Disclosure: This article was excerpted from the Biotics Bulletin published by BioticsResearch

Here is the brief article:
We tend to think that drugs are safer than they really are, and we tend to think that they are more effective than they really are. Heath Ledger had problems with anxiety and sleeping, for which he took drugs and we know how that worked out. According to a report from MSNBC, based on NIH figures, between 2000 and 2004, the use of sleep
medications doubled among adults aged 20-44. Use in children even increased by 85%. Americans now spend around $5 bi l l ion each year on sleep medications.

According to the October 23, 2007 issue of the New York Times, also reporting NIH figures, newer sleeping pills like Ambien, Lunesta, and Sonata reduced the average time to go to sleep by just under 13 minutes compared with fake pills. The sleeping pill Rozerem, gets you to sleep 7 to 16 minutes faster than a placebo, and increases total sleep time 11 to 19 minutes for the low,low price of $3.50 per pill.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention looked at 2.4 billion drugs prescribed in visits to doctors and hospitals in 2005. Of those, 118 million were for antidepressants. The New England Journal of Medicine published that the reporting of results of antidepressant trials exaggerates the effectiveness of the drugs. According to the published literature, nearly all studies conducted (94%) had positive treatment results, but FDA data showed that in fact only about half (51%) of the studies were
positive. The author of the report, Erick Turner, M.D. , assistant professor of psychiatry, physiology and pharmacology at Oregon Health & Science University and Medical
Director of the Portland Veterans Affairs Medical Center’s Mood Disorders Program states, “Selective publication can lead doctors and patients to believe drugs are more
effective than they really are, which can influence prescribing decisions.” Antidepressants are linked to violent behavior and to suicide in younger people. Sleep medication has been linked to bizarre things like sleep eating and traveler’s amnesia. A
study published in the April 15, 1998 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association found that more than 2 million Americans become seriously ill every year from reactions to drugs (this is a figure for all drugs—not sleep medication) that were
correctly prescribed and taken; 106,000 Americans die annually from those side effects.

There are natural approaches that offer you drug-free options. Functional diagnostic lab tests assess levels of key brain chemicals, amino acid, vitamins and minerals, stress hormones and sleep hormones. With this information, targeted and personalized nutrition, supplement, lifestyle and behavioral suggestions are made for you.

You know you are anxious or suffer from unhealthy and unwanted moods.

What is going on in your body that produces what you feel as anxiety or depression or obsessions?

Rather than just a diagnosis that tells you what your condition is called, how about finding evidence for why your body feels this way.

How about natural options? How about helping your body (and brain) function as it should and as you want?

How about real evidence that really explains what is going on?

How about reclaiming your life?

If you or someone you love suffers from anxiety, depression or insomnia, call the office for an introductory consultation to get some of your questions answered and to listen an overview of the program.