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Mothers Act fuels multibillion dollar industry Source: Online Journal Contributing Writer By Evelyn Pringle Date: 04/28/2009
Motherhood has fallen prey to the psycho-pharmaceutical complex. If new legislation known as the Mother’s Act becomes law, the drugging of infants through pregnant and nursing mothers will no doubt increase.
Congress
has rightfully refused to pass this bill for eight years. The official
title is currently the “Melanie Blocker Stokes Mom’s Opportunity to
Access Health, Education, Research, and Support for Postpartum
Depression Act of 2009.”
The
legislation was introduced in the House during the 110th Congress on
January 4, 2007, by Illinois Democrat Bobby Rush and later reintroduced
into both bodies of the new Congress in January 2009, after the bill
died in the Senate last year.
Democratic
Senator Robert Menendez from New Jersey, home to a large number of drug
companies, and Richard Durbin (D-IL) are the main sponsors of the bill
in the Senate.
In
a March 30, speech on the House floor, Congressman Rush identified the
target of this piece of legislation when he claimed that “60 to 80
percent of new mothers experience symptoms of postpartum depression
while the more serious condition, postpartum psychosis, affects up to
20 percent of women who have recently given birth.”
After
the House voted to pass the legislation on that day, the congressman
stated, “H. R. 20 will finally put significant money and attention into
research, screening, treatment and education for mothers suffering from
this disease.”
However,
he only mentions screening and treatment for postpartum depression. The
true goal of the promoters of this act is to transform women of
childbearing age into life-long consumers of psychiatric treatment by
screening women for a whole list of “mood” and “anxiety” disorders and
not simply postpartum depression.
Enough
cannot be said about the ability of anyone with a white coat and a
medical title to convince vulnerable pregnant women and new mothers
that the thoughts and feelings they experience on any given day might
be abnormal.
The
constant watching and barrage of questions such as are you depressed,
are you anxious, are you moody, are you fearful of motherhood, are you
sleeping well, are there changes in your eating habits, will
predictably have the net effect of convincing many women that normal
thoughts and emotions are a sign of mental disorders.
In
the March 13, 2008, NewsWithViews article, “Branding Pregnancy as a
Mental Illness,” Byron Richards writes, “The Mothers Act has the net
effect of reclassifying the natural process of pregnancy and birth as a
mental disorder that requires the use of unproven and extremely
dangerous psychotropic medications (which can also easily harm the
child). The bill was obviously written by the Big Pharma lobby and its
passage into law would be considered laughable except that it is
actually happening.”
While
mania, psychosis, agitation, hostility, anxiety, confusion, depression
and suicidality are often cited as “symptoms” of mental illness, many
of the same exact “symptoms” are listed as side effects on the warning
labels for antidepressants, antipsychotics and anticonvulsants.
All
of these drugs are now being prescribed to treat the “mood” and
“anxiety” disorders that women will be screened for if the act becomes
law. In the case of pregnant women, no psychiatric drug has been FDA
approved as safe for use.
The
newly recruited customers will be stigmatized for life with labels of
the most serious forms of mental illness simply because they are
unlucky enough to become pregnant in the United States, where serious
disorders lead to major profits from the prescribing of multiple
classes of psychotropic drugs.
On
September 1, 2008, Medical News Today ran a headline for a study that
stated: “Americans Show Little Tolerance For Mental Illness Despite
Growing Belief In Genetic Cause.” The study by University of
Pennsylvania sociology professor Jason Schnittker showed that while
more Americans believe that mental illness has genetic causes, the
country is no more tolerant of the mentally ill than it was 10 years
ago.
The
study explored tolerance in terms of: unwillingness to live next door
to a mentally ill person, having a group home for the mentally ill in
the neighborhood, spending an evening socializing with a mentally ill
person, working closely with such a person on the job, making friends
with someone with a mental illness or having a mentally ill person
marry into the family.
Multibillion-dollar industry
In
a June 18, 2008, AlterNet article, Dr Bruce Levine, author of the book,
“Surviving America’s Depression Epidemic,” explains how the
psycho-pharmaceutical cartel works. “Mental health treatment in the
United States is now a multibillion-dollar industry,” he reports, “and
all the rules of industrial complexes apply.
