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A New Model For Health And Disease – Page 43

Most of us live with a constant flow of thoughts occurring in our mind. The greatest part of our waking hours, and thus our very existence, revolves around the constant generation of these thought patterns. We cannot afford to ignore such an important aspect of ourselves, especially when this area can be affected by the application of a therapeutic system. Yet established medi¬cine has completely bypassed this important aspect in its search for a "cure" and has pretended that it did not exist. When it tested the new drugs, it very seldom investigated how deeply and in what manner they affected the human mind.
"The psychiatrists reminded their fellow scientists that the body’s own self-regulatory functions may be taken over by the drugs used…
"Even hormones primarily affect the brain; the Pill, in large therapeutic doses, caused temporary psychosis in 4 percent of the wives of armed forces personnel being treated for infertility. Drugs with specific ambitions— diuretics, antihistamines—may be indirectly psychoactive…
"They began pushing amphetamines as energy aids, and by the mid-1950s there were half a million amphetamine addicts in Japan. Fifty thousand cases of amphetamine psychosis had been reported." 17
"The worst offenders in producing depression are members of the reserpine type of alkaloids… Hypertensive patients receiving these alkaloids are most likely to become highly depressed even to the point of suicide…
"The anticholinergics such as benztropine, biperidine and procyclidine have a potential to produce delirium…
"Agitation, auditory, gustatory, tactile and visual hallucinations and sometimes disorientation have occurred with procaine penicillin…
"Psychosis or neurosis have been caused by a variety of drugs…
"Manifestations commonly observed are delusions, paranoid behavior and various kinds of hallucinations. These closely resemble the symptoms of schizophrenia." 18
Certain antibiotics substantially increased senile brain disease and Down’s syndrome through treatment of previously fatal complications such as infection. "Gruenberg presents data that indicate a doubling in prevalence of these conditions in recent decades. He terms this phenomenon the failures of success."19
It is true that this field of research is difficult and hard to investigate properly, but this is not a good enough reason for dismissing the damage caused by these drugs on the mental and emotional planes. The emotional and mental changes brought about cannot always be detected anatomically or by a microscope, but they have been related by patients experiencing these