Pharma Backed Australian of the Year Psychiatrist Wants Millions in Government Funding for Brave New World of “Pre-Drugging” Kids
Who is Patrick McGorry and what does he promote? He’s a psychiatrist just named Australian of the Year for his work in “youth mental health reform.” What does that reform consist of? What he calls a “new form of climate change.” It sure is.
He not only promotes youths being put on antipsychotics and antidepressants, cited by international drug regulatory agencies as causing hallucinations, hostility, personality change, life-threatening diabetes, strokes, suicide and death, McGorry goes a giant step further—drug them before they’ve even developed a “psychiatric” disorder.
The Association for the Accreditation of Human Research Protection Programs (AHRPP) likens such concepts to “performing mastectomies on women who are at risk of—but do not have—breast cancer.”[i]
The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child has expressed “serious concerns” about child drugging and Senate investigations in the United States have found high profile psychiatrists who were pharmaceutically funded and using fraudulent research being among the heaviest promoters of psychiatric drug use on children. While the rest of the world is experiencing serious alarm at the rampant use of deadly psychiatric drugs on children, McGorry pushes full steam ahead to increase the amount of children being needlessly subjected to psychiatry’s most powerful drugs—antidepressants and antipsychotics.
His theory and practices are so controversial that even his colleagues in the United States have backed away from it. And a parallel study done in the United States based on the same theory that McGorry uses was considered an abject failure—even by the investigators themselves. Other psychiatrists have criticized McGorry’s pre-drugging practice as unethical and harmful to adolescents. More on that later.
This is especially so as the “symptoms” McGorry and cohorts invented to “pre-label” youths as potential candidates for psychosis and “schizophrenia” (to start with) are, according to one U.S. psychiatrist, “remarkably common…adolescence is a period of life that is normally marked by tumultuous changes in personality.”
And what was the first thing he did to capitalize on his winning his “Australian of the Year” award? He demanded the Australian government hand over another $200 million to fund more of his centers where he can drug more children. Worse, the government is entertaining the idea.
Yet, for who ever nominated him—apparently an “anonymous supporter”—due diligence wasn’t done on what McGorry advocates.
A cursory look at his research shows that while behavioral symptoms are evaluated and, on a hunch, drugged to see if they “prevent” the onset of a “mental” disorder, there’s no mention of the teens being given full and searching physical exams to first rule out undiagnosed and untreated medical conditions that may be causing it. Yet dozens of physical conditions can manifest as behavioral problems.
Australia, like the U.S., has recently seen major media and legislative exposure of the conflicts of interest between psychiatrists and the pharmaceutical industry. McGorry has received unrestricted research grant support from Eli Lilly, Janssen-Cilag, Bristol Myer Squibb, AstraZeneca, Pfizer, and Novartis.
He is also a paid consultant for, and has received speaker’s fees from all or most of these companies.[ii] His recent report on “early intervention” for young people acknowledges AstraZeneca, Janssen, Eli Lilly, Novartis, Sanofi, Bristol Myers Squibb and Pfizer.[iii] [Since 2001, the U.S. Federal and state governments have recovered more than $4 billion from many of these companies that settled criminal or civil charges of fraud and misleading advertising filed against them.]
Even Big Pharma is bowing out of psychiatric drug research. In February, the CEO of GlaxoSmithKline said it was dumping antidepressant research because it is too hard to prove that antidepressants work because “patient improvement is measured by subjective mood surveys” and not by any blood or biological test used to confirm medical diseases. AstraZeneca followed with the head of development, Anders Ekblom, announcing it would no longer research and develop drugs for depression, bipolar, anxiety and schizophrenia, saying the decision reflects the unpredictable and risky nature of clinical trials to assess medicine working on the brain. [emphasis added]
Yet, despite the unpredictability and risk of these drugs, McGorry wants to go full steam ahead, increasing the funding to increase the number of children being placed on them.
