Showing posts with label veterans affairs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label veterans affairs. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Is Post-Traumatic Stress Medication a Danger to Veterans?


I have not run any guest posts lately, but some months ago the AllTreatment site was kind enough to feature a guest post of my own, so I've arranged to return the favor with an article by Brandon Yu. He is a Managing Editor of Alltreatment.com. AllTreatment is an online rehab center directory and substance abuse information resource.‬

Opinions expressed in guest posts are not necessarily those of Addiction Inbox.
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By Brandon Yu

After spending weeks, months, or years on the battlefield, veterans often experience Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) when returning to civilian life. The Department of Veteran Affairs reports that 60% of men and 50% of women, not just veterans, experience some sort of trauma in their lifetimes. PTSD has been known to cause insomnia, depression, and a sense of detachment, making it difficult for veterans to readjust to society, and throwing their personal and professional lives into disarray.

While there may not be a cure for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, there are treatments, and certainly medication, to sooth its side-effects. The most popular medication for PTSD is the pharmaceutical Quetiapine, marketed as Seroquel by the biologics company AstraZeneca. A potent antipsychotic, Seroquel is often prescribed to treat symptoms of psychoses including schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and acute manic episodes; numerous physicians claim that it is one of the few treatments that curbs the nightmares, insomnia and anxiety that come with PTSD. It is not considered a controlled substance, and not deemed addictive like other sleeping pills.

However, several families of veterans are calling for a Congressional investigation of Seroquel after reports of mistreatment over the drug have arisen. After some complaints that the treatment was not working, some doctors prescribed progressively larger doses for given patients, with certain ones receiving more than double the maximum recommended. Though only six similar deaths have been noted, there is a belief that there have been others. The New England Journal of Medicine recently published a report linking Seroquel use to heart failure, noting that 3 of 1,000 patients who suffered from cardiac arrest were noted to be on Seroquel at the time of death.

Seroquel is one of the more common medications in America, as it is one of the Department of Veterans Affairs’ most prescribed drugs and the fifth best-selling drug in the nation. It has been reported to help schizophrenia and PTSD, but some of its side effects, such as diabetes, weight gain, and uncontrollable muscle spasms, have caused AstraZeneca to receive multiple trips to court, with an estimated 10,000 product liability lawsuits. It is noted that although it is commonly prescribed for those suffering PTSD, Seroquel has not received FDA approval as proper treatment for insomnia. Families of veterans who are attempting a Congressional investigation on Seroquel are hoping for a clearer guideline of the side effects as well as the risk to one’s health.

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Study Probes Military’s “Culture of Binge and Underage Drinking”


Problems continue after active duty.

A University of Minnesota study found a level of underage binge drinking in the military that the study’s lead author called “dangerous to both the drinkers and those around them.” Mandy Stahre, the epidemiologist who headed up the study, said the results were disturbing, “given the equipment and dangerous environments commonly encountered by active duty military personnel.”

The article, “Binge Drinking Among U.S. Active-Duty Military Personnel,” appears in the March issue of The American Journal of Preventative Medicine. Researchers at the University of Minnesota and the Centers for Disease Control analyzed the results of an anonymous health survey of 16,000 military personnel conducted in 2005. (The group defined binge drinking as four or more drinks in one session for men, and three or more drinks for women.) In an interview with a University of Minnesota radio station, Stahre said that 43 percent of the active respondents reported binge drinking in the past month. Stahre said the figure represents “a total of 30 million episodes of binge drinking, or 32 episodes of binge drinking per person per year.” 5 million of those episodes, Stahre said, involved active duty personnel under the age of 21.

These figures are scarcely surprising, but the implications are no less nerve-wracking. Stahre said military binge drinkers were five times more likely to drive while drinking, compared to non-binge drinkers. Moreover, binge drinking is chronically under-reported in the military, Stahre said, cautioning that the conclusions in the study “may be conservative.” She called for an increase in alcohol excise taxes, stricter military enforcement of a minimum drinking age of 21, and “greater efforts at screening and counseling for alcohol misuse” in the military.

What can a study of this nature accomplish? Stahre said she hopes it will provide “further evidence that binge drinking is a major public health problem in the U.S. and in the military. And the military may be in a unique position to help reduce this problem in the general population, particularly given that nearly 13 percent of U.S. adults report current or past military service.”

Last summer, a study published in the August 13 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) demonstrated that Reserve and National Guard combat personnel returning from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan were at increased risk for “new-onset heavy drinking, binge drinking and other alcohol-related problems.” The article also found a strong association between posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSE) and substance abuse among returning veterans.

photo credit: http://navyformoms.ning.com/

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