle-blower status, the lawsuit was sealed from public view until Abbott joined it. (All emphasis added - B.M.)

-------------


To see how TeenScreen and TMAP relate, here are additional references:
Bush's Texas Two-Step: TeenScreen and TMAP: http://www.onlinejournal.com/health/052705Pringle/052705pringle.html
A Lone Wolf Takes on the Drug Leviathan http://www.rutherford.org/Oldspeak/Articles/Interviews/oldspeak-jones.htm
Over 500 doctors have now signed the TeenScreen petition. Please pass the word: http://www.petitiononline.com/TScreen/petition.html

Thursday, November 30, 2006

http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/article_1480.shtml
Federal government launches marketing campaign for psychiatric industry

By Richard A. Warner

Nov 29, 2006

Under the guise of combating the stigma of mental illness, the U.S. government will soon begin a massive campaign of psychiatric indoctrination, designed to increase the acceptance of psychiatric chemical imbalance theories and labeling, and to pave the way for national psychiatric screening, driving more Americans into seeking psychiatric drug treatment.

Regional meetings in support of the National Anti-Stigma Campaign (NASC), a nationwide television, radio and print public service advertising program funded by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), were held this past summer in Los Angeles, Denver, Chicago and Washington, D.C. According to a senior technical assistance specialist at the SAMHSA Resource Center to Address Discrimination and Stigma Associated with Mental Illness (ADS Center), the ad campaign, which will target 18-25-year olds, will be launched today. A campaign directed at older adults and ethnic and racial minorities will follow.

On its surface, the campaign’s message may seem perfectly appropriate, even compassionate. Its stated objective is to “encourage, educate and inspire 18-25-year olds to step up and support friends they know are experiencing a mental health problem.” One ad, for example, shows a man with his hand over his eyes. “Sometimes I find myself turning away from or just ignoring someone with a mental illness, avoiding eye contact,” he says. “I know it is not their fault but sometimes I don’t know how to communicate with them.”But there can be no doubt about the real purpose of the campaign’s emotional appeal: to create customers for the psychiatric/pharmaceutical industry.

This is clearly evident at SAMHSA’s website and in its literature. It is no accident that 18-25-year olds were chosen as the first target. A SAMHSA “Fact Sheet” states, “Among 18-25-year olds, the prevalence of serious mental health conditions is high . . . yet this age group shows the lowest rate of help-seeking behaviors [emphasis added].” “Help-seeking behavior” is, of course, a euphemism for being psychiatrically diagnosed and drugged. The 18-25-year old demographic represents a huge untapped market for psychiatric drugs and services. According to SAMHSA’s website, the anti-stigma media blitz “has been designed to establish a ‘new norm,’ in which individuals, without hesitation, will seek out the mental health services they need and deserve.”

The drug industry seeds NASCFurther evidence of SAMHSA’s marketing agenda is found in the origins of the National Anti-Stigma Campaign. The program was first recommended by a federal commission that had extensive ties to the pharmaceutical industry. In its 2003 report, Achieving the Promise: Transforming Mental Health Care in America, the President’s New Freedom Commission (NFC) on Mental Health called for the government to “undertake a national campaign to reduce stigma.” The NFC proposed “national education initiatives” to “shatter the misconceptions about mental illnesses, thus helping more Americans understand the facts and making them more willing to seek help for mental health problems” and advocated “actions of reducing stigma, increasing awareness, and encouraging treatment . . . (emphasis added).”

Several members of the NFC had extensive ties to the pharmaceutical industry, principally by way of an industry marketing scheme that was developed in Texas in the 1990s. Known as the Texas Medication Algorithm Project, or TMAP, it was designed to make the newest and most expensive psychiatric drugs the first (and virtually only) treatment option for mental health care. The project was nurtured at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, a major research center that conducts drug trials for pharmaceutical companies, with significant funding coming from the drug companies themselves. Pharmaceutical company gifts to the Texas Department of State Health Services totaled $1.3 million from 1997 to 2004, with at least $834,000 earmarked for TMAP.Backed by drug industry funding, TMAP was then exported to other states via the National Association of State Mental Health Program Directors (NASMHPD).

