A drug that is supposed to the one safe medication to give depressed children may be actually making children suicidal, according to new research. It was found that children had a 50% higher occurrence of suicidal thoughts while taking Prozac, as opposed to a placebo.
This is definite cause for concern given the number of children currently taking the supposedly safe Prozac. More tests must be conducted immediately to decipher if this is truly a risk that parents need to be concerned with. A push for relabeling of Prozac is underway so that parents are aware of this potentially dangerous side effect.
News summary:
Source: http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2004-09-13-prozac_x.htm
- Prozac, the only antidepressant certified as safe for children, may make kids more suicidal, according to evidence out Monday.
- A large new study added to previous research on Prozac shows that kids taking the drug have about a 50% higher risk of suicidal thoughts and suicide attempts than those getting placebos, says Robert Temple, director of the Office of Drug Evaluation at the Food and Drug Administration.
- Temple spoke at the first day of hearings on potential label changes for antidepressants taken by more than a million children and teenagers.
- The discussion continues today, and an advisory committee could end the day by asking for tougher warning labels on all antidepressants taken by kids.
- Following a February hearing, the FDA in March asked drug companies to relabel 10 antidepressants, warning that young patients should be watched for worsening depression and anxiety.
- Critics at the time derided that move as "too little, too late," considering that, in December, British drug regulators had advised doctors to prescribe only Prozac for depressed kids.
- The increased risk for suicidal behavior is small: About two to three kids in a group of 100 become more suicidal because they're on antidepressants, says Tarek Hammad, medical reviewer for the FDA.
- Dozens of parents testified at the hearing that antidepressants had caused their children to kill themselves --- or others.
- Their claims were "passionate and plausible," says psychiatrist Wayne Goodman, chairman of the FDA advisory panel.
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