America’s Drugged
Society
On almost any television channel
or in magazines throughout the country, you would be hard
pressed to not find an advertisement for some kind of drug or
another. Everything from arthritis pain, to indigestion, to
erectile dysfunction, to anxiety and depression
“disorders” has many pharmaceutical companies
looking to sell you one of their latest pills.
Advertisers use tactics such as
the colors and shapes of the pills to even cartoons to get
people to remember their drugs. As a result, many doctors
today are flooded with patients that are convinced they need
a drug for something and won’t be happy until they
leave with a prescription. Many pharmaceutical companies also
look to market many of their drugs for other uses through new
“studies”. Examples of this recently include an
epilepsy drug for alcoholism, an anti-impotence drug for high
blood pressure and an anti-depressant to quit
smoking.
The cost of all this to Americans
is much more than the billions that are spent on the drugs;
many people are losing their health and even their lives
because of the harmful “side effects” of the
drugs. The fact is that all drugs have effects and are, to a
greater or lesser degree, harmful to our bodies. L. Ron
Hubbard stated this datum for many years, along with the
accumulation of drug residues in the fatty tissue of the
body, through research in the field of drug rehabilitation.
He also discovered a method to effectively reduce the
build-up of those toxins through a sauna detoxification
process.
The harmful effects of these
widely promoted drugs are not without consequence to the
pharmaceutical companies. There now are hundreds of thousands
of current or potential lawsuits against various drug
manufacturers due to these effects. It actually comes as
little surprise to the drug conglomerates though, as many of
them, if not all, have been stockpiling billions of dollars
to pay for these damages through settlements. Apparently the
many billions of dollars in sales outweigh the detrimental
health situations and damaging suits, as long as people
continue to think that there is a drug to fit every illness
or condition.
An article last week in the
New York Times reported pharmaceutical companies
currently under suit include Pfizer, GlaxoSmithKline, Wyeth,
Merck, Johnson & Johnson, Eli Lilly and Bristol-Myers
Squibb. This array of drug giants covers many of the
well-known name brand drugs on the market, and many of the
suits claim that the companies tried to hide or lessen the
actual risk of the side effects.
As if the side effects
weren’t enough, drugs such as painkillers can be highly
addictive. One example of this fact is the outbreak of
name-brand oxycodone addiction and the crime that comes with
such a problem.
A feature article in the June
issue of Redbook magazine tells the story of several
women that were originally prescribed some type of medication
and ended up becoming hooked. Mindy Jewkes was one of the
women interviewed. She was a Registered Nurse who got
addicted to painkillers and lost everything in her life that
was dear to her before getting her life back through Narconon
Arrowhead, which is a non-traditional drug rehabilitation and
education facility. According to the article, there were 5
million people in 2001 that ended up taking prescription
drugs for non-medical reasons.
Unfortunately, due to massive
lobbying efforts and self-funded clinical trials and studies,
leading to false hopes that drugs are the answer,
“traditional medicine” has become the effect of
the drug companies, not to mention the promotional free
samples, gifts and incentives that have been offered to
pharmacies, universities and doctors themselves. Just by
looking at recent news stories, one could find several
examples of drug companies being reprimanded for such
practices or even fraud.
You don’t have to be too
old to remember the time when people were relatively
“normal” and half your family wasn’t on
some kind of drug. A good question to ask is if the drugging
of millions of Americans for conditions that can be handled
without manufactured chemicals is worth the convenience of
taking a pill and hoping you don’t get one of the
several side effects that can occur with each prescription or
over-the-counter medication.
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Story©2003 Narconon of
Oklahoma, Inc. All Rights Reserved. NARCONON is a registered
trademark and service mark owned by Association for Better
Living and Education International and is used with its
permission.