“Not
only does Big Pharma have influential psychiatrists . . . in their
pocket, virtually every mental health institution from which doctors,
the press, and the general public receive their mental health
information is financially interconnected with Big Pharma.
“The
American Psychiatric Association, psychiatry’s professional
organization, is hugely dependent on drug company grants, and this is
also true for the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill and other
so-called consumer organizations.
“Harvard
and other prestigious university psychiatry departments take millions
of dollars from drug companies, and the National Institute of Mental
Health funds researchers who are financially connected with drug
companies.”
More
Democrats than Republicans are supporting the Mother’s Act. The
increased campaign funding to Democrats may well explain this turn of
events. For the last eight election cycles, the pharmaceutical industry
has contributed far more to Republicans than Democrats. In the 2006
cycle, the percentage was 28 percent to Democrats and 70 percent to
Republicans, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, a
nonprofit group that tracks political funding.
But
the Democrats were close to matching the Republicans for the 2008 cycle
with $5,099,942 to Democrats compared to $5,680,871 to Republicans,
which is probably why the Democrats would allow such an obvious drug
marketing scheme to be implemented.
“The
Mothers Act, while appearing like an act of benevolence, is a dangerous
and unnecessary measure that will result in the further
over-prescription of drugs that are already grotesquely
over-prescribed,” says Kate Gillespie, one of the lead attorneys
handling SSRI birth defect lawsuits and Paxil suicide cases at the Los
Angeles based Baum, Hedlund, Aristei & Goldman law firm.
“The
act is a slippery slope,” she warns, “toward the forced drugging of
women of childbearing years with drugs of questionable efficacy and
serious safety issues effecting mothers and their innocent children --
drugs that can cause horrific side effects, including, suicidal
behavior, violence and devastating birth defects.
“Of
course, mothers who truly cannot cope should be helped,” Ms Gillespie
says, “but do we really need legislation requiring mothers to be
screened and drugged?
“Take out politics and Big Pharma and the push for this legislation just doesn’t make sense,” she states.
“For
politicians, a much safer issue than pushing drugs for pregnant mothers
is promoting the expansion of medical treatment for postpartum
depression,” according to Dr Levine.
He
says the Mother’s Act “omits relevant truths” about Melanie Blocker
Stokes, the woman the bill is named after, and the following
information about her suicide should be made known: “Blocker Stokes . .
. did in fact receive extensive psychiatric treatment. She was
hospitalized three times in seven weeks, given four combinations of
anti-psychotic, anti-anxiety, and antidepressant medications, and
underwent electroconvulsive therapy (electroshock). But despite her
psychiatric treatment -- or because of it -- Melanie Blocker Stokes
jumped to her death from the twelfth floor of a Chicago hotel.
“There
is no evidence that antidepressant use by depressed mothers lowers
their likelihood of suicide,” Dr Levine says, “and there is a great
deal of evidence that antidepressant use can make some people manic,
agitated, and violent.”
Money-making promoters behind the act
Katherine
Stone runs an internet website called “Postpartum Progress” and posts a
daily blog. She also serves on the board of Postpartum Support
International as the public relations outreach chairwoman. Her bio says
she “is a nationally-recognized, award-winning advocate for women with
perinatal mood and anxiety disorders.”
“In
2001,” Katherine reports on her website, “she suffered postpartum
obsessive compulsive disorder after the birth of her first child. The
feeling of isolation and shame she suffered inspired her to create
Postpartum Progress, which has become the most widely-read blog in the
United States on postpartum depression, postpartum OCD, antepartum
depression, postpartum PTSD and postpartum psychosis.”
On
another page, titled “The Art of Psychiatric Medication,” Katherine
tells women to hang in there if a medication does not work because for
her diagnosis of OCD, she states, “I’ve taken many medications,
including Effexor, Celexa, Seroquel, Risperdal, Wellbutrin, Luvox,
Cymbalta, etc. Throughout all of them, I was on the road to recovery.
Some just worked better than others at treating my symptoms.”
She ends the commentary by telling women: “You will find the right medication for you, and you will get better.”
The
prescribing of seven drugs, including two antipsychotics and five
antidepressants, to treat OCD is a typical example of the profit-driven
drugging that women snagged by the Mother’s Act will face, but it’s a
far cry from the description Katherine wrote about regarding the
comparatively minor treatment she received, when she stated in the June
7, 2004, issue of Newsweek, “in my case, that meant taking an
antidepressant and going for weekly therapy sessions.”