The chair of the NFC, Michael Hogan, was the Mental Health Program Director in Ohio when the Ohio Medication Algorithm Project (OMAP), was adopted there. A 2004 Janssen (makers of the atypical antispsychotic, Risperdal) publication, “Mental Health Issues Today,” lists Hogan as a member of their Advisory Board. In 2005, Eli Lilly (makers of the atypical antipsychotic, Zyprexa and the antidepressant, Prozac) gave Hogan its Lifetime Achievement Award. Hogan was president of the NASMHPD from 2003-2004 and president of the NASMHPD Research Institute, which is heavily funded by the pharmaceutical industry, from 1989-2000.Another NFC member, Stephen Mayberg, was the California State Mental Health Program Director when TMAP was adopted in that state. Mayberg is also a past president of NASMHPD and the NASMHPD Research Institute.NFC member Charles Curie, who recently stepped down as the administrator of SAMHSA, was the Deputy Secretary for Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services in Pennsylvania when PENNMAP was enacted. According Allen Jones, an investigator in the Pennsylvania Office of Inspector General and a whistleblower, Curie is reported to have set up a slush fund from which state employees could solicit grants from the pharmaceutical industry.NFC member psychiatrist Rodolfo Arredondo served on the board of the Texas Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation during TMAP’s development, while another NFC commissioner, Robert Postlethwait, has had a long career with Eli Lilly and Company.According to Jones, at least 14 of the 22 NFC members have drug industry ties. Not surprisingly, the NFC selected TMAP as a model program and stated that the “biggest challenge” was to ensure that TMAP was “implemented in other states and localities.”

The psychiatric industry is well on its way to meeting that challenge -- with disastrous results for our youth. A similar pattern emerges in states which have adopted TMAP. In Texas, 19,404 teenagers were prescribed an antipsychotic in July or August of 2004. Ninety-eight percent received the newer atypical antipsychotics. In April of 2004, the Texas Comptroller, Carole Strayhorn, released a report, Forgotten Children, that was highly critical of the psychiatric drugging of foster children in Texas.In 2005, the Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch ran a two-part story, “Drugged Into Submission,” on the psychiatric drugging of children, including 700 babies and toddlers, under state care. Part one was titled, “Forced Medication Straitjackets Kids.”In 1998, the Los Angeles Times reported, “Children under state protection in California group and foster homes are being drugged with potent, dangerous psychiatric medications, at times just to keep them obedient and docile for their overburdened caretakers.”

In Pennsylvania, Dr. Stephan Kruszewski, a Harvard trained psychiatrist working for the Pennsylvania’s Department of Public Welfare, complained that children were being heavily drugged with antipsychotics and anticonvulsants (mainly Neurontin). He was fired.

In Washington State, atypical antipsychotics ranked 1, 3, and 5 on the Medical Assistance Administration’s list of top 100 drugs by money paid in 2004, with nearly $78 million spent on those three drugs: Zyprexa ($36 million), Risperdal ($21 million), Seroquel ($20.8 million). Neurontin was #4, at $20.8 million. Antidepressants Zoloft, Effexor and Paxil came in at #7, #11 and #12, with nearly $31 million spent on those three drugs. A 1997 Seattle Post-Intelligencer series charged that an “unmonitored stream of mood drugs imperils children entrusted to state.”

Additional confirmation of the drug industry’s control of SAMHSA comes in the form of an email sent to me by the previously mentioned senior technical assistance specialist at SAMHSA. The email was a response to my inquiry about the anti-stigma campaign. The assistance specialist sent a copy of her response and my original inquiry, to the NASC liaison at NAMI. NAMI, of course, is the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill, a well-known front group for the pharmaceutical industry. SAMHSA is obviously working hand in hand with NAMI -- even forwarding private communication from the public to NAMI’s offices. In 1999, Mother Jones magazine reported that 18 drug firms gave NAMI a total of $11.72 million between 1996 and 1999. NAMI continually promotes psychiatric chemical imbalance theories, minimizes the damaging effects of psychiatric drugs, and advocates for forced psychiatric drugging programs.On May 28, 2006, the Philadelphia Inquirer reported that NAMI “did not disclose that Lilly [Eli Lilly, makers of Zyprexa and Prozac] marketing manager Gerald Radke briefly ran its entire operation. Radke began in 1999 as a Lilly-paid ‘management consultant,’ then left Lilly and served as NAMI's paid ‘interim executive director’ until mid-2001. The group acknowledged this only after being shown Radke's resume listing the job.”According to the Inquirer, Lilly gave NAMI $3 million between 2003 and 2005 and “called its executive loans mutually beneficial.” NAMI’s former executive director for 16 years was Laurie Flynn. Flynn is now the Director of Teenscreen, a psychiatric screening program developed by Columbia University’s Child Psychiatry Research Department and, not surprisingly, recommended by the NFC. TeenScreen’s goal is to screen all teenagers in the U.S. for psychiatric disorders.

