Ask yourself: Why are there no prescription medications without horrific side effects?


Image: Ask yourself: Why are there no prescription medications without horrific side effects?

The reason there are no prescription medications available today where the side effects aren’t worse than the ailment being treated is because Big Pharma will not treat or heal anything without creating several new issues that keep their “customers for life” coming back for more. Most Americans do not want to stop eating junk food, fast food, corporate franchise restaurant food, microwaveable food, prepared food bar “stuff,” and “diet” food that’s mostly chock full of synthetic sweeteners, GMOs and MSG.

Due almost entirely to these nasty eating habits, about 200 million Americans seek medical doctors to prescribe them chemical-filled pills to kill the pain, quell the hypertension, reduce the inflammation, unclog the clots, numb the anxiety, and nullify the depression.

The FDA and CDC do not allow anything that cures disease or disorders to be labeled “medicine”

Most Americans think the FDA was created to protect us from dangerous chemicals that might wind up in food and medicine, but just the opposite is true. Over the past century, the FDA has tried to destroy all forms of holistic care in America that compete with “slash-and-burn” drug and vaccine treatments that are readily dished out by the allopathic Ponzi sick-care scheme that masquerades as ‘health’ care in this country.

The CDC is a actually a for-profit corporation listed on Dun and Bradstreet. As a health protection agency, the CDC is supposed to save lives and conduct critical science for responding to threats when they arise, but pharma corporations have lobbyists and their vice presidents now in positions of control in the bureaucracy, writing legislation that favors new, untested drug approvals, as they have for decades.

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Both the FDA and the CDC promote toxic chemicals as medicine, including prescription medications, chemotherapy, and vaccines. Meanwhile, any food, herb, tincture, plant, seed, or essential oil that treats, prevents or cures disease is banned as “medicine” while being manipulated in labs, weakened or deadened, patented, and then declared a failure.

Prescription drug deaths skyrocket while the Big Pharma world pretends to search for cures for cancer, dementia, and diabetes

Twenty years ago, only four in every 100,000 people died from taking prescription drugs “as recommended” by their medical doctors. Now, one in every ten Americans struggle with addiction to prescription drugs (think opioids and SSRIs). Right now, over three million Americans are abusing painkillers, two million are misusing tranquilizers, 1.7 million are abusing stimulants, and half a million are misusing sedatives.

More Americans use and abuse “controlled” prescription drugs than heroin, cocaine and methamphetamines combined. How many of them will die this year? About 50 people will die today from overdosing on opioids. And now heroin is the death drug of choice for most people who become addicted to opioid pain relievers. Most teenagers think it’s safer to take a friend’s prescription drugs than to dose some illegal street drugs, just because they were prescribed by a doctor, but that’s not true at all.

The side effects of most prescription drugs that treat depression and anxiety include worsened depression and thoughts of suicide. How ridiculous is that? Every prescription drug advertised on television for all American children and teens to see comes slathered with side effects you wouldn’t wish on your worst enemies. Then they all feature the same tag line, “Ask your doctor if (fill in complex chemical name here) is right for you.”

It would only make sense that natural cures would be banned if they caused side effects like all the prescription medications do, but they don’t. If organic foods caused the health problems conventional foods do, they too would be banned, recalled or stuck with warning labels.

It’s as if we are all living in total idiocy like the movie “Idiocracy.” More than 200 million Americans think it’s okay if their medical doctor prescribes them “medicine” that can cause internal bleeding, loss of vision, coma, feelings of suicide, and thoughts of committing homicide. Wake up America. You’re living inside a real-life nightmare, where the food is toxic, the medicine is more toxic, and the medical doctors have no nutrition education, yet go to school for eight years to learn how to juggle chemical medicines like some Bozo science clowns. Maybe all M.D.s should wear big red wigs with big red noses and big red shoes while scribbling out those toxic prescriptions.

Sources for this article include:

TruthWiki.org

TruthWiki.org

FDA.news

CDC.news

NaturalNews.com

Talbottcampus.com

NaturalNews.com

FDA to assist pharma in developing abuse-deterrent opioids


The US FDA is to assist the pharmaceutical industry in developing abuse-deterrent opioids and in making these safer formulations available sooner, according to a final guidance document issued on 1 April 2015.

These safer opioids are to be formulated in ways that make it more difficult to snort or inject the medications.

