English speaking doctors

Home Forums Costa Rica Living Forum English speaking doctors

  • This topic has 1 reply, 6 voices, and was last updated 17 years ago by deb.
Viewing 12 posts - 1 through 12 (of 12 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #183399
    deb
    Member

    Can someone please give me the name (offline if so desired)of a good, English speaking psychiatrist in the Central
    Valley area. We have medications from the USA and while I am sure many are not available here, we need to get “hooked up” with a doctor here for substitutions.

    #183400
    Andrew
    Keymaster

    You’ll find a few mentioned in this article

    You could also visit and click on what specialist you need – psiquiatria – and contact those Doctors listed.

    I would think that a big percentage of psychiatrists here would speak English

    Scott Oliver – Founder
    WeLoveCostaRica.com

    #183401
    DavidCMurray
    Participant

    Fire when ready, Maravilla.

    #183402
    *Lotus
    Member

    LOL!

    #183403
    HuffnerB
    Member

    LOL2XXX! Lotus, I hope we “bump into” you in Jaco some day. My hubby & I will be living part-time in Jaco (Playa Hermosa, more specifically) beginning January. If “perchance” we meet, we are “Jack & Beth”…

    #183404
    *Lotus
    Member

    Look forward to it..Where about in Hermosa we have spent a great deal of time in the area and own property.

    #183405
    HuffnerB
    Member

    You’ll pinpoint us quickly. We’re just north of Hermosa Palms, south of the “bungalows” in one of the “quatro casas” on Playa Hermosa. There are 4 homes there(thank God, no mas), and we’re 1 of them. I Hope we’ll meet…do U surf there? The Jungle Surf is one of our fav hangouts,but I hear Tom sold?. Hope to meet some day.

    #183406
    *Lotus
    Member

    Sure I know where you are…yes I surf. Jungle surf has the best tasting fish I have ever eaten! Did not know Tom sold, I know His wife was pregnant and they just bought a house in Esterillo. That would have been a nice business to own down there. We usually rent the apartment from Stefano and Nada at “Costenera”, if Nada is cooking stop in for some authentic Italian cooking that starts with a nice plate of “Tapas”.

    #183407
    *Lotus
    Member
    #183408
    maravilla
    Member

    i’ll read this article later, keith, but there has been a lot of controversy lately over the most popular psychiatric drugs used to treat a long list of bogus mental disorders. doctors are starting to admit there is no such thing as ADD/ADHD and one judge in Austrralia admitted in open court that drugging young children with ritalin and other psychostimulants leads the way to criminal behavior when they get older as a preponderance of the juvenile offenders who come before him were drugged as children (they know that all psychiatric drugs cause permanent physical changes in the brain.) i live for the day when doping your child with psychiatric drugs will be a criminal offense. back to the mural. . . geez it’s hot in omaha!!

    #183409
    maravilla
    Member

    it always makes me wonder why people would put their kids on drugs that could potentially kill the kid. if doctors knew anything at all about how these drugs worked, we wouldn’t be seeing so many cases of serotonin syndrome.
    http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0705/S00125.htm

    Doctors Miss Life-Threatening Serotonin Syndrome
    Tuesday, 8 May 2007, 9:53 am
    Opinion: Evelyn Pringle