NASC and screening: Educating Americans to be good customers

Since psychiatric drugging must, in most cases, be preceded by the assignment of a psychiatric label, psychiatric screening is an essential step in the industry’s plans to expand its market. That’s where the anti-stigma campaign and national psychiatric screening -- both recommended by the NFC -- come into play.The NFC report recommended “early detection of mental health problems in children and adults -- through routine and comprehensive testing and screening . . ." and while NFC chair Hogan has denied that the NFC intended universal screening, in a January 20, 2005 story in the Christian Science Monitor, Hogan said that the commission decided that recommending universal screening would be "a little premature and probably controversial, even though we thought, in the long run, it probably might be the right thing to do.”In other words, the only barrier to screening everyone in America, as the NFC sees it, is the controversy it would generate. It’s “premature.” Americans have to be prepared to accept mass psychiatric interventions. SAMHSA’s NFC-recommended NASC program is their answer -- a three-year, “long run” program to prepare the population for universal screening, followed, of course, by psychiatric labeling and drugging.

The NASC campaign will advertise that mental illness has reached epidemic levels in the population -- a theme that has been repeated in psychiatric marketing campaigns dating back to the 1940s. The psychiatric industry wants Americans to see mental illness everywhere -- to associate any problem in life with a possible psychiatric disorder that can be treated with a psychiatric drug.A PowerPoint presentation available at the NASC website warns that “22% of Americans have a diagnosable mental health problem” but “the majority . . . do not seek help.”

SAMHSA has produced three brochures that focus on the workplace (Mental Health: It’s Part of Our Lives at Work), the elderly (Mental Health: It’s Part of Aging) and college students (Mental Health: It’s Part of College Life). All state that one in five adults in the U.S. experience a mental illness each year. All stress that not enough people are seeking treatment due to stigma.At the same time SAMHSA’s Eliminating Barriers Initiative (EBI) is currently being pushed into secondary schools via school administrators' associations. EBI is being piloted in eight states, (Mass., Ohio, Fla., NC, Calif., Texas, Wisc. Pa.). EBI training presentations promoting psychiatric chemical imbalance theories, stating, “Mental illnesses are brain disorders.”

In Massachusetts, the commissioner of Mental Health was brought to one conference and read a student’s suicide note to the assembled school administrators. Suicide is a favorite theme, even though 1) child suicides are extremely rare (4.6 per 100,000 in 2001, according to the Center for Disease Control) and declining; 2) In 2004, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) found “no evidence that screening for suicide risk reduces suicide attempts or mortality” and "insufficient evidence that treatment of those at high risk reduces suicide attempts or mortality;” and 3) psychiatric drug treatment has been found to increase suicidal thinking and behavior in children under 18.The goal of such programs is clear. SAMHSA, acting as a tool of the psychiatric and drug industries, wants Americans to view the world through psychiatric lenses -- to find mental illness in their children, their colleagues, their family and friends.

The purpose of the NASC campaign is not to educate Americans about psychiatric theories and treatments but to instill acceptance of psychiatric dogma and psychiatric labeling and thus prepare the way for psychiatric screening and drugging. Always the appeal is heavily weighted to the emotions. The elderly brochure, for example, advises, “If you feel shame because you have a mental illness remember: You are not alone.” SAMHSA will tell us that fear of the mentally ill is part of the stigma, while, at the same time, they will be sowing a subliminal fear that mental illness is lurking around every corner.The NASC campaign will spread the gospel of chemical imbalances and suggest that the stigma of mental illness is the result of public ignorance and fear. This is a key element of NASC.