Aside
from all the serious health risks now known to be associated with these
drugs, most women could not afford the seven-drug “cure” that Katherine
ingested. According to DrugStore.com in December 2008, from first to
last, at a middle dose for a 30-day supply, the drugs would cost:
Effexor $197.86, Celexa $279.92, Seroquel $388.38, Risperdal $652.07,
Wellbutrin XI $202.08, Luvox CR $135.99, and Cymbalta $366.62. The cost
of “etc” is impossible to calculate without knowing how many more drugs
she took.
In
a March 11, 2009, Postpartum Progress blog, Katherine plugs herself for
speaking jobs, along with a study that concluded “the Internet is a
viable and feasible tool to screen for PPD.”
“I’ll
be adding this study to the speech I give on how women with perinatal
mood and anxiety disorders use the Internet,” she reports, and then
adds: “If you’re interested in having me speak at your event, let me
know!”
On
March 10, 2009, Katherine’s headline read: “It’s Petition Signing Time!
Get Out Your Virtual Pen & Support Women with PPD,” and reported
“that Susan Stone over at Perinatal Pro is alerting everyone to the new
petition created by the Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance to
support the Melanie Blocker Stokes MOTHERS Act. She states that last
year’s petition generated more than 24,000 signatures. The petition has
been reintroduced this year to try and get this legislation passed once
again.”
The
blog carried a live link to a page where “you can scroll down, enter
your zip code and generate letters of support in a matter of seconds
for the Melanie Blocker Stokes MOTHERS Act that will be sent to your
local Congresspeople and Senators.”
Katherine
further told readers: “I know you’re thinking ‘but I already did that
last year.’ Well that was then and this is now. Do it again.”
The
2007 Annual Report for the Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance
shows this Big Pharma front group received between $150,000 and
$499,000 from AstraZeneca, Pfizer, and Wyeth. Abbott Labs, Cyberonics,
Eli Lilly, Forest Labs, GlaxoSmithKline, Organon, and Otsuka American
Pharmaceuticals each gave between $10,000 and $149,999.
The
2006 Annual Report shows that AstraZeneca gave the group more than
$500,000. Abbott Labs, Bristol-Myers Squibb and Wyeth gave between
$150,000 and $499,000, and Forest Labs, Glaxo, Janssen, Pfizer, and
Shire Pharmaceuticals each gave between $10,000 and $149,000. The
Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance in Baltimore also received
$5,000 from Eli Lilly in the first quarter of 2008, according to
Lilly’s grant report.
In
the section of the 2007 Annual report “at a Glance: How We Met Our
Mission,” among the things accomplished by the group, it states,
“Promoted Melanie Blocker Stokes Postpartum Depression Research &
Care Act at invitation of Rep. Bobby Rush (D-Ill.).
“Promoted MOTHER’s Act at invitation of Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.)”
After
writing letters to Congress through the link established by the
industry funded alliance, those visiting Postpartum Progress will
hopefully click on the link to Amazon and buy the book “Perinatal and
Postpartum Mood Disorders: Perspectives and Treatment Guide for the
Health Care Practitioner” by none other than the Perinatal Pro
“expert,” Susan (Dowd) Stone, and Alexis Menkin, at a special price of
$43.20, for a savings of $10.80.
Katherine
also provides a link to the PerinatalPro website, where women can find
treatment for all the “mood” and “anxiety” disorders diagnosed with
Internet screenings at “Blue Skye Consulting,” where Susan is listed as
the Managing director and owner.
She
also served as president of Postpartum Support International from
2006-2008, as vice-president and conference chair in 2005-2006, and
will chair the group’s President’s Advisory Council through 2010. This
group brags of being the leading proponent of the Mother’s Act. On
March 2, 2009, Susan’s PerinatalPro Blog announced: “The Melanie
Blocker Stokes MOTHERS Act moves forward!” and stated, “Thank you to
Congressman Bobby L. Rush, U.S. Senator Robert Menendez and Senator
Richard Durbin for your unceasing efforts on behalf of America’s
mothers!”
She
should have thanked these members of Congress for boosting her career
status and yearly income from her treatment center, speaking fees and
book sales.
