| ▲ | rrrrrrrrrrrryan 21 hours ago | |||||||||||||
Homicidal? | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | burnt-resistor 18 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||
Yep. My dad recounted that in 1989, he had to restrain her because she (then age 40) had a psychotic episode described as a "murderous impulse" just after starting a brand new "wonder pill", Prozac. This was quite uncharacteristic for a tiny, docile woman who is often described as "sweet" and "nice" who never had any psychiatric symptoms before or since except a couple of brief times of situational depression. There's a lot of FUD and social ills washing in mass media rather than less biased peer-reviewed research that blames individuals, conflates preexisting conditions with medication side-effects, and clouds the issue of whether SSRIs increase suicide and/or violent psychosis or not. Check out one of the modern black box warnings of fluoxetine (Prozac) that only addresses a subset of side-effects, suicide in children and young adults: https://dailymed.nlm.nih.gov/dailymed/fda/fdaDrugXsl.cfm?set... Somehow, I doubt there is much motivation to look for economically inconvenient and unnerving side-effects in some demographics, especially if they're adults who can easily be blamed entirely for all of their own actions because it's "definitely not" due to a (formerly) profitable pill or a pseudoscientific profession that doesn't exactly know how the medications it prescribes work, who would benefit from or be harmed by them, or have any ability to measure the organ or system they're supposed treating. | ||||||||||||||
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