Americans must be taught to locate the source of the stigma in their own personal failure, not the rampant disease mongering and fear tactics of the psychiatric industry.The real source of the stigmaThe real source of the stigma of mental illness lies in the definition of stigma itself. The dictionary says a stigma is “A mark or token of infamy, disgrace or reproach. A small mark; a scar or birthmark.” The word derives from the ancient word for the mark or tattoo that was carved or burned into the flesh of a slave or prisoner to inform everyone of their shameful status.The definition of stigma suggests at once the source of the stigma -- psychiatric “marking” -- and how it could be eliminated: Don’t place the mark. The most direct way to end the stigmatization of the mentally ill would be to stop calling them mentally ill and labeling them with specious disorders. After all, there’s no proof they’re ill. There is no lab test that can verify the presence of any psychiatric disorder.

We could just get rid of the Attention Deficits, the Major Depressives, the Social Anxieties, the Bipolars and the 370 other labels psychiatrists have invented to alienate and marginalize those who are suffering and convince those who are well that they are ill. We could tell the psychiatric prisoners that their diagnostic cells are a thin illusion, that their experience is part of the infinite variety of human experience. We could tell them they are not other than us, they are not sick, they don’t have bad brains. Life is tough, for a thousand different reasons, and most of us struggle.

If we just put an end to psychiatry’s fraudulent pathologizing of life, the stigma of mental illness would disappear.Needless to say, this is not the kind of campaign SAMHSA has planned. There’s too much money at stake. For several decades now psychiatrists have been manufacturing stigmas at a ridiculous rate. Psychiatry’s book of stigmas, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, has expanded from 112 stigmas in 1952 to its current 374, under the guiding hand, the New York Times and others recently (April 20) reported, of “experts” with financial ties to drug companies.

According to the Times, a study in the journal Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics found that “56 percent of 170 experts who worked on the 1994 edition of the manual, called the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, or D.S.M, had at least one monetary relationship with a drug maker in the years from 1989 to 2004.” A report on the study in the Chicago Tribune noted that, “100 percent of the experts on DSM-IV panels overseeing mood disorders and schizophrenia/psychotic disorders were financially involved with the drug industry. These are the largest categories of psychiatric drugs in the world, racking up 2004 sales of $20.3 billion and $14.4 billion, respectively. Depression is the leading mood disorder.”It’s a particularly profitable symbiosis.

Psychiatrists invent the diseases; the pharmaceutical industry makes the snake oil to treat them. And as we have seen, the purpose of the NASC campaign is to help the experts and drug companies cash in on their cozy relationship, to ensure that Americans accept psychiatric branding and become good customers for the psychiatric/pharmaceutical complex.The last thing the psychiatric industry wants is for people to have the facts about psychiatry’s invented illnesses and ineffective, damaging drugs. SAMHSA’s campaign will follow a different script, one with more of a “slaves are people too” theme, one which ensures that psychiatric branding is broadly accepted.A brochure from the ADS center asks that we “remember” that people with mental illnesses “do recover and lead productive lives,” they have the “same needs as everyone else,” they “make valuable contributions to society,” and discrimination “keeps them from seeking help” and “violates their rights.”In other words, we will be educated about how people become slaves (mentally ill); that it’s not their fault (it’s genetic); that slavery touches all of us, and that, while slaves are different, they should be treated with dignity. Slaves can lead productive lives, they have the same needs as everyone, they make valuable contributions, and you shouldn’t discriminate against them. We’ll be told that psychiatric prisoners are fortunate to have kind wardens who treat them with respect and though the whip is occasionally needed, it’s all in their best interests. Just don’t start thinking that they are normal human beings -- they are slaves, i.e., mentally disordered with damaged brains.SAMHSA’s campaign will justify and expand the stigmatization that supports the current mental health system, while chiding us to be nice to those who are thereby victimized. It won’t tell us how psychiatrists invent their diagnoses. It won’t tell that psychiatry’s own diagnostic manual admits that psychiatry can’t distinguish one disorder from another or mental illness from mental health. It won’t tell us that psychiatric diagnostic reliability is low. We won’t be informed that, as Harvard psychiatrist Joseph Glenmullen wrote in Prozac Backlash, “We do not yet have proof either of the cause or the physiology for any psychiatric diagnosis. . . . In recent decades, we have had no shortage of alleged biochemical imbalances for psychiatric conditions. Diligent though these attempts have been, not one has been proven.”The ineffectiveness of psychiatric drugs won’t be mentioned -- nor the stream of warnings that have issued from the FDA and international agencies over the past several years concerning the dangerous and often lethal side effects of antidepressants, antipsychotics and stimulants.We won’t hear about last year’s study of antipsychotics, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, which found the newer antipsychotics to be no more effective than the older drugs. In the study 74 percent of patients quit the drugs and “[T]he majority of patients in each group discontinued their assigned treatment owing to inefficacy or intolerable side effects or for other reasons.” (Note: They didn’t quit because they “decompensated,” “lacked insight,” or were “in denial.” The drugs were ineffective and intolerable.)