A Closer Look at McGorry’s Brave New World
In 1996, Patrick McGorry and fellow pharmaceutical company-funded researcher Alison Yung set up a clinic in Australia to monitor young people considered at a “high risk” for developing psychosis. They invented a subjective method for assessing symptoms that, while not based on science—claimed to predict early onset of psychosis or schizophrenia called prodromal (early symptoms), and drugged the teens and young adults. In other words, gave them toxic chemicals for a mental disorder they did not have.[iv]
The theory wasn’t McGorry’s alone, but he decided to test it in a world-first trial that had psychiatry’s skeptics and even psychiatrists themselves aghast. The Australian program inspired the development of similar programs worldwide.[v]
A follow up study was conducted in 2002, funded with an unrestricted grant from Janssen-Cilag pharmaceuticals, and supported by psychiatric-pharmaceutical front groups NARSAD and Stanley Foundation, as well as several Australian agencies. McGorry and colleagues said that risperidone (Risperdal)—made by Janssen—reduced the risk of “transition to psychosis” in young people.[vi]
Risperdal has been linked to diabetes and, more specifically, Type 2 diabetes. Other serious side effects include Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome (NMS), a potentially fatal syndrome involving muscle rigidity, and irregular blood pressure and pulse.[vii]
McGorry’s friend and colleague, Yale University professor of Psychiatry, Dr. Thomas McGlashan, conducted a parallel study (1997-2003), the results of which were published in the American Journal of Psychiatry. Eli Lilly funded the experiment. Sixty adolescents, who did not meet any criteria for a diagnosis of mental illness, were prescribed Lilly’s antipsychotic Zyprexa (olanzapine).[viii]
The experiment failed to demonstrate any significant benefit of Zyprexa, and 54.8% of adolescents prescribed the drug compared to 34.5% on placebo refused to complete the study (the 20% difference indicating substantial intolerable safety problems with the drug).[ix]
Even McGlashan later admitted to The New York Times in May 2006 that, “the drugs were more likely to induce weight gain than to produce a significant, measurable benefit….” Those on medication gained an average of about 20 pounds. The entire process changed Dr. McGlashan’s thinking.[x]
In fact he distanced himself from McGorry in a TIME Magazine article the same year on McGorry titled, “Drug Before Disorder?” “There may be gold in the early-intervention hills,” McGlashan conceded, “but the data are not plentiful enough and the findings not replicated enough for us to recommend anything more than further research at this point.”[xi]
Undeterred, and buoyed by an Australian government $A54 million funding of a National Youth Mental Health Foundation, McGorry plowed on to expand his unproven and potentially risky methods to the early diagnosis and treatment for “a range of mental health problems in young people: substance abuse, personality disorders, bipolar—the whole lot, really.”[xii]
Richard Warner, MB, DPM, director of Colorado Recovery in Boulder, Colorado, and professor of psychiatry at the University of Colorado, completely debunks McGorry’s theory, writing: “Medicating at the earliest appearance of symptoms, without thought for the natural history of the condition, may lock the person experiencing a brief psychosis into a long-term career as a psychiatric patient.”[xiii]
Further refuting McGorry’s theory, Honorary Professor Anthony Pelosi from the Department of Psychiatry, Hairmyres Hospital, East Kilbride, wrote, “So far, evidence from randomized trials does not support the use of psychological therapies or drugs as preventive interventions.”[xiv]
No Science to “Pre-Disorder” Screening
Dr. Warner counters any idea that science drives McGorry’s pre-disorder assessment: “As for the claim that we can prevent psychosis by intervening before the illness has become fully evident, this effort requires effective screening to detect those at risk.” Something that McGorry clearly doesn’t have.
“Patrick McGorry and colleagues at the PACE clinic in Melbourne…report that their screening instrument is capable of 80 per cent accuracy in their clinic. But the instrument is not that accurate in routine use. In the PACE sample, 35 per cent developed psychosis within one year. Probability theory tells us that if the same instrument were used to screen a general population sample…it would be correct only seven per cent of the time.”
“In fact, in another Australian clinic, the PACE instrument only achieved nine per cent accuracy. False-positive rates of the order of 70 to 90 per cent are clearly unrealistic for intervening with medication or other forms of treatment.”
