By John Wayne on Wednesday, 26 October 2022
Category: Race, Culture, Nation

Beware of Side Effects! By Mrs Vera West

It has been said that all medications have potential risks, perhaps with long-term use. While we at Alor.org, are not offering medical advice, the following material from Dr Mercola is well-worth considering, for information purposes only. Many common medications, some easily obtained at a supermarket, can have negative effects. Usually there are warnings which Big Pharma puts in with the meds to cover itself legally, and one should read the leaflets. Beware of long-term usage, so check with your friendly GP; they looked after us fine during Covid, didn’t they?

 

https://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2022/10/24/common-medications-long-term-use-problem.aspx?ui=4b76ef641adf6eb9d4ff474498ab322ff93fc0a1359d95e535955e5de58beefb&sd=20190530&cid_source=dnl&cid_medium=email&cid_content=art2HL&cid=20221024&cid=DM1271927&bid=1628146493

“Global pharmaceutical sales rose from $780 billion in 2010 to $1.186 trillion in 2021.1 In that same period, the U.S. market increased from $315 billion to $555 billion. In other words, the U.S. market was nearly 50% of world market sales. When drug sales were compared, the leading pharmaceutical product in 2021 was the COVID-19 vaccine, which generated $37 billion in revenue.

When compared to other large companies, the profitability of the pharmaceutical industry is significantly greater than other public companies.2 In other words, the pharmaceutical industry is big business. They make money when you buy medication and stay on it for the long term. However, there are several drugs that were designed to be taken short-term, but have become long-term staples in the medicine cabinet.

Research published in July 2022 revealed a dramatic rise in adverse drug reactions in the U.K.3 Many of these were related to the high number of medications prescribed to the participants. Overprescribing is known as “polypharmacy,” which has been a growing problem over the last decade as the pharmaceutical industry develops new drugs with the inferred intent of lengthening life through chemistry.

However, as is seen in revenue reports and research into the negative consequences, it appears the goal is growing revenue. If it were better health, the first recommendation would be lifestyle changes in collaboration with established support systems to help you make those changes. Instead, the first step is often a simple prescription, which may come with complicated side effects.

Growing Problem With Polypharmacy

Data4,5 demonstrate that between 80% and 89% of adults aged 65 and older take at least one prescribed medication and 54% take four or more. Adverse effects are common and often drive patients to seek other drugs to control the side effects of the first drug.

Polypharmacy, or using multiple medications, is more common in older adults who have several risk factors and chronic health conditions that can lead to overprescribing. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,6 6 out of every 10 adults have at least one chronic health condition and 4 out of every 10 have two or more.

Prescription medications are not the only type of drug that can cause challenges with polypharmacy. Over-the-counter (OTC) drugs are those you can buy without a prescription. Drugstore shelves are lined with pain medications, allergy relief, cold preparations, and remedies for gastrointestinal issues.

While you can purchase them without a prescription, OTC drugs can have the same types of drug interactions with prescriptions or other OTC medications. As you consider whether you are taking too many drugs, it is also important to remember that some medications were designed to be taken for the short term and long-term use can lead to their own set of problems.

Pain Medications

Opioids also commonly cause sedation, physical dependence and respiratory depression. Withdrawal symptoms include muscle and bone pain, severe cravings, diarrhea and vomiting and uncontrollable leg movements.9

Unfortunately, using them for an extended period can lead to ulcers, indigestion, stomach and colon bleeding, increased blood pressure, cardiovascular events11 or kidney damage.12 Drugs include ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin), Naproxen (Aleve, Anaprox DS, Naprosyn) and Celecoxib (Celebrex).

Central Nervous System

They have the potential for abuse and addiction with the risk of profound sedation, coma and death, which increases when combined with other sedatives, including alcohol. Withdrawal can lead to psychosis, hallucinations, panic attacks and seizures.

Adverse effects include mild sedation, akathisia, sexual dysfunction, acute dystonia, weight gain, tardive dyskinesia and myocarditis.15

Respiratory System

Hormone-Acting Medications

Inhibitors

Other Common Medications to Avoid

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