Instead, our government will tell us of the terrible consequence of failing to seek treatment. We’ll be told to get branded -- and encourage our friends and family to do the same - as soon as possible. We’ll be assured that life on the pill plantation is a wonderful thing.The pitch will touching and benevolent, the unspoken message crystal clear: psychiatric stigmatization is a good thing. Only the ignorant and uncaring fail to embrace it.

You’ll be hearing a lot about the stigma of mental illness in the coming months and with good reason. A trillion dollar industry depends on it.For the past 20 years, Richard A. Warner has been the president of the Citizens Commission on Human Rights of Seattle. He's written several pieces for the Seattle Times and Seattle Post-Intelligencer over the years, been a guest on dozens of local and national radio shows, and testifies regularly at the Washington State capital in Olympia on issues related to mental health. His recent paper on shock treatment can be found at ect.org. (Emphasis added - Justice Lover).


Pass the word: http://www.petitiononline.com/TScreen/petition.html

Saturday, November 18, 2006

UPDATES AND FURTHER DETAILS OF THE
TORTURE BY CLOZAPINE OF MISS REBECCA
MERHAV ARE ON
http://www.nocrush.blogspot.com
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Unscientific and Experimental "Mental
Health Screening" of American School
Children
, by Justice Lover

A stark warning of what's in store for humanity under the global rule of the
transnational corporations can be found in the recent "TeenScreen" experiments on school children in the USA. The leaders of these experiments must be the drug corporations, as the experiments would yield enormous profits to them via their faithful (and bribed) psychiatrists' prescriptions.

If this insane and fascist experimentation would become compulsoy, then the next step would be to screen the entire population for "mental illnesses". To the drug corporations it would bring untold profits, and for the rest of the ruling class it would secure their global rule (globalisation), and all under the supervision of the shrinks ! Those insane and fascist ideas come on top of
other world disasters that those corporations have been perpetrating on us, and first and foremost the disastrous global warning and poisoning of our planet !


It is good news, therefore, the current awakening of ordinary people in the USA in opposition to the "TeenScreen" tests, as is evident from the following petition currently circulating among parents of school children throughout the USA.


Stop TeenScreen's Unscientific and Experimental
"Mental Health Screening" of American School
Children


To: School Board Members and State and Federal Legislators

Whereas children as young as 9, who previously had not thought of the concept of suicide,
are being asked invasive and leading questions by TeenScreen such as: Have you tried to kill
yourself in the last year? Are you still thinking of killing yourself? Have you thought seriously
about killing yourself? Have you often thought about killing yourself? Have you ever tried to kill
yourself?" and kids are being lured into doing the suicide survey by TeenScreen's offers of free
movie passes, food coupons, pizza parties and $50 mall gift certificates;

Whereas the goal of TeenScreen leaders is to screen every American child before they
graduate from high school;

Whereas TeenScreen is based on the controversial and unscientific Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders, written by psychiatrists with financial ties to drug companies and
children screened by TeenScreen are not given valid medical testing such as brain scans, blood
test, urine tests, X-Rays or any other valid medical tests to detect evidence of any possible
physical abnormality that may be contributing to certain behavior;

Whereas, according to TeenScreen psychiatrist David Shaffer, mental disorders in the DSM
were developed by psychiatrists "shouting out their opinions from all sides of the room and
whoever shouted loudest tended to be heard. My own impression, coming straight from
England, was it was more like a tobacco auction than a sort of conference." and according to
Shaffer, TeenScreen "... does identify a whole bunch of kids who aren’t really suicidal, so you
get a lot of false-positives. And that means if you’re running a large program at a school, you’re
going to cripple the program because you’re going to have too many kids you have to do
something about";