    Doctors Fail to Recognize Life-Threatening Serotonin Syndrome

    By Evelyn Pringle
    In addition to recent reports that the drugs work no better than sugar
    pills, the latest warnings added to the long list of adverse events linked
    to selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor antidepressants have focused on
    birth defects, suicide risks and violence.
    However, the massive over-prescribing of SSRIs, including Prozac, Paxil,
    Zoloft, Celexa and Lexapro in combination with many other drugs now has
    medical experts scrambling to educate doctors about a life-threatening
    condition known as “serotonin syndrome.”
    According to the report, “A Mix of Medicines That Can Be Lethal,” by Jane
    Brody, in the February 27, 2007 New York Times, “with the enormous rise in
    the use of serotonin-enhancing antidepressants, often taken in combination
    with other drugs that also raise serotonin levels, emergency medicine
    specialists are trying to educate doctors and patients about this
    not-so-rare and potentially life-threatening disorder.”
    According to the Times, patients at particular risk, some experts say, are
    those taking a combination of antidepressants and antipsychotic drugs
    prescribed to treat resistant depression.
    Ms Brody notes that in the March 2005 New England Journal of Medicine, two
    specialists, Dr Edward Boyer of the University of Massachusetts Medical
    School and Dr Michael Shannon of Children’s Hospital Boston, found that more
    than 85% of doctors were “unaware of the serotonin syndrome as a clinical
    diagnosis.”
    In a report based on calls made to poison control centers in the US in 2002,
    the doctors found 7,349 cases of serotonin toxicity and a total of 93
    deaths. In 2004, the Toxic Exposure Surveillance System identified 48,204
    exposures to SSRIs that resulted in moderate or major outcomes in 8,187
    patients and death in 103 patients, according to the September 2005 American
    Journal of Emergency Medicine.
    In 2005, the last year for which statistics are available, a total of 118
    deaths were reported, according to the New York Times.
    The true incidence of serotonin syndrome, experts say, may be under-reported
    in these figures because the syndrome may be wrongly attributed to another
    cause, mild cases may be dismissed or medical professionals may not suspect
    the condition.
    Studies have shown that when an expectant mother takes an SSRI, her system
    is flooded with extra serotonin, which then passes across the placenta into
    the womb, soaking the developing fetus in serotonin, according to Houston
    Attorney Robert Kwok.
    “It is this prolonged and unanticipated exposure to serotonin,” he says,
    “that our experts believe leads to the baby’s birth defects. “
    Studies indicate,” he explains, “that mothers who take an SSRI during
    pregnancy have 1.5 to 2 times the risk of giving birth to a baby with a
    heart defect such as an atrial septal defect or ventricular septal defect,
    and are 6 times more likely to give birth to a baby with a severe and
    life-threatening lung disorder known as persistent pulmonary hypertension
    (PPHN).
    And the cases of birth defects are on the rise. “Our group has over 100 SSRI
    baby birth defect cases in medical review,” Mr Kwok states, “with most
    babies bearing strikingly similar heart and lung defects.”
    Mr Kwok is representing the family of Chase Steele, a baby born with severe
    heart defects after his mother took an SSRI during her pregnancy and the
    family of Gavin Shore, an infant also with severe heart defects to a mother
    who took the SSRI Celexa during her pregnancy.
    “You would think by now,” Mr Kwok says, “that the FDA would ban SSRIs for
    children, since the same logic applies to developing adolescents and
    developing babies in the womb during pregnancy.”
    Serotonergic receptors are found throughout the central nervous system and
    are involved in the regulation of the sleep-wake cycle, behavior, appetite,
    temperature and muscle tone, and serotonin neurotransmission is involved
    with the regulation of gastrointestinal motility and vascular tone.
    Serotonin syndrome results from excessive stimulation or agonism at
    postsynaptic serotonin receptors.
    According to the FDA, symptoms of the syndrome may include restlessness,
    hallucinations, loss of coordination, fast heart beat, rapid changes in
    blood pressure, increased body temperature, overactive reflexes, nausea,
    vomiting and diarrhea.
    The patients often have changes in mental status, including agitation,
    hypervigilance and pressured speech, and in severe cases, may present with
    profound hypertension and tachycardia, and proceed rapidly to shock.
    In severe cases, patients may exhibit delirium, seizures, muscular rigidity
    and hypertonicity. A core temperature may exceed 40º C (104 F), and may be
    accompanied by metabolic acidosis, rhabdomyolysis, renal failure and
    disseminated intravascular coagulation.
    Experts say the most important information for doctors to know when dealing
    with a possible case of serotonin syndrome is what drugs have been ingested,
    because in addition to SSRIs, there are other classes of drugs with
    different mechanisms that can also increase serotonin levels to differing
    degrees.
    A greater awareness of the combinations that trigger the syndrome could lead
