Stevie Nicks Confesses: Common Remedy Turned My Hair Gray and Molted
My Skin...
by
Joseph Mercola
Recently
by Joseph Mercola: Eight
Foods You Should Almost Never, Ever Eat
In the article
linked below, Fleetwood Mac star Stevie Nicks discusses the biggest
mistake she says she ever made giving in to her friends and
going to see a psychiatrist. He put her on the drug Klonopin, and
the next eight years of her life were destroyed.
According to
Nicks, if she didn't take it, her hands started to shake. She gained
weight and felt as if she had a neurological disease.
As reported
in the Daily Beast, Nicks said:
"Finally,
in 1993, I'd had enough. I said, 'Take me to a hospital.' I went
in for 47 days, and it made Betty Ford look like a cakewalk. My
hair turned gray and my skin molted. I could hardly walk. You can
detox off heroin in 12 days. Coke is just a mental detox. But tranquilizers
they are dangerous. I was terrified to leave, and I came
away knowing that that would never happen to me again."
Sources:
Dr. Mercola's
Comments:
Like many of
you I am sure, I enjoyed listening to Fleetwood Mac in the 70s and
it was quite a surprise to read Stevie Nick's story.
It's been repeatedly
demonstrated that prescription drugs can, and frequently do, pose
SERIOUS risks to your health. In this case, Fleetwood Mac star Stevie
Nicks ended up battling the devastating side effects of a drug she
probably didn't need in the first place, and it swallowed eight
years of her life.
Although many
fail to realize this, prescription drugs can be just as addictive
as illegal drugs. In fact, in many cases there's no difference
between a street drug and a prescription drug. For example, hydrocodone,
a prescription opiate, is synthetic heroin. It's indistinguishable
from any other heroine as far as your brain and body is concerned.
So, if you're hooked on hydrocodone, you are in fact a good-old-fashioned
heroin addict.
Unfortunately,
not a lot of attention is paid to prescription
drug abuse. Still, nearly 20 percent of Americans admit to having
used prescription drugs for nonmedical reasons, and three quarters
of those may be abusing prescription drugs.
Insane Drug
Use Statistics and the Danger of Polypharmacy
There's no
doubt that the US has been manipulated into a nation of drug users.
In just a ten-year span, from 1992 to 2002, the number of prescriptions
written increased by a whopping 61 percent. And in that same period,
the number of prescriptions written for opiates increased by almost
400 percent.
According to
the latest statistics
from the Kaiser Health Foundation, the average American, aged
19 to 64, now takes more than 11 prescription drugs!
This brings
up yet another problem, which is the exponentially increased health
risk of mixing multiple drugs. The
word 'polypharmacy' means "many drugs," and essentially refers
to instances where an individual is taking too many drugs
either because more drugs are prescribed than clinically indicated,
or when the sheer number of pills simply becomes a burden for the
patient.
This situation
used to be primarily a concern for the elderly, who generally take
more medicines than younger folk in the US, the average
senior fills more than 31 prescriptions per year. But over the
past several years, even children as young as three are increasingly
being prescribed four or more drugs!
This is a
significant problem, as the more drugs you mix together, the greater
the chances of serious side effects. People (of all ages) taking
psychiatric drugs
appear to be particularly prone to polypharmacy, which is particularly
disturbing since each and every one of these drugs are quite potent
and potentially dangerous when taken all by itself.
The Incredible
Cost of Polypharmacy
Prescription
drug abuse and overuse not only wreak havoc on the health, well-being,
and longevity of the American population, it also has a major impact
on our health care system, and it's NOT a beneficial one.
In fact,
drug use accounts for tens of billions of dollars per year in health
care costs. Let me explain that's tens of billions of
dollars to treat the side effects of drug use, IN ADDITION
TO the close
to one TRILLION dollars those same drugs cost our health care
system in the first place!
So the idea
that "more and better drugs" are the answer to our nation's failing
health is "misguided" to say the least...
When the Treatment
is Worse than the Original Problem
Sadly, there
are literally millions of people who, like Stevie Nicks, suffer
the ravaging side effects of drugs they didn't need in the first
place drugs that were supposed to "help" them in some way,
but in reality cause problems far worse than the original concern.
For example,
knowing how hard it can be to quit drugs like heroin, it's shocking
to hear Nicks' description of her ordeal in detoxing from Klonopin;
an anti-anxiety medication:
"I went
in for 47 days, and it made Betty Ford look like a cakewalk. My
hair turned gray and my skin molted. I could hardly walk. You can
detox off heroin in 12 days. Coke is just a mental detox. But tranquilizers
they are dangerous. I was terrified to leave, and I came
away knowing that that would never happen to me again."
It's time to
wake up from our collective slumber and cease to fall prey to this
predatory type of "health care."
You are Responsible
for Your Health
It's unfortunate,
but you, as a patient, carry the greatest burden when it comes to
changing the current drug paradigm. I don't think we'll see doctors
changing their prescribing ways anytime soon it's what they're
trained to do. In many cases, it's ALL they do! So as a patient,
you have to take responsibility for your health, and question the
drugs prescribed to you.
- Do you really
need that drug?
- Is it prescribed
appropriately, or is it being prescribed for an off-label use?
- What are
the side effects?
- Is it addictive?
These are but
a few of the most common-sense questions you need to ask before
you swallow any pill.
In the case
of Stevie Nicks, the health problems she experienced were par the
course for that drug. Klonopin
(Clonazepam) is an anti-seizure, anti-anxiety medication that
works by decreasing electrical activity in your brain. It's in the
same family of drugs as valium and xanax well-known tranquilizers.
(Ironically, it's also used to treat acute catatonic states, when
a person does not speak or move at all.)
