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Reply to "Why are people more sympathetic to Lindsay Clancy than Andrea Yates? (Child death mentioned)"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Is there any history of those drugs making homicidal? Suicidal yes, but I don’t think it makes one homicidal. She wasn’t driving drunk and accidentally killed them. She intentionally strangled them (which takes a minute or two each) one at a time. [/quote] Yes there is a link between SSRIs and aggressive and even homicidal thoughts and actions. This piece discusses how the black box warnings for this are included in some countries but not in the USA where Pharma lobbied the FDA and kept the warnings off - the only warning is increased suicidality in young people which is another known side effect of some SSRIs. I believe Zoloft in particular is linked to the Aurora Colorado movie theater mass shooter and also to Phil Hartmann’s wife who murdered him and then took her own life. I’m sure there are other cases. The biggest scam Pharma ever pulled was convincing millions of Americans that SSRIs and SNRIs were largely harmless. Homicidality is an extremely rare side effect but many of the more common side effects can add up to significant negative impacts on health over time and we really should be prescribing the natural remedies for depression before we ever hand out these pills like candy. [/quote] https://nypost.com/2017/07/26/common-antidepressants-linked-to-at-least-28-murders/[/quote] This article also says: Professor Carmine Pariante, from the King’s College London’s Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, said: “There is no good evidence that antidepressants increase the risk of violent behavior, and the extremely rare cases that are cited in support of this theory could be explained by chance.” “Antidepressants are prescribed relatively widely, and so by chance, someone on antidepressants will commit a violent act.” [/quote]
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