Popular on EntSun
- RAS AP Consulting Advances to RFP Stage in Heidelberg Materials' SAP Vendor & Customer Master Data Modernization Initiative - 194
- A Hidden Magical World Awaits in Ashley Gayheart's Upcoming Young Adult Fantasy, Rosewood Academy: The Awakening - 138
- T. Jones Group's Cameron Jones Serves as Judge for the 2026 CHBA National Awards for Housing Excellence - 137
- More Life Summit 2026 Announces Gary Brecka & Mr. Olympia Derek Lunsford as First Speakers for Miami Event - 135
- KLEKT Announces Appointment of Jay Kimpton to Board of Directors - 135
- Could You Make a 2026 World Cup Squad? A New Free Tool Will Tell You Where You'd Sit on Any National Team's Bench in 90 Seconds - 128
- Milo3D.ai Launches Free AI 3D Model Generator That Turns Text and Images Into Game-Ready 3D Assets in Seconds - 123
- Did Drake Just Find His Next Signee? Peoria Rapper Rhymi Gifts "ICEMANDRAKE" Domains, Drops Debut Album Same Day - 118
- Expert E-Bike Safety Advocate Issues Urgent Warning Following Recent Southern California Fatalities - 117
- New Study Finds Americans Judge Vacations on Value, Not Price — Signaling a Permanent Shift in How Travel Gets Booked - 108
Similar on EntSun
- J&J Exterminating Celebrates 65th Anniversary and Unveils Strategic Vision at Annual Team Meeting
- Wellness Technology Distributor Helping People Set Up Wellness Center Businesses
- FDA-Cleared AI Neuropsychiatry Platform, Million-Dose Ketamine Manufacturing and Presidential Psychedelic Initiative Drive Growing Momentum for NRXP
- Accelerating Toward Commercialization as FDA Momentum, AI Neurotherapy & Manufacturing Expansion Drive Multi-Catalyst Growth Story; N A S D A Q: NRXP
- Book Florida Keys Accommodations Early with KeysCaribbean and Save 15 Percent
- Tennessee Laws Lead with Psychotropic Drug Testing in Mass Shooting Cases and Comprehensive Reporting: CCHR Urges Nationwide Adoption
- Medical Experts Highlight the Importance of Second Opinions in Death Investigations
- USA Med Bed Helping Home Care Patients with Refurbished Hill Rom Hospital Beds
- CAPHRA warns Southeast Asia not to repeat Australia's nicotine policy failure
- D.R. Crotzer Announces A New Science Fiction Book Series Exploring Life Energy, Dreams, and the Mystery of Existence
CCHR: Psychiatric Drugs Fuel Rising Death Toll: National Adverse Drug Event Awareness Day Confronts America's Medication Crisis
EntSun News/11088098
Over 76 million Americans, including 6.1 million children, are prescribed psychiatric drugs despite rising evidence of harm, from emotional numbness to violence, suicide, and death. CCHR renews calls for a move toward genuine prevention of psychotropic drug dependency.
LOS ANGELES - EntSun -- By CCHR International
On March 24, National Adverse Drug Event Awareness Day spotlighted a major preventable public health crisis: adverse drug events (ADEs)—injuries, side effects, and errors caused by medication use, including psychiatric drugs—are now estimated to cause more than 250,000 deaths each year in the United States. This would make ADEs the third leading cause of death in the country, ahead of stroke and respiratory disease. However, these deaths are not shown as a single category in the official Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) rankings, largely because ADEs are not coded as one unified cause. Established in 2021 by the American Society of Pharmacovigilance (ASP), the awareness day aims to highlight this issue and calls for urgent national action to prevent it.[1] For more than five decades, the Citizens Commission on Human Rights International (CCHR) has maintained a public awareness campaign about psychotropic drug risks.
In 2013, CCHR launched a Psychiatric Drugs Side Effects online database to help consumers and families access information about adverse reactions and withdrawal effects. The organization also regularly files Freedom of Information Act requests for state-level psychiatric prescription data under Medicaid.
CCHR has purchased IQVia Total Patient Tracker data for accurate consumption reporting and continues to campaign for stronger FDA Medication Guides (MedGuides) — fact sheets that provide essential safety information in plain language, listing the most serious side effects. Pharmacists are currently required to distribute these when dispensing certain prescriptions, but CCHR is calling for this requirement to be expanded to prescribing doctors, with patients required to sign an acknowledgment of receipt.