Side effects
include:
| Drowsiness
|
Dizziness,
unsteadiness, and problems with coordination |
Difficulty
thinking or remembering |
| Muscle
or joint pain |
Blurred
vision |
Changes
in sex drive, reduced sexual function |
| Addiction
|
Fetal harm;
birth defects |
Changes
in mental health, including thoughts of suicide |
Withdrawal
symptoms include new or worsening seizures, hallucinations, uncontrollable
shaking and changes in behavior.
Prescription
Drugs Cause More Deaths than Illegal Drugs
In addition
to exorbitant health care costs for drugs and their subsequent side
effects, the cost in terms of lives has also skyrocketed.
Opioid painkillers
alone opium-like drugs that include morphine and codeine
now claim more than 13,800 lives each year. This means prescription
painkillers have surpassed both heroin and cocaine as the leading
cause of fatal overdoses, despite the fact that the FDA increased
the restrictions for consumer drug ads in 2005, especially for COX-2
painkillers like Celebrex and Bextra.
Additionally,
more than 700,000
people visit U.S. emergency rooms each year as a result of adverse
drug reactions. And, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
(FDA), adverse drug reactions from drugs that are properly
prescribed and properly administered cause about 106,000 deaths
per year, making prescription drugs the fourth-leading
cause of death in the U.S.
When you compare
these statistics to the death toll from illegal drugs which
is about 10,000 per year you can begin to see the magnitude
of the problem the pharmaceutical industry is propagating.
A Very Real
Side Effect: a 25 Percent Chance of Premature Death
Three years
ago, an analysis
of federal data by the nonprofit Institute for Safe Medication Practices
(ISMP) offered up some truly shocking information. In
the first quarter of 2008, fatalities from adverse drug reactions
accounted for 23 percent of all adverse reaction reports!
If that's not
a wakeup call, I don't know what is.
Naturally,
some drugs are far riskier than others. Chantix, for example, accounts
for more adverse reaction reports, including deaths, than the ten
best-selling brand name drugs combined! It even out-harms the addictive
troublemaker oxycodone, a potent pain medication.
The greatest
travesty here though is that Chantix is actually intended for
use in healthy people to help them quit smoking! If that's
not insane, I don't know what is...
There are
NO Absolutely Safe Drugs
A clear majority
of people have been successfully brainwashed into thinking that
FDA-approved drugs can safely and effectively treat every possible
ailment under the sun. This is a tragedy of epic proportions. But
it's not too late to turn this madness around.
First and foremost,
you must understand that even under the BEST circumstances
such as with a drug that has gone through unbiased, stringent, long-term
testing anything can happen when a drug is released
into the uncontrolled environment of your individual body. It may
interact badly with another drug you're taking, or perhaps a food
you eat causes an unforeseen reaction, or maybe your genetic makeup,
metabolism or the state of your immune system will cause it to have
an unpredictable impact.
Unfortunately,
studies are frequently biased, results
are skewed, and drugs are put on a fast-track to be approved
long before anyone knows whether they're safe. In essence, it's
all a gamble, and there are NO 100 percent safe drugs.
Should You
Medicate or Not?
Ultimately,
it's your body, and the decision to medicate yourself for
an ailment is yours alone.
However, I
urge you to research any drug your doctor prescribes before you
take it. Do not just take your doctor's word for its safety. Most
physicians have little information to offer you aside from what
they've been told by their drug
reps.
Make sure
you are aware of the potential side effects of the drug, read the
package insert, and remember that even if it lists a side effect
as rare, it can still happen to you.
Then decide
whether the potential benefits truly outweigh the potential risks.
Also remember
that a large number of drugs are vastly over-prescribed and unnecessary.
They're frequently referred to as "blockbuster drugs." If several
people you know are on it, it's a dead giveaway that it's probably
being over-prescribed, which means you should be even more cautious
not less!
Redefine the
Word "Health"
What does "health"
mean to you? Does your idea of being healthy include taking a dozen
medications or more?
I certainly
hope not...
If you make
drugs a last option instead of a first choice, you will
have taken a major step in the right direction.
"Health" does
NOT equate to "suppressing symptoms of disease." Rather, true health
means having a body that actually functions as it should... And
the only way to get there is by addressing the root causes of any
symptoms of disease you may have not covering them up with
a drug.
The "problem"
with this mindset, however, is that the medical- and pharmaceutical
industries can't make any money through this strategy. If
you get rid of the underlying cause of a disease, you effectively
cure it and all symptoms go away. If you have no symptoms, there's
no reason to take medications to suppress those symptoms.
This may sound
obvious to some, but believe me, many people still don't "get" this.
They take drugs
in the belief that they're doing something beneficial to their health
when in fact there's not a single drug on the market that is designed
to cure anything. The only thing a drug can do is address a particular
symptom or set of symptoms. And, if you don't address the root cause,
your problem never goes away!
This is how
you get stuck in the mindless never ending loop of polypharmacy.
Basic Health
Strategies that Can Address a Large Number of Health Problems
There are many
health conditions that can be prevented or effectively treated with
lifestyle changes alone, yet if you go to a typical doctor, you'll
walk out with one or more prescriptions. Examples of health problems
that typically don't require drug intervention include:
I realize it
may require a massive shift in thinking to realize that your body
can heal itself, and that drugs typically only hinder the process.
But I can't stress enough the importance of this most basic principle:
Disease
can only be resolved by addressing its root cause.
What many people
fail to realize is that it is possible to maintain optimal health
by simply avoiding unnecessary drugs and by understanding the fundamentals
of good nutrition and exercise.
Remember you
can Take Control of Your Health by:
May
19, 2011
Copyright ©
2011 Dr. Joseph Mercola
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