The document, titled “Abuse-Deterrent Opioids – Evaluation and Labelling Guidance for Industry”, is part of the FDA’s efforts to curb the escalating misuse or abuse of prescription opioids in the US, which has become a public health concern. [http://www.fda.gov/downloads/Drugs/GuidanceComplianceRegulatoryInformation/Guidances/UCM334743.pdf;Addiction 2014;109:177-181; Addiction 2014;109:185-186]

“The science of abuse-deterrent medication is still relatively new and rapidly evolving. The FDA is eager to engage with manufacturers to support advancements in this area and make these medications available as quickly as possible,” said FDA Commissioner, Dr. Margaret Hamburg.

In the Asia-Pacific region, Australia takes the lead in the opioid epidemic and the development of measures against abuse.

“The prescription of oxycodone and tramadol in Australia saw dramatic increases between 1992 and 2007,” said William Chui, President of the Society of Hospital Pharmacists of Hong Kong. “In Victoria, a 21-fold increase was seen in the detection of oxycodone in deaths reported to the Coroner between 2000 and 2009. Almost 54 percent of the death cases were the result of drug toxicity.” [Inj Prev 2011;17:254-259]

“Diversion of prescription opioids to drug abusers or dealers is very common in Australia. To curb the opioid epidemic, a formulation of hydromorphone is enteric-coated with a hard substance to prevent abuse through injection,” he told MIMS Oncology. “Furthermore, community pharmacists actively provide counselling and monitoring for patients on opioid therapy through a government-run programme.”

“In the rest of Asia Pacific, little data is published on the prevalence of opioid diversion,” he continued. “In Hong Kong, opioid diversion is uncommon because these analgesics are generally underused except in oncology settings. Also, our choice of opioid analgesics is limited, and no abuse-deterrent opioids are currently available on the Hong Kong market.”

Although the development of abuse-deterrent opioids can help reduce diversion and abuse, Chui said pharmacists also play important roles in ensuring appropriate use of these medications. “Their roles include opioid prescription monitoring, identification and referral of patients at risk of opioid abuse, and collaborative care with physicians in cases of misuse, abuse or diversion,” he suggested.

“In Hong Kong, opioid registries should be implemented and made mandatory for all prescribers, including those in the private sector,” he added.

FDA to assist pharma in developing abuse-deterrent opioids


The US FDA is to assist the pharmaceutical industry in developing abuse-deterrent opioids and in making these safer formulations available sooner, according to a final guidance document issued on 1 April 2015.

These safer opioids are to be formulated in ways that make it more difficult to snort or inject the medications.

The document, titled “Abuse-Deterrent Opioids – Evaluation and Labelling Guidance for Industry”, is part of the FDA’s efforts to curb the escalating misuse or abuse of prescription opioids in the US, which has become a public health concern. [http://www.fda.gov/downloads/Drugs/GuidanceComplianceRegulatoryInformation/Guidances/UCM334743.pdf;Addiction 2014;109:177-181; Addiction 2014;109:185-186]

“The science of abuse-deterrent medication is still relatively new and rapidly evolving. The FDA is eager to engage with manufacturers to support advancements in this area and make these medications available as quickly as possible,” said FDA Commissioner, Dr. Margaret Hamburg.

In the Asia-Pacific region, Australia takes the lead in the opioid epidemic and the development of measures against abuse.

“The prescription of oxycodone and tramadol in Australia saw dramatic increases between 1992 and 2007,” said William Chui, President of the Society of Hospital Pharmacists of Hong Kong. “In Victoria, a 21-fold increase was seen in the detection of oxycodone in deaths reported to the Coroner between 2000 and 2009. Almost 54 percent of the death cases were the result of drug toxicity.” [Inj Prev 2011;17:254-259]

“Diversion of prescription opioids to drug abusers or dealers is very common in Australia. To curb the opioid epidemic, a formulation of hydromorphone is enteric-coated with a hard substance to prevent abuse through injection,” he told MIMS Oncology. “Furthermore, community pharmacists actively provide counselling and monitoring for patients on opioid therapy through a government-run programme.”

“In the rest of Asia Pacific, little data is published on the prevalence of opioid diversion,” he continued. “In Hong Kong, opioid diversion is uncommon because these analgesics are generally underused except in oncology settings. Also, our choice of opioid analgesics is limited, and no abuse-deterrent opioids are currently available on the Hong Kong market.”

Although the development of abuse-deterrent opioids can help reduce diversion and abuse, Chui said pharmacists also play important roles in ensuring appropriate use of these medications. “Their roles include opioid prescription monitoring, identification and referral of patients at risk of opioid abuse, and collaborative care with physicians in cases of misuse, abuse or diversion,” he suggested.

“In Hong Kong, opioid registries should be implemented and made mandatory for all prescribers, including those in the private sector,” he added.