On
PerinatalPro, Susan posts a running list of supporters for the Mother’s
Act. On March 27, 2009, the list included many drug company funded
groups. For instance, the American Psychiatric Association is listed as
a supporter. In 2006, the pharmaceutical industry provided close to 30
percent of the association’s $62.5 million in financing, according to
the July 12, 2008, New York Times.
In
the first quarter of 2007, Eli Lilly gave the association grants worth
more than $412,000, according to Lilly’s grant report. The group also
received $623,190 from Lilly in the first quarter of 2008.
In
her PerinatalPro blogs, Susan has nothing but praise for Katherine’s
website and directs visitors back to Postpartum Progress with a live
link. On March 16, 2009, Katherine posted a “Quick Survey on Postpartum
Anxiety,” and wrote, “The fabulous Karen Kleiman has asked me to ask
you to participate in a short, five-question online survey on anxiety.
She says ANYONE can answer it, regardless of the age of their baby(s)
and regardless of diagnosis or lack thereof. ANY mother should answer
the questions. It’s super quick -- I know because I took it myself.”
Kleiman
must be fabulous because she has three books for sale on Postpartum
Progress with links to purchase them on Amazon. In fact, there are a
total of fourteen books for sale on Katherine’s site from which she
most likely profit from every sale.
Kleiman’s
survey is an excellent example of the methods used to con women into
suspecting they are mentally ill via the “expert” blogs. The preface
states: “The questions on this survey can be answered by a new mother
of an infant or an empty-nester with good recall of the early days with
her baby. Please answer as honestly as you can.”
The
question, capital letters and all, reads: “When you were carrying your
baby down a flight of stairs, did you EVER, at ANY time, have ANY
thought, image or concern that you could accidentally drop your baby?”
The survey further tells women:
If
you answered YES to the first question, please describe the type of
worry you had: Scary thoughts about dropping the baby, Scary images
about dropping the baby, Both thoughts and images, Other.
How
much distress did this cause you? A Great deal of distress, Some
distress but I quickly got over it, Some distress that seemed to
linger, Not much stress
Did
this thought or image occur once or did it recur? Only once, It
recurred frequently, It recurred persistently, It occurred off and on,
Did you ever tell anyone about the fear of dropping the baby? (Please
describe why you chose to tell someone or why you chose not to)
Women
who take the survey are told nothing about what the results mean; but
clearly the seed is planted that something is wrong if you “EVER, at
ANY time, have ANY thought, image or concern that you could
accidentally drop your baby.”
Katherine’s
website also provides links to the “Top Women’s PPMD Treatment Programs
& Specialists.” The first link on the list takes women to the
“Emory Women’s Mental Health Program” that primarily focuses on “the
evaluation and treatment of emotional disorders during pregnancy and
the postpartum period,” according to Emory University’s website.
Lilly’s 2008 first quarter grant report shows Emory’s Department of
Psychiatry received $25,000.
The
“experts” at Emory include some top pharmaceutical industry shills. For
example, a link to “Articles” brings up roughly 90 studies and papers
that include the co-author Dr Charles Nemeroff. Nemeroff is on an
ever-growing list of academic researchers in the field of psychiatry
under investigation by the US Senate Finance Committee for not
disclosing millions of dollars of income from the makers of
psychotropic drugs.
Emory’s
investigation found he was paid more than $960,000 by Paxil maker,
GlaxoSmithKline, from 2000 through 2006, but listed less than $35,000
on his Emory disclosure forms. All totaled, Nemeroff had earnings of
$2.8 million from speaking and consulting arrangements with drug
companies between 2000 and 2007, but only disclosed a fraction of that
amount, according to the Senate Finance Committee reports.
On
July 23, 2008, Medscape Psychiatry & Mental Health posted an
article by Nemeroff titled: “Weighing Risk and Benefit for Treatment of
Depression in Pregnancy and Post Partum.” On March 17, 2009, the
Medscape website stated, “This article is temporarily unavailable.”
Maybe that’s because the “top expert,” Dr Nemeroff, recently stepped down as chairman of Emory’s psychiatry department. Evelyn
Pringle is a columnist for Scoop Independent News and an investigative
journalist focused on exposing corruption in government and corporate
America. Disclosure: This article was sponsored by the Baum, Hedlund,
Aristei & Goldman law firm.
Copyright 2007. All Rights Reserved. |
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