A 2021 study published in Drug and Alcohol Dependence revealed that deaths in which psychotropic drugs played a contributing — but not underlying — role have risen dramatically. Analyzing U.S. mortality data from 1999 to 2019, researchers identified 51,446 psychotropic-drug-implicated deaths, divided into medical deaths (33,885) from natural causes where the drugs contributed as a factor, and external deaths (17,561) from accidents or injuries often linked to impairment.[2]
The annual rate of medical psychotropic-drug-implicated deaths increased 2.5-fold (from 0.31 to 0.78 per 100,000), while external deaths rose fivefold (from 0.12 to 0.58 per 100,000). Increases include psychostimulants and benzodiazepines, which often receive less attention than opioids.
The FDA's MedWatch system encourages reporting of adverse events, which can lead to labeling changes, Black Box Warnings, or other protections. However, a 2006 systematic review found that as many as 94% of adverse drug reactions go unreported, and more recent research continues to identify underreporting as a major limitation of these systems, delaying the identification of safety signals and accurate risk assessment.[3]
Compounding the crisis, national mortality data highlight the dangers of specific drug classes often used in combination. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) data show that benzodiazepine-involved overdose deaths increased approximately 7.6-fold from 1999 to 2024. Researchers from the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS and the University of British Columbia noted there were also 50% more deaths annually from psychiatric drugs than from heroin.[4]
More on EntSun News
The U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse reported drug overdose deaths involving antidepressants steadily rose from 1,749 in 1999 to 5,863 in 2022 and remained steady in 2023 with 5,783 deaths.[5] In the UK, a review of nearly 8,000 coroners' inquests in which antidepressants were mentioned found 2,718 deaths by hanging, 933 involving overdose, and 979 suicides, concluding that antidepressants are "ineffective for many people."
IQVia 2020 data reveals that 76,940,157 Americans were taking prescription psychotropic drugs, including 6.1 million aged 0–17, of whom 418,425 were aged five or younger.
Antidepressants were used by 45,204,771 people of all ages, including 2,154,118 aged 0–17 and 35,216 aged 0–5. Side effects include suicidality, aggression, psychosis, cardiac arrhythmias, a potentially life-threatening serotonin syndrome, sexual dysfunction, and emotional blunting.[6] Withdrawal affects approximately 56% of users and is often mistaken for relapse.[7] Symptoms can include "brain zaps," cognitive impairment, anxiety, irritability, emotional blunting, and akathisia — a severe restlessness linked to potential violence.[8]
Antipsychotics were prescribed to 11,154,803 people of all ages, including 829,372 aged 0–17 and 30,632 aged 0–5. These drugs have serious and often irreversible risks, including diabetes, cardiovascular complications, hormonal and sexual dysfunction, agitation, aggression, emotional instability, social withdrawal, suicidal ideation, and neuroleptic malignant syndrome (which can also occur during withdrawal). Severe long-term effects include tardive dyskinesia (TD), an involuntary movement disorder affecting 20–50% of long-term users, and tardive psychosis.[9] Withdrawal effects include: nausea, tremors, anxiety, agitation, irritability, aggression, sleep disturbances, and decreased concentration.[10]
ADHD/Stimulant Drugs were used by 9,585,203 people of all ages, including 3,155,441 aged 0–17 and 58,091 aged 0–5. Methylphenidate (Ritalin) has a mode of action similar to amphetamine and cocaine. Side effects include addiction, new-onset manic symptoms, hallucinations, delusional thinking, aggression, hostility, suicidal thoughts, behavioral dysregulation, and potential for misuse, abuse, and dependence.[11] Homicidal ideation has been reported with atomoxetine (Strattera), and 2025 safety updates.[12] Withdrawal effects include depression, fatigue, sleep disturbance, agitation, psychomotor slowing, vivid dreams, and increased suicide risk.[13]
Anti-anxiety Drugs (including Sedatives and Benzodiazepines) were taken by 31,229,150 people of all ages, including 1,153,351 aged 0–17 and 233,125 aged 0–5. Benzodiazepines should not be taken for more than four weeks due to the risk of rapid dependence.[14] They are associated with serious neurological and behavioral side effects, including memory impairment, confusion and disorientation, disinhibition, and suicidal ideation. Paradoxical reactions — agitation, hostility, aggression, or hallucinations — may occur.[15] Withdrawal can begin after as little as 3–6 weeks and includes intense perceptual disturbances, depersonalization, paranoia, irritability, and aggression. Symptoms can last for years.[16]
CCHR, a non-profit mental health industry watchdog, demands immediate reforms to protect vulnerable populations, especially children and veterans, from preventable harm. Lives depend on moving from psychotropic pills to genuine prevention and safer mental health care. Established in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and professor of psychiatry Thomas Szasz, CCHR is dedicated to exposing psychiatric abuse and protecting patient rights.
