Home > Uncategorized > Five Years of Blogging…

Five Years of Blogging…

January 2012.

I started this blog in January 2007. That’s five solid years of blogging about Seroxat (Paxil) and its manufacturer, GlaxoSmithKline.

5 years..

197 Posts…

But still no justice for Seroxat Victims…

I have a feeling things are all going to change, one way or another…

soon…

Keep Tuned…

UPDATE : Check Out Bob Fiddaman’s Blog “Seroxat Sufferers” for the current status of Seroxat Litigation in the UK.

http://fiddaman.blogspot.com/2012/01/uk-seroxat-litigation-current-status.html

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  1. Linda Turner
    January 13, 2012 at 2:46 am | #1

    Are you on Twitter? I can’t find you in the search function.

    • January 13, 2012 at 1:48 pm | #2

      Hi Linda, I am not on Twitter, although a lot of my posts get tweeted by Bob Fiddaman (from the Seroxat Sufferers blog)

  2. ragdoll
    January 13, 2012 at 9:45 am | #3

    Thank you very much for five years of research and well written posts, Truthman! I hope your feeling is right so that at least some degree of justice and recognition will soon come to the ones who have had their health, lives and futures destroyed by this utterly dangerous and defective drug.

    This morning I also had a feeling “something was in the air” again regarding the Seroxat problem. Something was in fact “in the air”. The morning the TV news in Sweden finally (about bloody time!) reported something that has been well known and all over the internet for years: Newborns that have been exposed to SSRIs during the last trimester risk having PPM (persistent pulmonary hypertension), a troublesome and dangerous lung disease.

    When a baby born to an SSRI treated mother is born, the baby goes into withdrawal. One of the most frequently reported post SSRI problems that adults suffer from is shortness of breath that sets in suddenly a couple of days after quitting or reducing the dose – in some cases very severe. disabling and lasting for many years. There may be reason to suspect that the by now well known and often reported PPM suffered by neonates is what happens to some adults as well. In adults, It is almost always diagnosed as COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) if the patient complains of “shortness of breath” or anxiety if the patient uses the words “breathing problems”.

    I have personally spoken to some people who within a couple of years after quitting Seroxat has spent some time staying at a higher altitude and they reported that parts of their remaining persistent withdrawal syndromes then got a lot worse. Altitude sickness is pulmonary hypertension so is it too far fetched to suspect that the post SSRI shortness of breath that many adults have is in fact the very same pulmonary hypertension the neonates suffer from? Perhaps it’s time to start joining some of the dots…

  3. Chris
    January 13, 2012 at 10:49 am | #4

    I would also like to thank you for highlighting the all so very real horror story that is SSRI/SNRI withdrawal. I, myself am still looking for any improvement in having no emotions whatsoever, but so far, 20 months post prozac, have not seen change. Someone should pay for these atrocities they call treatment!!

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