    to prevention, but a diagnostic challenge exists due to the fact that the
    list not only includes prescription drugs, but also over-the-counter
    medications and herbal supplements. The following are some of the products
    known to be associated with serotonin syndrome:
    Monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs)
    Tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs)
    Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (Zoloft, Prozac, Paxil, Lexapro,
    Celexa)
    Venlafaxine (Effexor)
    Trazodone (Desyrel)
    Nefazodone (Serzone)
    Meperidine (Demerol)
    Dextromethorphan (Cold Remedies)
    Chlorpheniramine
    Sumatriptan (Imitrex)
    Atypical antipsychotic (Zyprexa, Risperdal, Seroquel)
    L-dopa
    Meridia
    Lithium
    Valproic acid (Depakene)
    Linezolid (Zyvox)
    St John’s Wort
    Ginkgo Biloba
    Many experts blame the rise in cases of serotonin syndrome on the fact that
    so many different drugs are being prescribed to patients at the same time in
    combinations, or “drug cocktails,” which have never been approved as safe
    and effective by the FDA for any use and without considering the
    over-the-counter medications that patients may be taking.
    The syndrome has become more prevalent in children as the off-label use of
    drug cocktails with children has increased. Some experts suspect serotonin
    syndrome in the death of 4-year-old, Rebecca Riley in Massachusetts, on
    December 13, 2006.
    Critics say the Riley case highlights the need to put an end to the rampant
    off-label prescribing of adult psychiatric drugs to children. “The general
    public is unaware that almost no psychiatric drugs have ever truly been
    tested for children,” according to David Oaks, director of MindFreedom, an
    international human rights organization.
    “All psychiatric drugging of children,” he says, “is essentially ‘off label’
    in the sense that doctors have an enormous range of discretion when
    prescribing psychiatric drugs to young people.”
    “It’s time for society to get hands-on with the mental health system,” Mr
    Oaks warns, “and rein in the immense tyrannical power that doctors now
    have.”
    The State Police investigator’s report in this case said psychiatrist Dr
    Kayoko Kifuji, at the Tufts-New England Medical Center, prescribed 3
    medications for Rebecca: 750 milligrams a day of Depakote; 200 milligrams a
    day of Seroquel; and .35 milligrams a day of clonidine.
    Rebecca was given Seroquel, for bipolar disorder, a drug only approved to
    treat adults with schizophrenia or bipolar, Clonidine, for attention deficit
    disorder, a drug approved only to treat adults with high blood pressure, and
    Depakote, an anti-convulsant drug approved to treat epilepsy in adults.
    She was kept on this 3-drug cocktail since she was 2 and a-half-years-old,
    until she was found dead on the floor of her parent’s home on December 13,
    2006. At the time of her death, there were also over-the-counter cold
    medications in her system including Children’s Tylenol Cough and Runny Nose,
    which contain acetaminophen, dextromethorphan and chlorpheniramine.
    According to a report by investigators, Rebecca’s teachers and a school
    nurse repeatedly complained about the child’s extreme lethargy and how she
    seemed better when the drugs wore off, and the nurse also pointed out that
    Rebecca did not exhibit the kind of behavior that might justify prescribing
    these types of drugs.
    A therapist who treated the children also told investigators she was
    concerned about the medications prescribed to Rebecca because she never
    noticed symptoms of attention deficit or bipolar disorder.
    A state trooper’s affidavit said a Walgreen’s pharmacy filled a number of
    clonidine prescriptions for the Riley’s when they should have had an ample
    supply and that several times, Dr Kifuji approved extra pills because
    Carolyn Riley said she had run out or lost her supply.
    Carolyn Riley told investigators that Dr Kifuji had authorized the extra
    doses to help Rebecca get to sleep, the affidavit said. The trooper also
    reported that Dr Kifuji received calls from a therapist and a nurse at Elden
    Johnson Early Childhood Center, where Rebecca was a student, saying they
    were concerned about her medication.
    The affidavit shows that no testing was conducted on Rebecca in making the
    diagnosis of attention deficit or bipolar disorder and that Dr Kifuji said
    she diagnosed Rebecca based on the parents’ statements and “brief visits” in
    her office as frequently as twice a month and as seldom as once every two
    months.
    In July 2006, a social worker treating Rebecca filed a complaint with the
    agency reporting that Carolyn Riley was “neglecting her children” and
    “appeared heavily drugged and unable to respond” on one of her visits to the
    family home.
    The social worker said that during one visit, Carolyn told her that urine on
    the floor was from when Rebecca had taken a nap on the floor, according to
    an affidavit from investigators, and the social worker said she had to tell
    Carolyn to clean the floor.
    When checking out the social worker’s complaint, the DSS Commissioner said
    all the doctors and a psychiatric hospital caring for one of the children in
    July 2006 said the medications were appropriate and there was no one else to