More on EntSun News
Sources:
[1] https://stopadr.org/blog/predicting-adverse-drug-event-prevalence-a-data-driven-approach; https://www.stopadr.org/blog/asp-establishes-march-24-as-national-adverse-drug-event-awareness-day-launches-awareness-campaign
[2] https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8355085/
[3] https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16689555/; https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37277678/
[4] CDC WONDER Multiple Cause of Death database (1999, 2024), queried by year using ICD-10 code T42.4 (Benzodiazepines) and restricted to overdose deaths (X40–X44, X60–X64, Y10–Y14), https://wonder.cdc.gov/
[5] NIDA, "Drug Overdose Deaths: Facts and Figures," "U.S. Drug Overdose Deaths Involving Antidepressants, 1999-2023," https://nida.nih.gov/research-topics/trends-statistics/overdose-death-rates#Fig10
[6] https://psychopharmacologyinstitute.com/publication/antidepressant-induced-emotional-blunting-diagnosis-mechanisms-and-management-2/
[7] https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0306460318308347
[8] https://www.midwesterndoctor.com/p/the-truth-about-ssri-antidepressants?utm_source=post-email-title&publication_id=748806&post_id=184750716&utm_campaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=true&r=18l5a7&triedRedirect=true&utm_medium=email
[9] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5472076/
[10] https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352853222000165?via%3Dihub
[11] "Methylphenidate (A Background Paper)," U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, Oct. 1995
[12] Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration, "Product Information safety updates – April 2025," 22 May 2025, "Atomoxetine: New warnings about serotonin syndrome and homicidal thoughts," Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices, 7 Feb. 2025
[13] Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-III-R), (American Psychiatric Association, Washington, D.C., 1987), p. 136
[14] https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-cambridgeshire-66589042
[15] https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2016/017794s044lbl.pdf; https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/262809#side-effects; https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/psychiatric-bulletin/article/benzodiazepines-and-disinhibition-a-review/421AF197362B55EDF004700452BF3BC6
[16] http://www.benzo.org.uk/manual/bzcha03.htm; https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/benzo-withdrawal
On March 24, National Adverse Drug Event Awareness Day spotlighted a major preventable public health crisis: adverse drug events (ADEs)—injuries, side effects, and errors caused by medication use, including psychiatric drugs—are now estimated to cause more than 250,000 deaths each year in the United States. This would make ADEs the third leading cause of death in the country, ahead of stroke and respiratory disease. However, these deaths are not shown as a single category in the official Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) rankings, largely because ADEs are not coded as one unified cause. Established in 2021 by the American Society of Pharmacovigilance (ASP), the awareness day aims to highlight this issue and calls for urgent national action to prevent it.[1] For more than five decades, the Citizens Commission on Human Rights International (CCHR) has maintained a public awareness campaign about psychotropic drug risks.
In 2013, CCHR launched a Psychiatric Drugs Side Effects online database to help consumers and families access information about adverse reactions and withdrawal effects. The organization also regularly files Freedom of Information Act requests for state-level psychiatric prescription data under Medicaid.
CCHR has purchased IQVia Total Patient Tracker data for accurate consumption reporting and continues to campaign for stronger FDA Medication Guides (MedGuides) — fact sheets that provide essential safety information in plain language, listing the most serious side effects. Pharmacists are currently required to distribute these when dispensing certain prescriptions, but CCHR is calling for this requirement to be expanded to prescribing doctors, with patients required to sign an acknowledgment of receipt.
A 2021 study published in Drug and Alcohol Dependence revealed that deaths in which psychotropic drugs played a contributing — but not underlying — role have risen dramatically. Analyzing U.S. mortality data from 1999 to 2019, researchers identified 51,446 psychotropic-drug-implicated deaths, divided into medical deaths (33,885) from natural causes where the drugs contributed as a factor, and external deaths (17,561) from accidents or injuries often linked to impairment.[2]
The annual rate of medical psychotropic-drug-implicated deaths increased 2.5-fold (from 0.31 to 0.78 per 100,000), while external deaths rose fivefold (from 0.12 to 0.58 per 100,000). Increases include psychostimulants and benzodiazepines, which often receive less attention than opioids.