Whereas TeenScreen has screened children across the nation without written parental
consent in violation of federal law and state laws and has screened children across the nation
without fully informed consent and did not warn parents that after taking the TeenScreen suicide
survey, certain children have been and will be labeled with false mental disorders, based upon
the unscientific DSM and the "chemical imbalance of the brain" theory, which relies solely upon
observation and for which no scientific or medical test exists;

Whereas a federal lawsuit has been filed against a school and psychiatric facility by the
Rutherford Institute on behalf of parents who did not give permission for their child to be
subjected to the TeenScreen suicide survey which resulted in a false diagnosis of a mental
disorder;

Whereas an epidemic already exists with children using psychiatric drugs and will further
skyrocket if children are referred to psychiatrists after screening. According to a survey of
recently trained child psychiatrists it was found that treatment for 9 out of 10 children consisted
of prescription drugs. (Journal of the American Academy of Child Adolescent Psychiatry
2002);

Whereas TeenScreen's leaders and advisory board members have ties to pharmaceutical
companies and front groups for pharmaceutical companies;

Whereas antipsychotic drugs are not approved by the Food and Drug Administration for
children; the FDA's "black box warning" states antidepressants increase the risk of suicidal
thinking and behavior in children and adolescents with psychiatric disorders; and drug safety
experts have recommended additional "black box" warnings be placed on ADHD drugs: for the
increased risk of stroke and heart attack;

Whereas potential recruits are ineligible for military service if they have taken Ritalin and other
stimulants to treat the unscientific "disorder" called ADHD in the previous year;

Whereas most states have laws restricting the purchase of firearms based on an adjudication
of mental illnesses or disorders, and mass screening of all American children for mental
disorders will increase the number of persons labeled with a mental disorder, directly infringing
upon the citizenry's right to keep and bear arms as guaranteed by the 2nd amendment;

Whereas TeenScreen only partners with and seeks to immediately refer students to "mental
illness" practitioners and does not refer students to medical disciplines that could test for
underlying health problems such as allergies, nutrition, toxicities and physical illnesses;

Whereas child suicides are very rare and have been on a decline for years; and even
according to former TeenScreen director Rob Caruano, "suicides are so rare that you'd have to
screen the whole country to see a difference in mortality between screened and unscreened
students.";

Whereas many and various groups, individuals and legislators across a spectrum of political,
religious, scientific and common sense views are opposed to screening for mental disorders in
schools;

Whereas TeenScreen is very secretive about their suicide survey and refuses to allow parents
to obtain a copy and is also very secretive about which schools they've convinced to use their
suicide survey;

Whereas the United States Preventive Services Task Force reported in May of 2004:
There is no evidence that screening for suicide risk reduces suicide attempts or mortality,
There is limited evidence on the accuracy of screening tools to identify suicide risk,
There is insufficient evidence that treatment of those at high risk reduces suicide attempts or
mortality;

Whereas Ned Calonge, the chairman of the United States Preventive Services Task Force,
who is also the chief medical officer for the Colorado Department of Public Health and
Environment, was quoted in the June 16, 2006 Washington Post: "the panel would reach the
same conclusion today... Whether or not we like to admit it, there are no interventions that have
no harms... There is weak evidence that screening can distinguish people who will commit
suicide from those who will not... And screening inevitably leads to treating some people who
do not need it. Such interventions have consequences beyond side effects from drugs or other
treatments... Unnecessary care drives up the cost of insurance, causing some people to lose
coverage altogether.";

Whereas TeenScreen is an intrusion into the rearing of children and false psychiatric labels
could embarrass students and cause turmoil at home;

Whereas many school districts have reservations about using TeenScreen because of liability
and risk issues;

Whereas legislators in various states are proposing legislation to stop state and federal
funding for screening of mental disorders in schools;

Whereas schools should be in the business of educating our children instead of probing each
for unscientific mental disorders;

We, therefore, petition school board members and state and federal legislators to stop using
the TeenScreen suicide survey and to adopt firm policy that will prevent the implementation of
TeenScreen in the future.

That this spontaneous mass resistance is gaining momentum is clear from the following list of
schools which already oppose this insane and fascist "TeenScreen" experimentation.


"NO TEENSCREEN

The following school districts have confirmed that they either are not screening anymore or have
discontinued screening or will not implement TeenScreen.


