23,000 Alzheimer's Patients Killed Each Year In The U.K. By Psych Drugs



NaturalNews.com
Originally published September 25 2008

23,000 Alzheimer's Patients Killed Each Year in the U.K. by Psych
Drugs
by David Gutierrez

(NaturalNews) More than 23,000 Alzheimer's disease patients are killed
in the United Kingdom each year due to "off-label" use of anti-
psychotic drugs, according to a report issued by Liberal Democrat
Minister Paul Burstow.

"There are around 244,000 people with dementia living in care homes,"
Burstow said, "and the Alzheimer's Society estimates 100,000 are being
given anti-psychotic drugs. Of those, I am saying that 23.5 percent
could be dying prematurely as a result of being prescribed anti-
psychotic drugs - or 23,500 people a year."

Anti-psychotic drugs such as chlorpromazine, haloperidol,
thioridazine, trifluoperazine and risperidone are designed to treat
the delusions or hallucinations caused by schizophrenia or bipolar
disorder, and are not authorized for use on patients with Alzheimer's
or other forms of dementia. But due to their sedative effects, they
are commonly used on nursing home patients, especially those who have
a tendency toward agitation or aggression. Dubbing the drugs a
"chemical cosh," patient advocates have accused care home staff of
sedating patients with potentially dangerous drugs just to make life
easier for themselves.

"The over-prescription of anti-psychotic drugs to people with dementia
is a serious abuse of human rights," said Neil Hunt, chief executive
of the Alzheimer's Society. "Anti-psychotics should be used as a last
resort."

Burstow's mortality numbers were derived from a study led by Clive
Ballard from King's College London. Ballard and colleagues found that
Alzheimer's patients who were treated with anti-psychotics had a
significantly higher rate of death than those given a placebo. After
24 months of treatment, only 54.8 percent of the anti-psychotic group
was still alive, compared with 78 percent of the placebo group. By 42
months, the survival rates had dropped to 28 percent in the anti-
psychotic group and 60 percent in the placebo group.

Prior research by Ballard found that when dementia patients were taken
off of anti-psychotics, they demonstrated less trouble thinking and
communicating than those who were not taken off the medication. These
findings have been backed up by other studies, which have also found
that patients taken off of anti-psychotics do not become any more
aggressive. Still other research has concluded that Alzheimer's
patients on anti-psychotics have three times the risk of stroke and
twice the risk of death as patients not being given the drugs.

In spite of this research and the fact that anti-psychotics are not
approved for dementia patients, the use of the drugs on people over
the age of 60 - primarily dementia patients - has increased by nearly
40 percent in the last few years. Burstow accused the government of
failing to act decisively to stem this practice.

The use of anti-psychotics for dementia falls into a gray area of the
law. Although British health guidelines do not allow the use of anti-
psychotics as a sedative, doctors are allowed to use the drugs if they
decide they are necessary.

"Using drugs to restrain vulnerable older people with dementia is no
different to strapping them to a chair," he said. "It is an abuse of
their human rights. Ministers are guilty of being complacent. There
should a ban on prescribing anti-psychotic drugs in all but the most
severe cases of dementia."

"There are human alternatives," Burstow added. "They demand more
training and support, but they work."

According to Hunt, proper training of nursing home staff can decrease
the use of drugs by 50 percent.

Burstow also called for immediate police action to halt the practice
of sedating elderly patients.

"Inappropriate or abusive prescribing is not just sedating older
people, it is killing them. The law makes it clear: Treatment without
consent is assault. It is time the police and the courts took abuse of
elderly people seriously."

Sources for this story include: www.telegraph.co.uk, www.medicalnewstoday.com
and www.dailymail.co.uk.

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