.I highly doubt that any doctor has done much research on Miralax beyond their free lunch with the big-pharma rep.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you. So glad I read this. My 4 year old has been on this for about a month due to extreme constipation and to allow a tear to heal in his rectum. I am definitely taking him off!!!
Anonymous wrote:Any adverse event associated with any drug has to reported to the FDA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you. So glad I read this. My 4 year old has been on this for about a month due to extreme constipation and to allow a tear to heal in his rectum. I am definitely taking him off!!!
Do not take your kid off a drug recommended by a doctor because someone on an internet message board posted a link to a website of a snake oil competitor of the drug your kid's doctor recommended.
If you need to, contact his pediatrician to discuss.
As other posters have said, being listed in the FDA database, with a note that FDA didn't decide to investigate means absolutely nothing about the safety of a drug.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you. So glad I read this. My 4 year old has been on this for about a month due to extreme constipation and to allow a tear to heal in his rectum. I am definitely taking him off!!!
Anonymous wrote:You can search Miralax on FDA's website. FDA decided not to take action. Any drug can be reported to FDA's adverse event reporting program by a patient, doctor, prescriber. It doesn't mean the drug caused the adverse event.
Back in December of 2011, the FDA placed MiraLAX — a polyethylene glycol-containing blockbuster drug marketed by Merck & Co — on its Adverse Event Reporting System (AERS) in connection to “neuropsychiatric events.”