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UK: Petition to 10 Downing Street re overprescribing of SSRI/SNRI drugs

July 11 2007 at 11:11 AM
admin 


Response to JUNE 2007: News on SSRIs, other Psych Drugs and Related Issues

"Petition on 10 Downing Street website ………

 

based on the escalating number of prescriptions for the SSRI / SNRI class of drugs, questioning the huge and glaringly obvious anomaly within the 2005 Official National Statistic figures and requesting investigation and explanation.  

 

This is not a depression and antidepressant drug issue - but one that encompasses every aspect of the NHS – over prescribing and therefore over spending in any area takes funding from another.

 

The petition should have read as follows - however - due to a restriction of 1,000 characters including spaces in the 'More details' ection - three paragraphs were moved up to the petition.  This has made the petition far too long and lacking in clarity - which I apologise for and hope will not put anyone off supporting it with their signatures.

 

****

 

We the undersigned petition the Prime Minister to...

 

initiate an urgent investigation into GPs diagnostic rates of depression, the publicised over prescribing trends of SSRI / SNRIs the second generation class of antidepressant drugs - AND explain why according to the Office of National Statistics (ONS) that in 2005 the total number of prescriptions cashed for these drugs only increased by 315.8 thousand - while increases for years 1998 to 2004 and year 2006 have been between 1.2 and 2.2 million per annum - with the median average annual increase excluding 2005 of nearly 1.5 million.  

 

More info……

 

As 2005 showed no increase in total prescriptions cashed for other classes of antidepressants to counteract this drop - nor complaints regarding non treatment of ‘depressed’ patients – it is self evident that over prescribing of SSRI / SNRI drugs is an escalating problem and the cost an increasing financial burden on the NHS. 

 

Was 2005 an extraordinary year when miraculously thousands less people became depressed than any other year? 

 

Or in the aftermath of the Committee on Safety of Medicines (CSM) ‘Expert Working Group on the Safety of SSRI Antidepressants’ reporting December 2004 -- which found them to be lacking in both efficacy and safety -- did GPs moderate their diagnosis of depression and practice of prescribing SSRI / SNRI drugs as first line treatment?

 

The new antidepressants were promoted to replace older established tricyclic & MAOI drugs, however total prescriptions for older drugs have not decreased, remaining stable despite SSRI/SNRI prescriptions increasing from 8,270,800 to 20,176,600 over 8 years.

 

If a drug is efficacious & works, after an initial surge of prescriptions when licensed, prescriptions numbers should stabilise, even reduce as patients recover & come off.

 

The alarming & continual increase in SSRI/SNRI prescriptions provides clear evidence of drugs not working &/or a ‘withdrawal syndrome’ instrumental in keeping patients on them, a fact known by manufacturers who told medical professionals the syndrome was re-emergence of original symptoms &/or emergence of new mental illness.

 

The ONS figures demonstrate a problem which left unchecked could see prescriptions increasing by approximately 1.5 million per annum ad infinitum - can the NHS continue to sustain this – or any backlash for not acting in patients better interests?

 

****

The crest for Number 10 Downing Street

E-Petitions

Sign a petition

http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/ONS-SSRI-Anomaly/

Unfortunately you must be a British citizen or resident to sign the petition – although there are facilities to enable signatures of expatriates and those who are in overseas territories, a Crown dependency or in the Armed Forces without a postcode.

If you cannot sign yourself - please forward this page to anyone you know who might qualify and be willing to add their support.

Thanks – Mardi"


 
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