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LETTERS
 
No surprise at death

• I am saddened but unsurprised by the fourth Clozapine-related death in Camden (Patient died despite alert over drug, Jan 26).
What I find galling is the display of indifference by the Trust and a perverse idea of a nurse’s duties – imagine that sort of statement by a coronary care department.
If a psychiatric nurse cannot recognise nor monitor psychiatric drug-related emergencies, then precisely who is responsible for doing so?
Doesn’t “care” include monitoring of the effects of medication?
I have seen patients put on Clozapine, blood results showing a significant difference in white blood cells, yet the patient remaining on the drug. So what is the point of blood monitoring if nothing is done?
Even with other ‘antipsychotic’ drugs monitoring of effects can be inadequate by community and inpatient staff. I’ve visited friends in hospital clearly suffering from dystonic reactions (drug-induced muscle spasms) and they have been left like that for days before any treatment has been administered to counteract this painful but non-fatal reaction.
When cancer patients are neutropenic (their immune system wiped out by chemotherapy) they are intensively nursed in isolation. Yet someone experiencing a psychiatric drug-induced neutropenia is just left.
It seems to me that no side-effects are deemed too bad for psychiatric patients and people have been led to believe that we are all okay so long as we take our medication when there is ample evidence to show otherwise. Some of the non-fatal effects of psychiatric medication are pretty awful. Who wants to gain two-three stone, shuffle, dribble, develop diabetes, feel emotionless and tired all the time? Why should people be forced to take this under the Mental Health Act if this doesn’t take away a person’s experience of hearing voices. Studies show that 25-50 per cent of people still hear voices despite taking medication – it just sedates those individuals.
All we ever hear about is the wonder of medication. If so, then how come the recovery rate from schizophrenia hasn’t changed since the introduction of antipsychotic drugs 50 years ago?
There remains no medical test to clearly demonstrate the validity of the diagnosis. It’s ironic that it’s being likened to being diabetic by psychiatrists, given the new ‘atypical antipsychotic’ drugs can cause diabetes! Anyhow, there are definitive tests for diabetes, there are none for schizophrenia, it’s simply a subjective opinion – nothing more.
In saying this I do not in anyway play down the distress people endure, I know this as someone diagnosed as schizophrenic. It has taken me years to learn to live with my voices as well as I can, but the reason I withhold my name and address to this letter is an indictment of my position in society, and the discrimination associated with a psychiatric diagnosis.
Name and address supplied
 
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