CONNECTICUT
Bridgeport Public Schools
Bassick High School
Harding High School

Date: Monday, July 18, 2005 9:12 AM
"The program was located at Bassick and Harding High Schools. It was not successful and the
District discontinued it."

FLORIDA
Flagler Palm Coast High School

Screening will halt as of Oct 2006 due to lack of funding.

Hillsborough

Date: Monday, Mar 01, 2004 10:20 AM
"our district has not yet felt comfortable with the information provided by Teen Screen to
implement it anywhere in the district. We are exploring the possiblity of doing a pilot at Gaither
High School, but have not had all of questions answered by the organization. They
[TeenScreen] continue to say to others that Hills. Co. has "partnered" with them when, in fact,
we are still only exploring." Hillsborough decided to not implement screening.

Pinellas County

Date: January 25, 2005, the Pinellas County School Board decided that TeenScreen should not
be implemented. In the Tampa Tribune on January 26, 2005, School Board member Jane
Gallucci said that she was angry that Laurie Flynn told a U.S. Senate committee on health and
education matters 10 months ago that pilot TeenScreen programs were operating in
Hillsborough and Pinellas counties. Board Chairwoman Nancy Bostock called the program "an
intrusion for our students.'' False labels could embarrass students and cause turmoil at home.
"We could seriously do more harm than good," she said.

GEORGIA
Cobb County School District

Date: Sat, June 3, 2006 5:11 PM
"I called TeenScreen on Friday (6/2/06) afternoon and spoke to Mina Fasolo, program
director, to remove Cobb Schools from their wait list. We have decided that TeenScreen was
and is still not a good fit for Cobb Schools."

ILLINOIS
Urbana High School

Date: Thur, Aug 31, 2006 7:01 PM
"We did use TeenScreen last year, but the person who did it left the District. I have been
informed that we will not be doing it again this year."

INDIANA
Clay High School - Southbend Community School System

Date: Tues, Aug 8, 2006 12:55 PM
"The school corporation pulled back because of controversy in another district."

IOWA
West Burlington Jr./Sr. High

Date: Mon, Aug 15, 2005 8:33 AM
"We will not be using the TeenScreen program again"

West DesMoines Schools AEA 11
Valley High School

Date: Fri, Oct 20, 2006 11:49 AM
"Valley High School in West Des Moines, Iowa, is no longer considering the implementation of
Teen Screen."




MICHIGAN
Clio Public Schools

Date: Thursday, Oct 19, 2006 7:25 PM
"We do not now - and have NEVER - permitted TeenScreen to screen our students. Yes....we
DID invite them in to speak with us and we looked at the program. However, we decided not
to go forward."

NEVADA
C.W. Woodbury Middle School

Date: Tue, September 05, 2006 8:01 AM
"We are not going to use TeenScreen again at Woodbury."

NEW YORK
John F. Kennedy Catholic High School

Date: Thur, Oct 19, 2006 at 9:47 PM
"I was also very upset when I first found out that the school was involved in TeenScreen. All
parents on the Parents Advisory Board were as upset as I was as nobody knew about it not
even the school's administration knew of the ramifications of the TeenScreen program and its
consequences for our children. This is to let you know that the Kennedy Catholic High School
in Westchester County, NY is not involved in the discredited TeenScreen program. The
president of the school confirmed that the school is no longer involved in that program
whatsoever"

East Syracuse/Minoa School District
Date sent: Mon, June 12, 2006 10:40:03 AM
"There was a funding issue"

NORTH CAROLINA
Moore County School District

Date: Mon, June 5, 2006 2:29 PM
"We have/had made no commitment to the program and are not planning to implement it."

OKLAHOMA
Douglass High School

Date: Wed, Sept 20, 2006 2:13 PM
"Last year someone contacted us and actually did the program for us. This year I have not
heard from anyone."

Emerson High School

Date: Thur, Sept 28, 2006 6:36 PM
"We are not using the screening program anymore."

WASHINGTON STATE
Lynden School District #504

Date: Wed, June 7, 2006 8:01 PM
"We have been told to halt all screening at this time."

WISCONSIN
Wisconsin School for the Deaf

Date: Fri, October 20, 2006 11:29 AM
"The Wisconsin School for the Deaf has not implemented the TeenScreen instrument."

Washburn School District

Date Thu, June 15, 2006 10:00 AM
"We did receive a mini grant but did not use and returned grant funds."