No
wonder the nation is full of either zombies or psychotics. I've been offered - and refused - the two most popular - statins and SSRI antidepressants
Nearly
half of Brits on prescription drugs – report
Nearly half
of all Britons are taking prescription medication on a regular basis
according to new figures produced by the Health and Social Care
Information Centre (HSCIC)
RT,
30
December, 2014
According
to the HSCIC, 50 percent of women and 43 percent of men are taking
specialised drugs to combat physical and mental illnesses, with
cholesterol-lowering statins and anti-depressants being among the
most common drugs taken by Bits.
According
to the HSE report, doctors issued on average 18.7 prescriptions per
person in England during 2013, costing the NHS more than £15bn per
year.
While
the report does not count issuing of contraceptives and anti-smoking
medication, nearly a third of the prescriptions were related to
regulating blood pressure, with more than 65 million being issued in
one year alone.
Additionally,
more than one in 10 women said they were taking medication to do with
mental health issues, with 17 percent of women from low income
backgrounds taking anti-depressants, compared to 7 percent of women
in higher income brackets.
“It's
well known that rates of depression are much higher among women than
men, so I am not surprised to see that antidepressant use follows the
same pattern in this study,” Dr
Sarah Jackson, a professor at University College London told the BBC.
“People
with depression are less likely to be in regular employment, and
people who are unemployed or in low paid jobs are more likely to have
depression.”
The
paper also found that overweight and obese people were more likely to
need prescription medication, while more than half of people who were
‘severely obese’ took at least one prescribed drugs, and a third
took at least three types of special medication.
Commenting
on these findings, Sue Faulding, a pharmacist and programmes manager
at the HSCIC said: “Obesity is often associated with high
cholesterol, high blood pressure, joint pain and depression.”
"Lifestyle
changes are always recommended in the first instance, but medicines
can help to address the symptoms and this study shows that medicine
use increases steadily with body mass index,” she dded.
READ MORE: Social media make UK 'a phenomenal market' for illegal drug sales - watchdog
READ MORE: Social media make UK 'a phenomenal market' for illegal drug sales - watchdog
Earlier
this week, the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency
warned that a record number of Britons were purchasing illicit
medication through social media channels, and that the UK had become
a ‘phenomenal market’ for selling these types of medication.
According
to the MHRA, thousands of sexual enhancement chemicals, sleeping
pills and weight loss medication was being sold through the black
market, with the UK among the most lucrative countries for
distributors.
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