News
Proof is in the Pharmaceuticals
From 2003 to 2007, the Department of Defense indicated:
• Spending for Topamax, an epilepsy medicine now being used to treat soldiers with TBIs that could lead to seizures, nearly quadrupled in four years, from $5.6 million to $20 million.
• Spending for Ambien, a sleeping pill, doubled in four years, from $11 million to $22 million.
All three drugs are commonly used for the treatment of brain injury.
What conclusions can we reach about the data? More servicemembers are having seizures. More of them are having problems sleeping at night.
I have to applaud the Post reporter who wrote the article, but worry that much may have been lost in the editing. The Post didn't provide more meaty information–are the purchases of drugs increasing or decreasing? What kinds of trends can we look out for that might illuminate the situation?–but it is asking the right kinds of questions. The kinds of questions we should all be asking.
Click here to read Soldiering On In Pain.