Acne doesn't kill kids - but Accutane might
#1
Posted 28 July 2003 - 03:16 PM
The truth is, the attention on Accutane is long overdue. This drug, which has been on the market for over 15 years, has been linked with suicide for at least a decade. And for longer than that, with serious, even life-threatening, birth defects.
With a track-record like that, you'd assume this drug offers hope for some life-threatening or severely debilitating illness. Something so horrible that it justified the considerable risk associated with taking it - especially since the majority of people taking it were teenagers. But the only thing it's designed to treat is acne.
The cure is worse than the disease
Certainly to those who have it, acne can be serious. The type of acne Accutane is designed to treat - severe cystic acne - may be among the most embarrassing conditions of adolescence. And it can leave physical scars on the face that can last a lifetime.
But let's keep in mind that it's always hard to be a teenager. Whether it's acne, being overweight, or not being able to afford the clothes the "in crowd" is wearing, growing up is just hard.
We've all been through our own high school challenges. But in today's instant-gratification society, we think that there must be a quick and easy solution to every problem. Too often, that solution comes in a pill bottle.
You think we'd have learned by now that these "solutions" really don't solve anything - and in many cases, they can cause even worse problems.
Acne doesn't kill kids - but Accutane might
In the case of Accutane, the "solution" is MUCH more dangerous than the original problem. Consider this: between 1998 and 2000 - just three short years - Accutane was linked with at least 160 cases of suicide, attempted suicide, suicidal thoughts, and hospitalization. That's roughly 53 cases a year. And that's not counting the kids who came before 1998, when they started counting - and those since, like 15-year-old Charles Bishop. As early as 1985, just three years after its FDA approval, reports started coming in about psychiatric side effects of Accutane, like seizures, emotional instability, and depression.
The effects of Accutane-related birth defects are even more far-reaching. Hoffman La-Roche, the company that manufactures Accutane, knew that the drug caused severe birth defects even before the drug hit the market. And in 1990, the FDA concluded that since the drug's introduction, there had been 11,000 to 13,000 Accutane-related abortions and 900 to 1,100 Accutane-related birth defects.
Over the years, the reports continued to build. The label warnings got longer and longer - even leading to the requirement for signed consent forms. But Accutane's sales continued to grow; in 1998, it was Roche's second biggest seller, bringing in $800 million that year alone.
Yet Hoffman La-Roche still denies the connection. According to a MedScape Health article, Roche has called the suicides "spontaneous," and suggested that they reflect "the multiple risk factors in the adolescents and young adults afflicted with the disfiguring disease."
Which scars are worse?
I suppose that Roche thinks that statement defends its position. But to me, it just shines a spotlight on the problem. Teenagers are already at an increased risk for suicide and depression. Let's suppose Roche is right and teenagers with severe acne may be at even higher risk. Then why give them a drug that may magnify those risks?
Defenders of Accutane say that it is an invaluable drug, the only drug available to treat severe cystic acne. They point to the terrible toll that serious acne can take on a teenager's self-image, and the permanent scars, both physical and mental, that the disease can leave behind. That may be.
But they can't be worse than the scars left on a woman who gives birth to a severely deformed baby. Or the damage done to a teenage boy who tries to kill himself, and has to endure the whispers and gossip in the hallways at school when he returns.
And I can't imagine a worse scar on a mother or a father than living with the knowledge that your child took his own life.
If your children or grandchildren are taking Accutane, please sit down with them and talk about the seriousness of the drug’s potential side effects.
I don't mean to excuse kids who tease - most do it at some point. I can think of several people I knew during my teenaged years who had severe acne. None of them had it easy. They probably all got some teasing and harassment as they were growing up.
But all of them had the chance to grow up - and grow out of it. And every kid should have that chance.
#2
Posted 28 July 2003 - 04:10 PM
Having acne causes more depression than accutane
#3 Guest_fatman_uk_*
Posted 28 July 2003 - 04:25 PM
-Gaz
#4
Posted 28 July 2003 - 04:38 PM
www.roaccutanesurvivors.com
www.ragforum.com
www.accutaneaction.com
Give me a break.
#5
Posted 28 July 2003 - 06:45 PM
This is about as stupid as the smokers who get lung cancer and then sue the tobacco companys saying, "i didnt know smoking was bad more me"
give ME a break
#6
Posted 28 July 2003 - 06:56 PM
#7
Posted 28 July 2003 - 07:29 PM
1. Is Gaz right? Did you cut and paste your message? I don't really care, but if you didn't, you're a very good writer. Were you born in 1989? (I'm guessing from your name.) If so, I'm even more impressed. Consider looking into journalism or something if you're young.
2. I've been seeing commercials lately about accutane. You know the ones - from attorneys. "If you've experienced any of these damaging side effects from the use of accutane, call our law offices now and get paid for your suffering." It had a whole list of very horrible supposed side effects. Like, REALLY bad ones, that I'd never heard of being associated with accutane before. I can't remember what they were, honestly. If someone else has seen the commercial, post what they were. But I've actually been waiting for someone to comment on it on these boards and I haven't seen anything. I just thought it was interesting and I was wondering how true it was!
#8 Guest_fatman_uk_*
Posted 28 July 2003 - 08:23 PM
Quote
This is about as stupid as the smokers who get lung cancer and then sue the tobacco companys saying, "i didnt know smoking was bad more me"
give ME a break
Bump on that.
Whatever way you look at it, they're told about the side effects AND no1 forces the pills down their throat.
-Gaz
#9
Posted 28 July 2003 - 09:04 PM
#10
Posted 28 July 2003 - 09:50 PM
#11
Posted 28 July 2003 - 09:51 PM
and yes i was born in 89, i am 14. i do feel very strongly against accutane, though because 2 days ago one of my friends who was 15 committed suicide (you mightve heard on the news if u live near) and she was on accutane. she did not leave a suicide note, and from what i know of her, her life was perfect. but obviously she was suffering from depression and led up to her taking her life.
#12
Posted 29 July 2003 - 07:31 AM
#13
Posted 29 July 2003 - 01:25 PM
Thanks for posting that article. It's good to get people more aware about what potential side effects "the miracle acne drug" can have.
I had a friend that went on it about five years ago and he complained about the usual--dryness, chapped lips, but also personality changes and major mood swings. He lost he zest for life he told me and began to get digestive problems and worst for him at an early age, his hair began to prematurely thin. He regrets ever taken it. It's a toughy because most people that go on it, see it as a last alternative to being "normal."
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