The FDA's MedWatch system encourages reporting of adverse events, which can lead to labeling changes, Black Box Warnings, or other protections. However, a 2006 systematic review found that as many as 94% of adverse drug reactions go unreported, and more recent research continues to identify underreporting as a major limitation of these systems, delaying the identification of safety signals and accurate risk assessment.[3]
Compounding the crisis, national mortality data highlight the dangers of specific drug classes often used in combination. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) data show that benzodiazepine-involved overdose deaths increased approximately 7.6-fold from 1999 to 2024. Researchers from the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS and the University of British Columbia noted there were also 50% more deaths annually from psychiatric drugs than from heroin.[4]
More on EntSun News
- New England Picture Cars Unites Six States with Authentic Regional Picture Cars
- Creative Investment Research Analysis Finds Slower GDP Growth, Rising Inflation
- London Fashion House LatexandLovers Launches Premium Wardrobe Hire Service for Industry Stylists
- New Patriotic Song "America 250" Celebrates Nation's Semiquincentennial Ahead of July 4th
- Triumph Donnelly Studios Choses The 2026 Nissan Z Nismo as the New Official Vendetta Car
The U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse reported drug overdose deaths involving antidepressants steadily rose from 1,749 in 1999 to 5,863 in 2022 and remained steady in 2023 with 5,783 deaths.[5] In the UK, a review of nearly 8,000 coroners' inquests in which antidepressants were mentioned found 2,718 deaths by hanging, 933 involving overdose, and 979 suicides, concluding that antidepressants are "ineffective for many people."
IQVia 2020 data reveals that 76,940,157 Americans were taking prescription psychotropic drugs, including 6.1 million aged 0–17, of whom 418,425 were aged five or younger.
Antidepressants were used by 45,204,771 people of all ages, including 2,154,118 aged 0–17 and 35,216 aged 0–5. Side effects include suicidality, aggression, psychosis, cardiac arrhythmias, a potentially life-threatening serotonin syndrome, sexual dysfunction, and emotional blunting.[6] Withdrawal affects approximately 56% of users and is often mistaken for relapse.[7] Symptoms can include "brain zaps," cognitive impairment, anxiety, irritability, emotional blunting, and akathisia — a severe restlessness linked to potential violence.[8]
Antipsychotics were prescribed to 11,154,803 people of all ages, including 829,372 aged 0–17 and 30,632 aged 0–5. These drugs have serious and often irreversible risks, including diabetes, cardiovascular complications, hormonal and sexual dysfunction, agitation, aggression, emotional instability, social withdrawal, suicidal ideation, and neuroleptic malignant syndrome (which can also occur during withdrawal). Severe long-term effects include tardive dyskinesia (TD), an involuntary movement disorder affecting 20–50% of long-term users, and tardive psychosis.[9] Withdrawal effects include: nausea, tremors, anxiety, agitation, irritability, aggression, sleep disturbances, and decreased concentration.[10]
ADHD/Stimulant Drugs were used by 9,585,203 people of all ages, including 3,155,441 aged 0–17 and 58,091 aged 0–5. Methylphenidate (Ritalin) has a mode of action similar to amphetamine and cocaine. Side effects include addiction, new-onset manic symptoms, hallucinations, delusional thinking, aggression, hostility, suicidal thoughts, behavioral dysregulation, and potential for misuse, abuse, and dependence.[11] Homicidal ideation has been reported with atomoxetine (Strattera), and 2025 safety updates.[12] Withdrawal effects include depression, fatigue, sleep disturbance, agitation, psychomotor slowing, vivid dreams, and increased suicide risk.[13]
Anti-anxiety Drugs (including Sedatives and Benzodiazepines) were taken by 31,229,150 people of all ages, including 1,153,351 aged 0–17 and 233,125 aged 0–5. Benzodiazepines should not be taken for more than four weeks due to the risk of rapid dependence.[14] They are associated with serious neurological and behavioral side effects, including memory impairment, confusion and disorientation, disinhibition, and suicidal ideation. Paradoxical reactions — agitation, hostility, aggression, or hallucinations — may occur.[15] Withdrawal can begin after as little as 3–6 weeks and includes intense perceptual disturbances, depersonalization, paranoia, irritability, and aggression. Symptoms can last for years.[16]
CCHR, a non-profit mental health industry watchdog, demands immediate reforms to protect vulnerable populations, especially children and veterans, from preventable harm. Lives depend on moving from psychotropic pills to genuine prevention and safer mental health care. Established in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and professor of psychiatry Thomas Szasz, CCHR is dedicated to exposing psychiatric abuse and protecting patient rights.