    consult, so the department did not substantiate the complaint.
    The medical examiner’s office determined that Rebecca died from
    “intoxication due to the combined effects” of the drugs clonidine, Depakote,
    dextromethorphan, and chlorpheniramine, the district attorney’s office said
    in a statement.
    The official autopsy report states that Rebecca died of the “combined
    effects” of the drugs and that her lungs and heart were damaged by
    “prolonged abuse of these prescription drugs, rather than one incident.”
    Those findings have some experts wondering whether the medical examiner may
    be a member of the 85% of doctors identified by the New England Journal of
    Medicine study who are unaware of the serotonin syndrome as a clinical
    diagnosis.
    The statement released by the DA states, “This occurred as a result of the
    intentional overdose of Rebecca with clonidine,” and the manner of death
    “was determined to be homicide.”
    Rebecca’s parents have both been charged with murdering their daughter.
    However, psychiatrist Dr Grace Jackson, a leading authority on psychotropic
    drugs, takes issue with the claim of the manner of death being homicide.
    “I’d put my money on serotonin syndrome as the cause of death,” she says, “a
    potentially lethal condition of serotonin excess, leading to signs and
    symptoms which include autonomic instability, heart dysrhythmias (sudden
    death), hyperthermia (high fever), changes in mental status (including
    possible coma), hyperreflexia, and myoclonus.”
    “In this case,” Dr Jackson says, “the primary culprits were dextromethorphan
    and chlorpheniramine, an antihistamine which also boosts serotonin levels.”
    “It is probably quite likely,” she explains, “that the family had not been
    warned by any doctor or pharmacist that this combination of medications
    could cause death – particularly, in a toddler.”
    “It is also possible,” she adds, “that the psychiatrist did not realize that
    the family was administering dextromethorphan to the child — it might have
    been given from an over-the-counter cough remedy by unsuspecting parents.”
    Dr Jackson also notes that Depakote has been shown to increase levels of
    serotonin in many brain regions, “hence,” she says, “it was factor #3 in the
    serotonin syndrome which presumably killed this child.”
    “This toddler,” she explains, “may have been receiving tiny doses of the
    medications prescribed, but that did not protect her from serotonin
    syndrome.”
    Reports by investigators, based on interviews of relatives in the home who
    observed Rebecca in the days before she died, describe symptoms typical of
    serotonin syndrome. They said she became restless, disorientated,
    incoherent, would not respond to her name and that she appeared dazed and
    “out of it.”
    She was lethargic at school and at home, and a neighbor described her as
    zombie-like, according to interviews in an affidavit filed in Plymouth
    District Court.
    The day before she died, Rebecca developed a fever and was coughing
    uncontrollably, so her parents went to Wal-Mart to buy cold and flu
    medicine. While at Wal-Mart, Rebecca began to vomit, so Carolyn Riley
    purchased Pedialyte and a plastic bowl for Rebecca to vomit in during the
    ride home, and she reportedly vomited about 5 times over the course of that
    day.
    Rebecca’s grandmother told reporters that the doctor never told the parents
    not to give her the over-the-counter cold medications now listed as
    contributing to her death because of the prescription drugs she was on.
    Dr Jackson suspects that Rebecca – like so many patients – was the unwitting
    victim of “Evidence Based Psychiatry,” which means drug, drug, and more
    drug, because “somebody, somewhere, published a study that showed a three
    year old responded to five or six or seven drugs in combination,” she
    states.
    Dr Jackson is the author of, “Rethinking Psychiatric Drugs: A Guide for
    Informed Consent,” a book that provides a critical appraisal of 3 classes of
    psychiatric drugs that an estimated 20% of Americans consume on a regular
    basis, including antidepressants, antipsychotics and stimulants.
    According to Harvard Instructor Dr John Abramson, author of, “Overdosed
    America,” this “gruesome story” seems to have two separate and distinct
    components. “First,” he says, “is the question of whether or not the child
    was being given medication as it was prescribed.”
    “And the second,” he notes, “is the question of why such medicines were
    prescribed for such a young child.”
    Dr Abraham points out that there has been a progressive medicalization of
    other than desirable behaviors in children. “We have seen this in the
    enormous proliferation of stimulant medication use,” he notes, “far out of
    proportion to use in other countries.”
    Now, he says, the diagnosis of bipolar disorder in children is rising in
    parallel, and clearly, it is the drug industry driving this medicalization
    to sell more products.
    In what can only be described as assembly-line customer recruitment,
    Rebecca’s psychiatrist, Dr Kifuji, also prescribed the same powerful drug
    cocktail to Rebecca’s older brother and sister when they were diagnosed with
    the same illnesses several years earlier.
    The Rileys’ attorneys say the parents are unsophisticated people who did not
