Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts | Yet it's exactly what's happening right now with Restless Legs Syndrome, road rage Disorder, Social Anxiety Disorder and even Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder. Every one of these is utterly bogus. Completely fictitious. Designed for one sinister purpose: To sell drugs to people who don't need them.
As reported in one news story, "Experts claim IED is caused by inadequate production of serotonin in the brain, which regulates our moods. It is felt that treatment with antidepressants can help the condition."
Ah. Antidepressants. | | But saying you have road rage Disorder because some psychiatrist force-fed a false diagnosis into your impressionable, defenseless brain only qualifies you as gullible.
Pseudoscientific psych surveys
How, exactly, did psychiatrists actually come up with this stunning "discovery" that 16 million Americans suffer from this new disease, IED? Get this: They conducted a survey.
The survey asked American adults if they had ever experienced three anger outbursts in their entire life. Not surprisingly, a whole lot of people said they had. From this flimsy evidence -- and this alone! | | This is how we get road rage Disorder, Restless Legs Syndrome (an extremely rare condition that drug companies are now trying to push onto half the population) and even the idea that menstruation is now a "disorder" that can be treated with drugs to stop a woman's natural cycles from being expressed. Merely being a woman, apparently, is a state of ongoing disease and biological dysfunction according to Big Pharma's disease pushers.
It's so outrageous, and based on such obvious non-scientific psychobabble, that only a complete fool would actually buy into it. | | REPPED: Disease mongering has reached a new level of ridiculousness with the widely-reported announcement that millions of American now have undiagnosed road rage Disorder, also sometimes called Intermittent Explosive Disorder (IED). Desperate to scrounge up new diseases that can be treated with high-profit prescription drugs, Big Pharma and its disease-pushing sidekick, psychiatry, is now pulling diseases out of thin air, making them up as it goes along, and hoping enough impressionable consumers (and journalists) can be hoodwinked into thinking every fictitious disease is actually real. | Jack Challem See book keywords and concepts | For a variety of reasons, such as genetics or upbringing, a few people are more likely than others to be the canaries—more prone to having road rage, being involved in high-speed car chases, "going postal," and committing other irrational and senseless acts. Worse, as more people suffer from deteriorating nutritional health, still greater numbers of people are negatively affected—hence, the increase in bad moods.
The situation may sound grim, but most of this book focuses on what you, as an individual, can do to change it. | Bottom Line Health See book keywords and concepts | | Anger has been associated with everything from high blood pressure to road rage. Now, a new study links anger in men to injuries.
Researchers who interviewed emergency room patients found that men were likely to report being angry at the time of their injuries.
Although the findings may seem obvious, previous research into anger has found contradictory results, says study coauthor Dr. Daniel C. Vinson, a professor of family medicine at the University of Missouri-Columbia. | | Alittle-studied mental illness, marked by episodes of angry, potentially violent outbursts like those seen in road rage or spousal abuse, is more common than previously thought, researchers report. In fact, the illness, known as intermittent explosive disorder (IED), may affect 8.6 million Americans, the researchers found.
IED may also predispose people to other mental illnesses, such as depression and anxiety, as well as substance abuse problems. | Jack Challem See book keywords and concepts | For example, road rage usually results from pent-up frustration about traffic congestion, which may be expressed through horn honking, reckless speeding and lane changing, or freeway shootings. People who have angry outbursts are often described as losing it or having a meltdown.
Impatience is a form of annoyance and anger that's commonly seen in many people's driving habits. A person who is annoyed and impatient with traffic might tailgate, speed, and weave between lanes, only to be stopped at red lights, increasing his or her frustration, annoyance, and impatience. | | Drivers' muttering under their breath morphed into shouts, obscene gestures, road rage, and freeway shootings. The problem is not only with driving habits. There has been an epidemic of what I call "pissy mood syndrome." All too many people are in an irritable mood much of the time.
How Many People Have Bad Moods?
Just how common are our bad moods? Recent articles in the Archives of General Psychiatry, published by the American Medical Association, have pointed out that at least one of every two people will experience a serious mood or mental health problem at some time in his or her life. | | Anger-related feelings and behavior (how you express your feelings of anger) include brooding, resentment, annoyance, aggravation, rudeness, sarcasm, passive-aggressiveness, impatience, irritability, inflammatory language, outbursts, negative energy, road rage, hatred, hostile-personality disorder, vital exhaustion, destructive behavior, juvenile delinquency, and adult criminal violence.
What You Should Know
Anger is a secondary emotion, meaning that it develops in response to a primary emotion, such as frustration, hurt, or pain. | Peter J. Whitehouse and Daniel George See book keywords and concepts | A New York Times article even suggested that people with road rage should consider this medication! If the drug helps at a reasonable cost, it would be great. However, the first line of management of PBA is to make people aware that these involuntary emotional outbursts are well-described phenomena and are not associated with an underlying depression.