More on EntSun News
- TechHouse Earns Highly Selective Microsoft Support Badge
- MRAA Certifies Been in Since the 80s Silver, Marking Another Kansas, Mo Milestone for Keke Fleiss
- MRAA Certifies Keke Fleiss' Been in Since the 80s (DJ Big Baby Presents BabieKeesh) 2 X Silver
- J&J Exterminating Celebrates 65th Anniversary and Unveils Strategic Vision at Annual Team Meeting
- Pixel Swarm Drones Presents a Spectacular Drone Light Show at By Brothers Farm This Saturday
Sources:
[1] https://stopadr.org/blog/predicting-adverse-drug-event-prevalence-a-data-driven-approach; https://www.stopadr.org/blog/asp-establishes-march-24-as-national-adverse-drug-event-awareness-day-launches-awareness-campaign
[2] https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8355085/
[3] https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16689555/; https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37277678/
[4] CDC WONDER Multiple Cause of Death database (1999, 2024), queried by year using ICD-10 code T42.4 (Benzodiazepines) and restricted to overdose deaths (X40–X44, X60–X64, Y10–Y14), https://wonder.cdc.gov/
[5] NIDA, "Drug Overdose Deaths: Facts and Figures," "U.S. Drug Overdose Deaths Involving Antidepressants, 1999-2023," https://nida.nih.gov/research-topics/trends-statistics/overdose-death-rates#Fig10
[6] https://psychopharmacologyinstitute.com/publication/antidepressant-induced-emotional-blunting-diagnosis-mechanisms-and-management-2/
[7] https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0306460318308347
[8] https://www.midwesterndoctor.com/p/the-truth-about-ssri-antidepressants?utm_source=post-email-title&publication_id=748806&post_id=184750716&utm_campaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=true&r=18l5a7&triedRedirect=true&utm_medium=email
[9] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5472076/
[10] https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352853222000165?via%3Dihub
[11] "Methylphenidate (A Background Paper)," U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, Oct. 1995
[12] Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration, "Product Information safety updates – April 2025," 22 May 2025, "Atomoxetine: New warnings about serotonin syndrome and homicidal thoughts," Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices, 7 Feb. 2025
[13] Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-III-R), (American Psychiatric Association, Washington, D.C., 1987), p. 136
[14] https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-cambridgeshire-66589042
[15] https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2016/017794s044lbl.pdf; https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/262809#side-effects; https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/psychiatric-bulletin/article/benzodiazepines-and-disinhibition-a-review/421AF197362B55EDF004700452BF3BC6
[16] http://www.benzo.org.uk/manual/bzcha03.htm; https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/benzo-withdrawal
Contact
CCHR International
***@cchr.org (/email-contact.htm#13135913)
CCHR International
***@cchr.org (/email-contact.htm#13135913)
Source: Citizens Commission on Human Rights International
0 Comments
Latest on EntSun News
- New Women's Collection Really Sings as Designer Ivey Abitz Releases Companion Recording
- Media Companies will LOVE the ADVERTISING REVENUES with this very dynamic SUMMERWEEN PROMOTION
- New Home of the Month: Spacious Luxury Meets Modern Design in The Bristol at Heritage at Manalapan
- The Calida Group Announces Sale of Ely at Fort Apache for $57.5 Million
- Rare Archival Footage and Cultural Legacy Take Center Stage at Bergman in Dallas Documentary Event
- Summer Festivals in Gunma Prefecture: Song, Dance, and Vibrant Color – Get There Via Tobu Railway!
- Jetperch Introduces Joulescope JS320 Precision Energy Analyzer for Low-Power Embedded System Development
- AI-Powered Trading Bots Are Transforming Forex, Gold, and Digital Markets as DefiHash Expands Intelligent Quantitative Infrastructure
- Early Bird Registration Open for FLYING HY, the Top Hydrogen and Battery Electric Aviation Event
- Eichelberger Performing Arts Center Welcomes New Executive Director
- North Alabama Illusionist to Make History with International 'Merlin Award' in Las Vegas
- 5-Star Family Fun Comes Alive at House of Magic Las Vegas
- Century Fasteners Corp. Hires Tony Marano as Director of Human Resources
- Accelerating Toward Commercialization as FDA Momentum, AI Neurotherapy & Manufacturing Expansion Drive Multi-Catalyst Growth Story; N A S D A Q: NRXP
- New Wisconsin Report Shows Most Plane Crashes Happen Outside Major Hubs
- "Broken and Restored" Feature Film Eyes Cincinnati for Late 2026 Production
- Actress Constance Anderson Enters Pre-Production for Season 2 of Principle of The Principal
- Minnesota Picture Cars Captures the Real Spirit of the Land of 10,000 Lakes
- Book Florida Keys Accommodations Early with KeysCaribbean and Save 15 Percent
- Illusionist & Entertainer David Kovac to Perform at TAP Annual Gala
