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  Your Drug May Be Your Problem: How and Why to Stop Taking Psychiatric Medications (Paperback)
  Your Drug May Be Your Problem Cover
 
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Description Editorial Reviews About the Authors
 
From Ativan to Zoloft, Effexor to Prozac, the dangers of psychiatric medication and guidance on how to safely stop taking them.

When first published in 1999, Your Drug May Be Your Problem was ahead of its time.

The only book to provide an uncensored description of the dangers involved in taking every kind of psychiatric medication, it was also the first and only book to explain how to safely stop taking them.

In the time elapsed, there have been numerous studies suggesting or proving the dangers of some psychiatric medications and even the FDA now acknowledges the problems; more studies are under way to determine their long-term and withdrawal effects.

In the meantime, this book continues to be ever relevant and helpful.

Fully updated to include study results and new medications that have come to market, Your Drug May Be Your Problem will help countless readers exert control over their own psychiatric treatment.
 
Features

Paperback:
  288 pages

Carton Size:  26 books

Publisher:  Da Capo Lifelong Press, Rev Upd edition (July 30, 2007)

Language:  English

ISBN-10:
0738210986

ISBN-13:
978-0738210988




 

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Average Customer Review: Based on 2 Reviews. Write a review.

  86 of 91 people found the following review helpful:
 
Hard to Believe! August 23, 2007
Reviewer: Bill Butler from Tarzana, CA  
I was presribed Valium for 30 years. It's beneficial effects rarely last more than 4 months. But I trusted my doctors. The effects have been devastating and disastrous for me and my family. I have suffered from severe depression for 30 years and finally turned to alcohol to reduce what is commonly called the "Benzo Blues". Valium has also been referred to as "Blue Death". When I questioned one clinic about this drug, the reply was, "We must deal with the depression first!" So they kept me on this dosage for 3 more years while prescribing Prozac. Obviously, this did not help except to deaden my brain worse. So they doubled the Prozac. That did not work. So they quadrupled the Prozac to it's maximum! In desperation, I called my church, and they said to follow my doctor's orders so that I was even more convinced that what I was doing was right. Finally, the climax came and I started going on alcoholic benders to alleviate the depression. Now, the clinic stated that I must take the Valium and Prozac in order to treat my disease of alcoholism! I finally ended up in a psychiatric hospital for one week. A psychiatrist there told me that what had been going on was insane.  That she has been desperately trying to get the elderly off of Xanax and Valium which their doctors had addicted them to. If you are a counselor, or simply a concerned citizen who is definitely concerned about crime in this country, you simply must read this book and discover what the medical profession and the pharmaceutical companies have been doing in order to make money. I am now under a slow withdrawal program with a qualified psychiatrist and therapist. But I am taking care now of my own medical care in all regards. Readers, please refer to the PDR also ("Physician's Desk Reference") and read all the side effects of all drugs that you are taking. And put this one under the pillow of your bed.

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  24 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
 
This Book Can Help You Save Your Own Life August 23, 2007
Reviewer: Self-Kerbed "Kerbistani Rebel" from Kerby, OR  
Like many people, I've worked in high-tech industries. The money was great, but the hours were long and the stress was incredible. There was always one more project, always crises breaking out, always the unpleasantness of watching one's back while covering one's butt -- from my point of view, Dilbert was (and still is) often more painful to read than funny. After fifteen years of modest success, all hell suddenly broke loose in my life. My marriage fell apart; my husband cleaned out our joint bank account and "borrowed" tens of thousands he never repaid; I got hit with a huge tax bill. And then, I got involved with a married man at work who looked like the White Knight to me and like Evil Incarnate to everyone else. I fell apart. Each day it got harder and harder to get out of bed and go to work. I couldn't concentrate anymore. I found a "pDoc" who prescribed a variety of ADHD meds, each of which originally helped -- but then eventually made me more hyper, anxious, depressed and/or volatile. I felt I needed to keep going -- my job performance was suffering -- so begged my doctor for something to calm me down and help me sleep, and Xanax was added to the mix. Things got worse, but I thought they were better. When I should have felt grief or worry and acted upon those feelings, I took Xanax, instead. Friends I loved dearly who'd stood by me for decades got fed up with me and vanished from my life. How unreasonable of them! In tears, I took a Xanax. Eventually, I quit my job, rather than taking a leave of absence. Very bad move!! To make a long story shorter, five years later I'm still fighting my way back. Got off the "uppers", now slowly getting off the "Benzos". When I hit a crisis and find I can't sleep, so want to increase the dosage "just this once", I often reach for this book. 'tis better to stay up all night and re-read than reach for that extra pill.

Remember to work with your pDoc (or GP, whatever) and NOT to be hostile or blaming toward them when you find you're addicted to medication they initially prescribed to get you through a rough patch. BE HONEST WITH YOURSELF -- you went in with a complaint! Very few of us are forced to swallow a pill or watch TV and believe only the nice things the drug companies tell us in commercials for their products (while ignoring the information about side-effects). Any reasonable doctor will understand and behave compassionately when they are approached with sincere requests for help, rather than the pointing finger of blame for "not knowing better" or "not warning me." Remember that here in the USA we are a lawsuit-happy society and your doctor has good reason to fear that you may be "seeking compensation" -- in the majority of cases, unreasonably so! Reading this book will provide you with a set of tools that you can use to work with your doctor, pull yourself up out of whatever hole you got yourself into and act responsibly toward yourself and/or toward someone else in your life. Be an advocate for yourself, be strong, have courage and DON'T GIVE UP!!

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