Due giorni prima dell’omicidio era andato dallo psichiatra: che sia un caso oppure è l’ennesimo successo della psichiatria?

Sarebbe ora che cominciassero a indagare sulla connessione tra gli omicidi più efferati ed insensati e il passato psichiatrico delle persone che commettono il delitto.

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Da: estense.com

sabato 9 aprile 2016

De Scisciolo andò da uno psichiatria due giorni prima dell’omicidio

Il 73enne soffriva per lo stato di salute della moglie e assumeva un antidepressivo. Il gip ha disposto il suo ricovero in ospedale

E’ stato portato dal carcere all’ospedale Francesco De Scisciolo, il 73enne che il 5 aprile ha ucciso la moglie malata, coetanea, Elena Salmaso, costituendosi subito dopo. Ieri il gip Piera Tassoni, dopo aver convalidato il fermo del pensionato, ne ha infatti disposto il ricovero presso l’ospedale di Cona in una situazione protetta e sorvegliata.

carabinieri omicidio via paracelsoIntanto i legali difensori dell’uomo, gli avvocati Ugo e Marco De Nunzio e Federico Fischer, hanno rinunciato all’incarico conferito loro dalla famiglia del 73enne, che ora dovrà necessariamente ricorrere alle prestazioni di un nuovo professionista.

Riguardo alla tragica vicenda sembrano emergere particolari che potrebbero essere oggetto di approfondimenti, per arrivare a capire per quale motivo un uomo per bene, che amava profondamente la moglie e abituato ad assistere persone malate (è stato per anni consigliere dell’Unitalsi Ferrara) sia arrivato a compiere un gesto (l’accoltellamento della coniuge nel sonno) che nemmeno lui ora riesce a spiegarsi.

Si apprende infatti che l’uomo – che stava vivendo da qualche tempo con sofferenza la situazione di salute della moglie, colta da ictus invalidante – un paio di giorni prima dell’omicidio si era rivolto a uno psichiatra con l’intento di alleviare il proprio stato depressivo. Psichiatra che avrebbe prescritto a Francesco De Scisciolo l’assunzione di un farmaco antidepressivo, il “Trittico”, il cui principio attivo è il trazodone e fra i cui effetti indesiderati figurano, fra gli altri, “idee suicidarie o comportamento suicida, stato confusionale, insonnia, disorientamento, mania, ansietà, nervosismo, agitazione (che del tutto occasionalmente si esacerbano fino al delirio), delirio, reazione aggressiva, allucinazioni, incubi e altro ancora” (tratto dal foglietto illustrativo del farmaco, ndr).

Durante il colloquio avuto in carcere con i legali De Nunzio, il 73enne aveva ricordato quanto avvenuto senza capacitarsi di come aveva potuto compiere l’insano gesto, facendo ben capire che non era stata sua volontà. Quest’ultimo particolare emerso, dunque, potrebbe essere determinante nello stabilire se in quegli attimi di follia la volontà di De Scisciolo fosse offuscata da una reazione indesiderata al farmaco assunto, o se comunque lo stato depressivo in cui versava l’avrebbe portato comunque a questo temporaneo ‘tilt’ del proprio cervello.

 

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La sparatoria di Charleston: un altro successo della psichiatria!

Nelle news girano già articoli che parlano dell’assunzione da parte di Dylann Storm Roof, il killer di 9 persone di colore a Charleston, di uno psicofarmaco per “curare” l’assuefazione da oppiacei…

Non c’è che dire: una bella cura!


Another American on Psych Drugs … kills 9

Thursday, 18 June 2015

Charleston Shooter Was on Drug Linked to Violent Outbursts

Charleston shooter Dylann Storm Roof was reportedly taking a drug that has been linked with sudden outbursts of violence, fitting the pattern of innumerable other mass shooters who were on or had recently come off pharmaceutical drugs linked to aggression.

According to a CBS News report, earlier this year when cops searched Roof after he was acting suspiciously inside a Bath and Body Works store, they found “orange strips” that Roof told officers was suboxone, a narcotic that is used to treat opiate addiction.

Suboxone is a habit-forming drug that has been connected with sudden outbursts of aggression.

