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Monday, 20 September 2010

Book review - The Evidence, However, Is ClearThe Seroxat Scandal (Kindle Edition)

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:


A Tireless Campaigner And a Very Good Book, May 28, 2010

By yorkshirewrose (kendall park, nj USA) - See all my reviews

http://www.amazon.com/Evidence-However-ClearThe-Seroxat-ebook/product-reviews/B003E35ZJG/ref=dp_top_cm_cr_acr_txt?ie=UTF8&showViewpoints=1

This review is from: The Evidence, However, Is ClearThe Seroxat Scandal (Kindle Edition)

The British may be known for "inventing" the first novel, and like the first novel, this reads smoothly, part epistolary, part fiction. But it's not fiction. This is a true story, which I sorely wish was fiction.



The book I am referring to, is The Evidence Is Clear", written by Bob Fiddaman. Right now it's available as an ebook, for download here, but will be coming out in print later this year. Seroxat, (or Paxil, or Paroxetine) is manufactured worldwide by GlaxoSmithKline and is a SSRI drug used mostly for psychiatric purposes.



It was prescribed to Bob for depression, as he tells his tale of three years on this drug:

"I was prescribed Seroxat by my GP due to 'depression' - it was work-related and kind of spiralled when my former employers put me on to a 'Long Term Absence Register' because I had developed an illness, Osteoarthritis of the hips, [1] that didn't allow me to perform the job I was employed for. The 'Long Term Absence Register' was basically set up to leave employees without pay and without being able to claim for benefits. It had a strain on family life and Seroxat was deemed to 'fix' that problem."



"Seroxat took away the pain of not being able to provide for my family, in fact I didn't really care much about anything. I became devoid of any human emotion other than sadness. It was an unexplainable sadness though, you know, bouts of crying when I really didn't know what I was crying about. (p.10)"





Bob's life spirals out of control when he starts missing a dose on holiday, and then describes side effects he encountered from taking the drug, unable to tolerate loud noises, night thrashes/terrors, night sweats, blurred vision, apathy and confusion. Then a suicide attempt. His marriage crumbles, and he has "brain zaps". After 18 months of tapering, he goes "cold turkey" off the drug and it takes about three months before he feels "normal" again after a period of hell withdrawing.



What then starts is a labyrinthian journey, as Bob goes through the bureaucracy of red tape and politics that exist in the UK, as he writes to doctors, politicians, the BBC, and employees of GSK trying to learn more about Seroxat and it's purpose. Again, it almost seems like fiction, but it's true. During this process, Bob launched his website. "Seroxat Sufferers, Stand Up And Be Counted"and has developed a loyal readership of people who have been hurt and maimed on Seroxat, as well as other psychiatric drugs.



Bob's book is a tough read on a serious subject. But rewarding. Its only drawback right now is it's only available from the publisher as an ebook, which I bought , or for a Kindle, which I am saving up for. The book comes out in the fall. But if you cannot wait til the Fall, which I couldn't, buy this , now or buy the book when it comes out. But like any book worth reading, it makes you think. It makes you mad as hell, too. And it makes you want to go out and do something, even if it's writing a letter to your local Congressman, on MP. And for that, it really does belong on the bookshelf, once the paperback comes out. But, if you were like me and cannot wait, download the Kindle book in the meantime. You won't be sorry. It's that good.

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