MOTHER SEEKS REMOVAL OF FDA OFFICIALS DUE TO CONFLICTS OF INTEREST Kernersville, North Carolina, February 16, 2004 – The mother of a teenage girl who attempted suicide while taking Effexor for migraine headaches has asked the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to remove three FDA officials from having any oversight over the review of a suicide risk in children and adolescents taking SSRI antidepressants. Jennifer Tierney of Kernersville, North Carolina told officials from the HHS Commissioner’s office, with whom she met on Tuesday, February 3, 2004, that FDA officials, Russell Katz, Robert Temple, and Thomas Laughren should not be permitted to have any involvement in the antidepressant review currently taking place due to their past failures to protect the public health on these very issues. Tierney stated in a letter sent on February 16, 2004 that she and other victims who met with the Commissioner’s office on February 3rd “have little confidence in the current regime (Temple, Katz and Laughren) and do not believe they have the necessary objectivity to oversee this process, after all, it was their failure to ensure further research was conducted [when the issue was first raised in 1991] that has placed millions of people at risk and potentially killed tens of thousands of people, including children. How can you expect them to objectively adjudicate a matter for which they are, in part, culpable?” The February 3rd meeting came the day following an FDA Advisory Committee meeting held to discuss the risk of suicide in children and adolescents taking the antidepressants Paxil, Zoloft, Prozac, Luvox, Celexa, Effexor, Wellbutrin, Serzone, and Remeron. The FDA advisory panel urged the FDA to issue warnings about the potential risk immediately. The FDA has not issued anything to date. On December 10, 2003, the UK government announced that all SSRI antidepressants (except Prozac) would be contra-indicated for use in children and adolescents under 18 in the UK due to their lack of efficacy and a 2 to 3 times greater incidence of suicidal behavior in those taking the antidepressants over placebo. Tierney was joined at the February 3rd meeting by about a dozen other individuals who have lost a child or other loved one to suicide while taking an antidepressant. Dr. David Healy, an outspoken critic of the drugs (from the University of Wales College of Medicine) was present as was Richard Brook, a member of the UK expert panel that banned the use of the drugs in children and adolescents in the UK. Other documents of interest:
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