snipped from....
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cachepaCEk_Rxi4J:www.canada.com/business/Airdrie%2Bhelp/6706078/story.html+wourms+alberta+medication&cd=14&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=ca
"Published: Thursday, May 31, 2012
Death of young Airdrie family stirs debate about coping with depression
In late April, Airdrie RCMP had attended the Wourms' home after receiving a call from a family member concerned about his well-being.
"He was admitted to the hospital in Calgary for a psychiatric assessment on April 24, 2012," confirmed his parents. "He was subjected to a full workup and released with medication and outpatient follow up. He was scheduled for another meeting with a counsellor on Monday, May 28, 2012, after spending the weekend in St. Walburg with family."
An Airdrie dad found dead in a Saskatchewan ditch with his wife and young son was depressed and due for a followup meeting with a counsellor the same day the bodies were discovered.
Darren Wourms, 26, his 23-year old wife Hayley and their two-year-old son Cayden were located dead on the side of a rural road near St. Walburg, Sask., about 100 kilometres northeast of Lloydminster, after an apparent murder-suicide."
-------------------
you can read the rest of the article with the link above...
How many of these all too similar tragedies have to happen before we the people start looking at the side affects of phsychotropic drugs instead of the person?
It is almost daily we are hearing about these horrific crimes all similar in nature (Newtown, Sophie Blanchette, Felicia Boots, Alison Easton, Peter Lefabvre, Seth Ottenbreit, and the list goes on and on....
Where psychotropic drugs are in the mix of horrific crimes where there has been no history of violence and all of a sudden suicide and homicide are taking place where there is a listed side effect on psychotropic drugs that this can occur ... along with loss of reality agression and violence to name a few...
It seems to me that many people are looking at the perp instead of the potential root cause which are side affects. And still these prescriptions are written over and over throughout each day...
I just called to pharmacists to ask what the side affects are from psychtropic drugs... both didnt mention suicidal and homicidal ideation until I asked about it.. Theyboth said that those side affects are very rare, and that if a person experiences those side affects they should go back to the docs where the dosage will be increased or a diff drug will be prescribed..... WTH?
I asked both what happens if the person has lost touch with reality (which is another side effect) and both said the families will know so to get the proper help??????????????? What?
Apparently, the people need to do the research on these drugs themselves so not to expect being led by the blind. In too many of these sad stories the reporters arent presenting these stories as possible victims of side affects, where we are being robbed of education.
We need to do it ourselves. It seems to me that the side affects are doing the killings not the depression...
,
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cachepaCEk_Rxi4J:www.canada.com/business/Airdrie%2Bhelp/6706078/story.html+wourms+alberta+medication&cd=14&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=ca
"Published: Thursday, May 31, 2012
Death of young Airdrie family stirs debate about coping with depression
In late April, Airdrie RCMP had attended the Wourms' home after receiving a call from a family member concerned about his well-being.
"He was admitted to the hospital in Calgary for a psychiatric assessment on April 24, 2012," confirmed his parents. "He was subjected to a full workup and released with medication and outpatient follow up. He was scheduled for another meeting with a counsellor on Monday, May 28, 2012, after spending the weekend in St. Walburg with family."
An Airdrie dad found dead in a Saskatchewan ditch with his wife and young son was depressed and due for a followup meeting with a counsellor the same day the bodies were discovered.
Darren Wourms, 26, his 23-year old wife Hayley and their two-year-old son Cayden were located dead on the side of a rural road near St. Walburg, Sask., about 100 kilometres northeast of Lloydminster, after an apparent murder-suicide."
-------------------
you can read the rest of the article with the link above...
How many of these all too similar tragedies have to happen before we the people start looking at the side affects of phsychotropic drugs instead of the person?
It is almost daily we are hearing about these horrific crimes all similar in nature (Newtown, Sophie Blanchette, Felicia Boots, Alison Easton, Peter Lefabvre, Seth Ottenbreit, and the list goes on and on....
Where psychotropic drugs are in the mix of horrific crimes where there has been no history of violence and all of a sudden suicide and homicide are taking place where there is a listed side effect on psychotropic drugs that this can occur ... along with loss of reality agression and violence to name a few...
It seems to me that many people are looking at the perp instead of the potential root cause which are side affects. And still these prescriptions are written over and over throughout each day...
I just called to pharmacists to ask what the side affects are from psychtropic drugs... both didnt mention suicidal and homicidal ideation until I asked about it.. Theyboth said that those side affects are very rare, and that if a person experiences those side affects they should go back to the docs where the dosage will be increased or a diff drug will be prescribed..... WTH?
I asked both what happens if the person has lost touch with reality (which is another side effect) and both said the families will know so to get the proper help??????????????? What?
Apparently, the people need to do the research on these drugs themselves so not to expect being led by the blind. In too many of these sad stories the reporters arent presenting these stories as possible victims of side affects, where we are being robbed of education.
We need to do it ourselves. It seems to me that the side affects are doing the killings not the depression...
,