    question the doctor. Michael Riley’s lawyer, John Darrell, told the Boston
    Globe on February 7, 2007, that neither parent knew enough treatment to have
    challenged Kifuji. “You’ve got two poor parents here of minor means
    financially, of minor education,” he said.
    A reading of all the official reports and court documents in this case
    definitely indicate that be true.
    As so often happens with families like the Riley’s, who are covered by
    public health care programs, and with the great assistance of Dr Kifuji, the
    entire Riley family become a cash cow for the psychiatric-pharmaceutical
    industry, including the mother and father.
    Another incentive certainly worth noting is the potential monthly income Dr
    Kifuji generated for herself by the legal pill-pushing to the Riley family.
    A 2003 study by the American Psychiatric Association found doctors could
    earn about $263 an hour for holding three 15-minute medication management
    sessions per hour, compared to about $156 for a single therapy session. That
    represents an hourly pay cut of 41% for doctors doing therapy only, the APA
    study said.
    Critics say more blame should be focused on the prescribing doctors. “While
    the pharmaceutical companies certainly are getting rich providing
    mind-altering drugs for psychiatry’s made-up mental disorders, the fault
    lies with the psychiatric community,” says Kelly Patricia O’Meara, author of
    “PSYCHED OUT: How Psychiatry Sells Mental Illness and Pushes Pills That
    Kill”.
    “Until the fraud of psychiatric diagnosing is exposed,” Ms O’Meara warns,
    “the American people will continue to hear about more and more of these
    tragic outcomes.”
    And it always goes back to the chicken and the egg theory. Was there an
    epidemic in this family where all 5 family members were so severely mentally
    ill? Or did the psychiatric-pharmaceutical industry convert them into
    life-long disabled customers through the administration of a powerful drug
    cocktail for years on end?
    According to Dr Ann Blake Tracy, Director of International Coalition for
    Drug Awareness, and author of “Prozac: Panacea or Pandora?”, she expects a
    person placed on one of these drug cocktails to be on disability within a 3-
    to 5-year window of time.
    “And for a decade and a half,” she says, “she has been trying to figure out
    how our economy will survive the skyrocketing disability rates.”
    The chicken and the egg theory arises a second time in this case when
    reviewing the allegations lodged against the parents. Were the bizarre
    behaviors of the parents cited in official reports and the media the result
    of ignorance, bad parenting or a wish to harm Rebecca? Or were the behaviors
    in fact brought on by the combination of drugs the parents were ingesting?
    “Naturally,” Ms O’Meara notes, “one has to wonder that if the entire family
    was being ‘treated’ for their alleged mental illnesses, why then didn’t the
    drugs work?”
    Dr Tracy says, “Is it absolutely possible that some of the alleged behaviors
    of the parents in this family could have been caused by the prescribed drugs
    they were taking.”
    She explains that the hypothesis behind these psychiatric drugs is
    backwards, meaning they often end up causing the conditions that they were
    prescribed to treat.
    Leonard Frank, author of “Zyprexa: A Prescription for Diabetes, Disease and
    Early Death”, concurs. “Psychiatrists and other physicians,” he explains,
    “prescribe drugs in attempt to suppress objectionable conduct but the drugs
    often make the conduct even more objectionable, in which event the
    prescription is changed.”
    Then he explains, one drug may be substituted for another, or one or more
    drugs may be added to the mix, or the dosage may be decreased, or more
    likely increased, and this process may go on endlessly, he says.
    Following Rebecca’s death, the Department of Social Services placed the
    other two Riley children, Kaitlynne 6, and Gerald 11, in foster care and
    sought an independent opinion on their medical care, and doctors determined
    that their medication needed to be changed.
    *************
    Persons injured by Serotonin Syndrome and seeking legal advice can contact
    the Robert Kwok & Associates Law Firm, at (713) 773-3380;
    http://www.kwoklaw.com/about.php
    Evelyn Pringle
    Evelyn-pringle @ sbcglobal.net
    (This article is written as part of a series on emerging issues involving
    the pharmaceutical industry and is sponsored by Robert Kwok & Associated,
    LLP)

    #183410
    maravilla
    Member

    The article you posted, Keith, absolutely makes me sick. The atypical antipsychotics they’re talking about cause permanent brain damage, not to mention the other side effects such as tardive dyskinesia and tardive dystonia. It’s the equivalent of killing a mouse with an atomic weapon. What do the doctors care when they dole out these drugs to unsuspecting parents? After all, they are getting paid BIG bucks to do it. Eliar Lilly just paid out more than a billion dollars to settle claims for their drug Zyprexa. Nobody should take these drugs, not even the schizos for whom they were designed because the side effects and permanent damage they cause (including death) by far outweigh any benefit.

Viewing 12 posts - 1 through 12 (of 12 total)
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.