A user on the MD Junction website relates how her husband “became violent, smashing things and threatening me,” after just a few days of coming off suboxone.

Another poster on the Drugs.com website tells the story of how his personality completely changed as a result of taking suboxone.

The individual relates how he became “nasty” and “violent” just weeks into taking the drug, adding that he would “snap” and be mean to people for no reason.

Another poster reveals how his son-in-law “completely changed on suboxone,” and that the drug sent him into “self-destruct mode.” A user named ‘Jhalloway’ also tells the story of how her husband’s addiction to suboxone was “ruining our life.” A poster on a separate forum writes about how he became “horribly aggressive” towards his partner after taking 8mg of suboxone.

According to a Courier-Journal report, suboxone “is increasingly being abused, sold on the streets and inappropriately prescribed” by doctors. For users, it is even more addictive than the drugs it’s supposed to help them quit. As we previously highlighted, virtually every major mass shooter was taking some form of SSRI or other pharmaceutical drug at the time of their attack, including Columbine killer Eric Harris, ‘Batman’ shooter James Holmes and Sandy Hook gunman Adam Lanza.

As the website SSRI Stories profusely documents, there are literally hundreds of examples of mass shootings, murders and other violent episodes that have been committed by individuals on psychiatric drugs over the past three decades. Pharmaceutical giants who produce drugs like Zoloft, Prozac and Paxil spend around $2.4 billion dollars a year on direct-to-consumer television advertising every year. By running negative stories about prescription drugs, networks risk losing tens of millions of dollars in ad revenue, which is undoubtedly one of the primary reasons why the connection is habitually downplayed or ignored entirely. //Paul Joseph Watson, IW

Fonte: http://macedoniaonline.eu/content/view/27574/61/

Tra i soldati americani ne uccide più la psichiatria che non la guerra

Bradley Stone—3rd Mass Killing in 16 Months by Military Personnel Under Influence of Psychiatric Drugs

Thirty-five-year-old Bradley Stone, an Iraq War veteran and alleged killer of six members of his immediate family, is the third recent case of military personnel committing mass murder on the general public while under the influence of psychiatric drugs.

Click here to read this article in full.

Fonte: http://www.cchrint.org/2014/12/30/bradley-stone-3rd-mass-killing-in-16-months-by-military-personnel-under-influence-of-psychiatric-drugs/

Un’altra strage in caserma, un’altro militare trattato con psicofarmaci

Violence and psychiatric drugs—a deadly formula America is becoming too intimately familiar with and, the mental health watchdog group, Citizens Commission on Human Rights says that rather than continually send heartfelt condolences to the families of the victims, it is time for lawmakers to investigate the connection between prescription psychiatric drugs and violence.

America learned within hours of the April 2nd shooting at Ft. Hood that four people were dead (including the shooter) and 16 had been wounded in the attack. The shooter, 34-year old Army Specialist, Ivan Lopez, served in Iraq for four months in 2011 and according to The New York Times, Secretary of the Army, John McHugh, said Lopez had been "examined by a psychiatrist within the last month, but showed no signs that he might commit a violent act." Secretary McHugh further explained to the Senate Armed Services Committee that Lopez "had been prescribed Ambien, a sleep aid, and other medication to treat anxiety and depression."

CCHR says this sounds sadly familiar to the September 2013 Washington Navy Yard attack by Aaron Alexis, who had been taking the antidepressant, Trazadone, when he killed twelve innocent people.

CCHR continues that, "psychiatric treatment, in the form of prescription mind-altering drugs, once again is connected to a mass shooting. Yet, despite data showing a connection between psychiatric mind-altering drugs and violence, lawmakers have yet to investigate the connection."

Click here to read the rest of the article.
— CCHR International

• Since 2002, the suicide rate in the U.S. military has almost doubled.
• From 2009 to 2012, more U.S. Soldiers died by suicide than from traffic accidents, heart disease, cancer and homicide.
• Veterans are killing themselves at a rate of 22 a day – one every 65 minutes.
• The U.S. Department of Defence now spends $2 billion a year on mental health alone.
• One in six American service members is on at least one psychiatric drug.


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