08 Mar 2008 12:28:06 | Online Lawyer Source
A study that appeared in the July 21, 2004 Journal of the
American Medical Association appeared to support previous data
possibly linking antidepressants to suicidal impulses. After
looking at four drugs and nearly 2,800 British adults and
children, there was evidence that suicidal thoughts or attempts
were four times more likely during the first ten days of
treatment than they were after three months.
The FDA is investigating antidepressants and issued a public
health advisory asking ten drugmakers to strengthen suicide
warnings on labels earlier this year, including popular drugs
Paxil and Prozac. On Aug. 26 GlaxoSmithKline Plc, Europe's
largest drug maker, said it settled a lawsuit filed by New York
Attorney General Eliot Spitzer, who accused the drug maker last
June of withholding safety data that had examined the safety of
prescribing the anti-depressant medication Paxil to children.
When Paxil was compared to Dothiepen users, studies found Paxil
users to have 29 percent more suicidal tendencies.
One of the study's authors believes the increase in suicidal
tendencies among Paxil users was statically insignificant,
though it also did not eliminate the possibility of increased
risk when using Paxil. The study's data offers more insight to
the controversial debate over the link between antidepressants
and suicide but fails to resolve any lingering questions. Some
family members of people that committed suicide while taking
antidepressant drugs have continued to blame the medication.
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For more information on antidepressant use and the possible link
to suicide, please go to
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