How many drug scripts do doctors write per year?
by Jon Rappoport
Medical News Today reports that, in 2011, there was a modest uptick in the number of prescriptions written in the US.
The increase brought the total to: 4.02 billion.
Yes, in 2011, doctors wrote 4.02 billion prescriptions for drugs in America.
That's an average of roughly 13 prescriptions for each man, woman, and child.
That's about one new prescription every month for every
American. (Update: the Kaiser Family Foundation reports that in 2016,
4,065,479,343 drug prescriptions were written by US doctors---an
increase of 65 million.)
The Medical News Today article concluded, "...the industry
should be heartened by the growth of the number of prescriptions and
spending." Yes, I'm sure the drug industry is popping champagne corks.
We're talking about prescriptions here. We're not talking
about the number of pills Americans took. We're also not counting
over-the-counter drugs or vaccine shots.
Pharmacopoeia, a 2011 exhibition at the British Museum,
estimated that "the average number of pills a person takes in his or her
own lifetime in the UK is 14,000." That's as a result of prescriptions.
Including over-the-counter drugs, the 14,000 number would swell to
40,000 pills taken in a lifetime.
What are the effects of all these drugs?
We are looking at a supreme Trojan Horse that is rotting out
America and all other countries from the inside. Wars, no wars, economic
deprivation, economic prosperity, the drugs continue to do their work,
debilitating and ruining and terminating lives.
Many sources can be cited to confirm this assessment.
On January 8th, 2001, the LA Times published an article by
one of the best medical reporters in the business, Linda Marsa: "When
Good Drugs Do Harm." Marsa quoted researcher Dr. David Bates, who
indicated that, in the US, there are 36 million serious adverse
reactions to medical drugs per year.
On July 26, 2000, the Journal of the American Medical
Association published the most stunning mainstream estimate of
medical-drug damage in history: "Is US health really the best in the
world?" The author was Dr. Barbara Starfield, a respected public-health
researcher at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health.
Starfield concluded that medical drugs were killing Americans at the rate of 106,000 per year.
That's a million deaths per decade.
This is a conservative sketch of the Trojan Horse that has been placed in the center of every country in the world.
The pharmaceutical juggernaut will continue, no doubt about
it. The only question is, how many people will wake up and seek another
way?
The destruction of societies by medical drugs goes far beyond
what some people call "over-prescribing." This isn't just a tilt in the
wrong direction. It isn't simply errors of judgment compounded by the
number of doctors dispensing medicines.
Those are all polite terms suggesting the situation can be
corrected through a show of good will and better judgment. That will
never happen.
Countries of the world are literally being assaulted by
pharmaceutical companies and their foot-soldier doctors. It's chemical
warfare.
To even begin to see light at the end of the tunnel, hundreds
of millions of people must add themselves to the rolls of those who
already are pursuing better health through natural means.
Not even the Nazis and their dearly beloved cartel, the
monster IG Farben, dreamed of the day when the citizenry would line up
and demand to ingest more and more life-destroying chemicals.
In case anyone thinks the FDA, the single US agency
responsible for certifying drugs as safe and effective, has "overlooked
the problem," Google "FDA, Why Learn About Adverse Drug Events." You'll
find the following statements on the FDA's own site:
"Over 2 MILLION serious ADRs [Adverse Drug Events] yearly; 100,000 DEATHS yearly."
The only thing missing is: "And we, the FDA, said the drugs were safe."
Well, at one time, you could have found that statement on the FDA website.
The page has been removed.
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