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Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Birth defects related to Prozac

  I remember picking up my paper a long time ago and reading this very interesting title:

"Woman sues after receiving free unsolicited box of Prozac in her mail."

 and asking myself why would she be so enraged just for receiving a free antidepressant sample before realizing the implications.
    Prozac also known as the "happy pill" is a very powerful prescription drug, primarily used for treating  depression, bulimia nervosa, panic disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder and aparrently was left in  the woman's mailbox like a chocolate or perfume sample. We could easily imagine the consequences if someone else have picked it up and took it like a child for example.
   
    What made me remember that peculiar article was a study proving how Prozac, if taken during pregnancy ,may lead so very serious birth complications and birth defects in infants. Apparently the problem is so serious that the FDA has  asked the companies that make Prozac and other SSRI drugs to change the warnings they issue about possible side effects from the drugs to include the possibility that they can cause possible deadly birth defects in babies.

    While doing some research I discovered that two years previous to the FDA approval, a 1996 study published in the New England Journal of Medicine found that women taking Prozac during pregnancy were twice as likely to deliver a baby with three or more "minor abnormalities" and poorer than average neonatal adaptation. And that's just the tip of the iceberg.
     Among the birth defects that Prozac has been linked to we find:           
  • Anal atresia
  • Anencephaly (birth without a forebrain)
  • Atrial Septal Defects
  • Clubfoot
  • Craniosynostosis (premature closing of sutures of the skull)
  • Diaphragmatic hernia
  • Heart defects
  • Limb-reduction defects
  • Omphalocele (babies born with organs outside the body)
  • Patent Ductus Arteriosus (PDA)
  • Persistant pulmonary hypertension of the newborn (PPHN)
  • Pulmonary Atresia (PA)
  • Pulmonary Stenosis
  • Tricuspid Atresia (TA)
  • Ventricular Septal Defects     
     Even so, it is still being prescribed to pregnant women all over the world. While depression is a serious matter and untreated may cause grave problems for a future mommy what is more alarming is the fact that most of the prescriptions are being handed without a proper psychiatric diagnosis often by doctors doctors who aren't psychiatrists. 
     It is one thing to use such a powerful drug when dealing with depression and it's a whole different story to make use of it just to relieve some stress , or sleep better. Common sense would dictate that one should first  talk to their doctor and inquire about possible side-effects especially when  it is enough to do a simple google search to find the testimony of so many women who reported that after taking Prozac during pregnancy , their newborns suffered from life-threatening birth defects.
      So on the one side we have a very competitive and aggressive pharmaceutical market that shoves free samples of their product in your mailbox and on the other doctors who treat antidepressants as "mood boosters" while more and more pregnant women fell victim to this lack of caring for human life.
   
      If you already fall in the latter category, all I could recommend you is to take a stand and consult a  Prozac birth defect lawyer. The pursuit of a lawsuit may not only lead to some financial compensation that could ease your situation but could also serve as an example to raise awareness and  prevent such tragedies from happening. 


         

      
 

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