New study: FDA-approved drugs are dangerous: this is a limited hangout
                              
  
  NOTE: Jon's website www.nomorefakenews.com has been hacked
  
   As 
  alarming as the study sounds, it's a limited 
  hangout---I'll explain
  
  By Jon Rappoport
  
  It turns out every new medical drug should contain a warning: "The FDA 
  approved this medicine. Watch out."
  
  Perhaps the warning should be more extreme: "If you're taking this drug, 
  have an emergency medical crew on stand-by."
  
  A new study, published in the Journal of American Medical Association, examined 
  all 222 drugs approved by the FDA between 2001 and 2010. The finding? Years 
  after approval, roughly a third of the medicines were then labeled with warnings 
  about serious adverse effects; and some of those warnings indicated life-threatening 
  complications. For example, cancer and liver damage. For example, death---which, 
  the last time I looked, is life-threatening.
  
  The Washington Post reports: "Among the drugs with added warnings [years 
  after the drugs were approved, as safe, for public use]: Humira, used for arthritis 
  and some other illnesses; Abilify, used for depression and other mental illness; 
  and Pradaxa, a blood thinner. The withdrawn drugs [taken off the market] and 
  the reason: Bextra, an anti-inflammatory medicine, heart problems; Raptiva, 
  a psoriasis drug, rare nervous system illness; and Zelnorm, a bowel illness 
  drug, heart problems."
  
  A pharma trade-group spokeswoman told the Post: "Even with rigorous clinical 
  studies and regulatory review it may be impossible to detect certain safety 
  signals until several years after approval, once the medicine is in broader 
  use."
  
  No doubt. And that's why the public is subjected to the luck of the draw, a 
  roll of the dice, a spin of the roulette wheel.
  
  Of course, as I never tire of pointing out, a landmark review (July 26, 2000) 
  in the Journal 
  of American Medical Association, by Dr. Barbara Starfield, found that, every 
  year in the US, FDA approved drugs kill 106,000 people. Extrapolating to a decade, 
  that would be a million deaths. 
  
  The new study confirms only a small part of the overall problem.
  
  And the overall problem is what major media don't want to report on---and what 
  the federal government doesn't want to touch with a 10-foot pole.
  
  The new study is what intelligence agencies would call a limited hangout, which 
  is a public admission of part of a problem or scandal that is, in fact, much 
  bigger. The huge scandal, in this case, is the routine death-by-medicine numbers 
  every year---which is ignored by the press and the government.
  
  106,000 Americans killed by FDA approved medicines every year. That's the big 
  one. That remains hidden and unacknowledged. 
  NOTE: under Trump, the FDA is urged to speed up the drug-approval process. It's 
  good for business. For patients, it's a disaster on top of the already existing 
  disaster. 
Related:
Is US Health Really the Best in the World? JAMA commentary by Dr. Barbara Starfield
The Starfield Revelations - http://www.shiftfrequency.com/tag/jama/