Harmful Drug Outcomes
Further, the antipsychotic drug interventions McGorry suggests as one intervention approach are dangerous. “Given the expected number of false positives, the potential for harm is significant,” Dr. Warner stated.[xv]
Dr. Pelosi concurs: “[M]ost patients who enter these specialist programs will unnecessarily receive potentially dangerous treatments. Data are emerging from the clinics of early intervention enthusiasts that illustrate nicely what they have been warned about for years. When psychiatrists referred selected patients to a schizophrenia prodrome clinic, about half went on to develop a psychosis. After teachers, college counselors, and families were encouraged to refer young people with possibly prodromal symptoms directly to the same clinic for the same care plans…almost 90% were receiving unnecessary ‘preventive’ interventions.”[xvi]
Dr. Jerald J. Block, a U.S. psychiatrist, writing in Bioethics Forum, says that “preventive pharmacology” (what McGorry is practicing) is “ethically questionable territory” because the treatments given “frequently have side effects and complications” and you are potentially harming people. Further, the symptoms used to identify them as at risk of schizophrenia are “also remarkably common…adolescence is a period of life that is normally marked by tumultuous changes in personality.”[xvii]
He says, “[I]t is unclear how the quality of one’s life will be affected during and after one year of getting daily neuroleptic,” especially for a condition you haven’t even developed. “Forming and solidifying new relationships occupies much of the time in adolescence and young adulthood. As neuroleptics affect cognition and emotionality, we might expect [an antipsychotic] to influence one’s ability to build relationships, for better or worse.”[xviii]
Moreover, Dr. Warner points out, if left untreated, the person exhibiting so-called “prodromal” symptoms is likely to recover without drug treatment. “The Soteria projects in California and Berne, Switzerland, and a multi-center study in Finland demonstrated that medication is not essential for good outcome.”[xix]
Despite the Failure, Keep Lobbying for the $
Dr. Pelosi points out that when the leaders of the early intervention movement are pinned down, while they accept the criticisms against them, “this has not stopped their skilful lobbying of politicians, journalists, patients, and carers with upbeat messages about the prevention and attenuation of schizophrenia.”
Which is precisely what McGorry is doing now—using his award and unquestionably unscientific theories to advocate for more funds.[xx]
Australia’s Joseph Biederman?
McGorry has been equated with America’s Dr. Joseph Biederman, the psychiatrist who came under U.S. Senate Finance Committee investigation for failing to disclose more than $1.6 million he’d earned in consulting fees from drug makers while conducting research for universities. Biederman was on the Advisory Board of Eli Lilly, which manufactures antipsychotics and antidepressants. The New York Times said that Biederman helped to fuel a 40-fold increase from 1994 to 2003 in the diagnosis of pediatric “bipolar disorder” and corresponding increase in children taking antipsychotics.
How much McGorry may have impacted on pediatric and youth prescriptions of antipsychotics and antidepressants in Australia is unknown, but certainly warrants a closer look. As do the outcomes of his studies and what, if any, influence the drug companies that funded him may have had.
Australia’s Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) has received reports of 26,506 adverse reactions linked to antipsychotics, including 477 deaths. That’s since they were introduced over many years. By January 2009 there were 36,804 adverse reactions reported to the TGA linked to antidepressants, including 217 deaths, of which 4 were from the 10 to 19 age group.
But add to that the Food and Drug Administration’s adverse drug reaction reports (ADRs) during a five-year period alone (2004-2008) and the magnitude of where the potential risk of this “Drugs before Disorder” practice is heading. For antipsychotics, there were 91 deaths for those under 18. For antidepressants, there were 321 deaths, of which 251 were suicides. As these reports represent between one and ten percent of the ADRs, that figure could be as high as 3,210 deaths, and for antipsychotics, nearly 1,000.
Australia’s health care system ranks well internationally, and preventative measures may seem the way to enhancing it; however, the last thing the country needs, then, is a psychiatrist banner heading the idea that children and youths should be gotten to early and drugged on the precept that they might become mentally ill. Rather, they need proper medical—not psychiatric—care and educational solutions. The last thing they need is $200 million of taxpayers’ dollars funding what could be a lifetime sentence to taking mind-altering drugs.
Someone needs to care for Australia’s children and youth, but it’s definitely not Patrick McGorry.
[i] http://www.ministryoflies.com/pdf-articles/Yale-Lilly.pdf.
[[xv] http://www.camh.net/Publications/Cross_Currents/Winter_2007-08/futureorfad_crcuwinter0708.html.
[xvi] http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/full/337/aug04_1/a710.
[xvii] http://www.ahrp.org/cms/index2.php?option=com_content&do_pdf=1&id=386; http://www.bioethicsforum.org/ethics-of-preventive-psychopharmacologic-treatments.asp.
[xviii] http://www.ahrp.org/cms/index2.php?option=com_content&do_pdf=1&id=386; http://www.bioethicsforum.org/ethics-of-preventive-psychopharmacologic-treatments.asp.
[xix] http://www.camh.net/Publications/Cross_Currents/Winter_2007-08/futureorfad_crcuwinter0708.html.
[xx] http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/full/337/aug04_1/a710.
http://www.cchrint.org/2010/03/15/pharma-backed-australian-of-the-year-psychiatrist-wants-millions-in-government-funding-for-brave-new-world-of-“pre-drugging”-kids/
3,361,596 members
12,339,752 petition signatures
$17,571,785,510 diverted from Big Pharma
It’s obvious that some members of the allopathic community are still missing the connection between healthy plants and the fact that humans and animals had evolved as far as they did only as a result of the nutrients that were supplied by those plants. Had the situation been any different, the process of evolution would have selected different mutations that had different nutritional requirements.
So, while McGorry and his ilk are busy promoting their own professions through pharmaceutical interventions, they completely miss the boat in point the fingers of blame on corrupt legislators who always seem to promote destructive factory farms over smaller, family run, community farms.
The issue is one of poor management, where a problem surfaces and the first response is to blame the employees rather than ever question the supposed wisdom of those in charge. Then, when those in charge are challenged for their ineptitude, they staunchly reject any notion that their “solutions” were at fault.
At least with respect to our many years of evolution (or, put another way, our species’ gradual acceptance of the nutritional offerings of the Earth), the soil has always held the answer. Until we evolve enough physiologically away from our current model, man will just become sicker by the day. This is one thing that eugenicist strategies try to employ. While many of us see the solution in the soil, itself, US and global legislative pressures have been hard at work making sure that more people become dumb to learning how to grow their own food.
As a result, the societal stressors severely tax many people’s nutrient stores and they wind up with stress related nutritional deficiencies that allow the McGorrys of the world to then tout their worth. Had McGorry chastised the UN, the WHO, and his own legislature for missing the mark, I could understand the award, but so far he is just another wrench thrown into the gears of any meaningful solution.
[Reply]
Re: Dr. McGorry and the drugging of children.
It will be interesting to see how long it takes parents to wake up and smell the coffee. I wonder too how much longer the humans on this planet will keep doctors in general in the GOD spot. Drs are some of the brightest and some of the stupidest people out there. Buyer Beware.
A truly “brave new world” would be one where Dr. Gorry and his cohorts would all be inmates in a prison; perhaps one where they could be given the drugs they so much desire to be used on others.
S
[Reply]
re: Dr. McGorry (appropriately named)
This is a very well-written article on this evil and disgusting phenomenon in our society. The major difficulty is just the volume of funding that exists for the production and marketing of psychiatric drugs which do absolutely nothing to help and have dozens of harmful side effects. There are NO scientific studies which show the efficacy of any psychiatric drug anywhere. I know because I have looked. Any that have existed have been disproven or revealed to be fraudulent and funded by Big Pharma.
It’s most scary when it starts to hit our kids. They have fewer choices and can even be forced to take these stupid drugs which should be illegal (and in fact are in some countries).
There is a great non-profit that fights against exactly this problem. http://www.cchr.org. They have great documentary films you can buy, alternative health solutions and a great museum you can go to in Los Angeles. Support them, not Big Pharma before we all end up on psych drugs!
[Reply]
Hopefully this news will be the straw that breaks the camel’s back in terms of waking people up to how far the pharmaceutical companies and some who profess to be in a “healing profession” can go for profit, prestige and control of the health care system. As my son once said when he was given Valium and Vicadin for real complaints he had in his digestive system that the doctors did not have a clue how to treat (no one suggested changing his diet)….. “No way. You take these drugs yourself and tell me how you like them or feel after a month or two. And, furthermore, give them to your own children and see what it does to them first.” The doctor’s looked at him blankly. A few weeks later I diagnosed him with appendicitis and he has his surgery. I am a Clinical Ayurvedic Practitioner. We do stomach exams, take blood pressure and pulse and look at the tongue. We also do a complete health history and evalulate the individual’s physical appearance and from that we can design an all natural treatment program to restore them to good health. Most diseases start with digestion. The mind also plays a role. Work on those two things with herbs, diet and other natural treatments. It is simple. Food really is medicine!
[Reply]