Changes in personality
As many of us know, the day-to-day behaviors of persons with dementia can be quite variable. But do their basic personalities change? | John J. Ratey, MD See book keywords and concepts | Children and adults can automatically overreact, negatively or positively, which makes them passionate and quick to anger. road rage is essentially a temper tantrum, and a red flag for particularly hyperactive forms of ADHD. Just making it through traffic to my office is a trial for some of my patients: "I wish I had howitzers in my headlights!" one woman told me. "I'd blast everyone out of the way!" Impatience feeds this response too. People with ADHD will do anything not to stand in line and can explode if they're made to wait. | David Steinman See book keywords and concepts | Before leaving, I read in the paper that another person in a car was shot, this time on the Costa Mesa Freeway in Tustin, and local authorities say there seemed to be no motivation, no road rage, no previous contact between victim and criminal, only a silver, late-model Toyota extended-cab pickup, not even a human ID, just knowing the suspect by the car. According to a newspaper report, at least four other men have been killed in similar incidents in the last six weeks, including one of those killed in the same locale as the most recent shooting. | Jack Challem See book keywords and concepts | Anger disorders include irritability, crankiness, resentment, brooding, rudeness, aggressiveness, road rage, juvenile delinquency, and criminal violence.
• Impulsive and distractible disorders include rash behavior, some types of irrational behavior, excessive multitasking, some types of addiction, and adult attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).
• Anxiety disorders include tension, jumpiness, worry, fear, panic attacks, post-traumatic stress disorders, and obsessive-compulsive behavior (such as repeated and unnecessary checking). | John J. Ratey, MD See book keywords and concepts | It evens out the reaction to a new stimulus, so we don't go overboard and scream at another driver in a fit of road rage, for example.
To the extent that ADHD is a lack of control—of impulses and attention—the performance of the prefrontal cortex is critical. The seminal 2006 study from Arthur Kramer of the University of Illinois used MRI scans to show that walking as few as three days a week for six months increased the volume of the prefrontal cortex in older adults. | Russell L. Blaylock, M.D. See book keywords and concepts | Violence and Aggression in Our Society
The news media is filled with stories of violent teenage assaults and even incredible acts of aggression by small children; road rage, airplane rage, and every other kind of rage, plagues our society. In large part, I believe this is because of the destruction of religiosity in the
West, which undermines teaching people how to love one another and behave in a civil manner. Yet, there is growing evidence that nutritional deficiency may play a major role in extremes of violence and in violent suicide. | KC Craichy See book keywords and concepts | Phobias
¦ Over-reactions
« Anxiety attacks (panic)
In addition, stress can lead to antisocial behaviors and signs, including argumentativeness, social isolation, conflicts with coworkers, road rage, domestic or workplace violence, and frequent job changes.
The Negative Effects of Stress
The National Institute of Mental Health reports that 19 million Americans between the ages of 18 and 54 are afflicted by anxiety- and stress-related illnesses per year.4 The effects of this stress are profound. | John E. Sarno, M.D. See book keywords and concepts | The varieties of road rage are a good example of displaced emotions. In its most benign form the driver finds himself reacting with anger to annoying things his fellow drivers do. He swears at them, berates them, accuses them of gross incompetence, and so on, all from within the safety of his automobile with the windows closed. I'll admit that this is very familiar to me since I do it all the time, much to the distress of my wife when she is in the car. | | This is undoubtedly the mechanism behind phenomena like road rage.
Mr. G did well in psychotherapy and has remained free of pain for the ten years since he came to see me.
Mrs. B was a fifty-three-year-old married investment firm executive who had suffered back pain for six years. Her income significantly exceeded that of her husband. They had two daughters of college age. She said her marriage was good and had high praise for her girls, who were exceptional students and "good people. | Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts | Because everybody's making money from disease, including the doctors, hospitals, medical imaging specialists, oncologists, radiologists, anesthesiologists and, of course, psychiatrists, who are now making money by imagining that people have all sorts of brain chemistry disorders like road rage Disorder that they claim need to be treated with prescription drugs. | Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts | Drug companies routinely engage in outrageous "disease mongering" to invent and market new diseases (like road rage Disorder) so they can sell more drugs to people who don't need them.
Most non-profit disease groups (cancer, diabetes, heart, etc.) are actually pharmaceutical front groups that work to prevent prevention because treating disease is so much more profitable than teaching people how to avoid disease.
None of the most popular psychotropic drugs currently being prescribed to children (for ADD, depression, etc.) has ever been approved for use in children by the FDA.
... | Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts | I hate to use the term "road rage," because even that phrase has been overhyped, but I do think there may be a connection between antidepressant drugs and aggressive driving habits or traffic-related confrontations.
My theory is that when you have people out there driving around the cities of our nation and they're doped up on drugs, they are no doubt causing more automobile accidents because they have slower reaction times and impaired nervous system function due to the drugs. In other words, they are not the healthy, alert drivers that we should have on the roads. | Antoinette Saville and Antony J. Haynes See book keywords and concepts | Anger, road rage, constant anxiety, yelling at your kids, compulsive eating, smoking or drug use are some of the behaviors that let you know your adrenals are crying out for help. This reflects that your digestive system does not have enough energy to digest food properly.
14. Does it take you a long time to recover from illness, injury or trauma? - The cold you got in October is still hanging on in December. The cut on your finger takes weeks to heal. Two years after your father died you are still incapacitated by grief. | Zorba Paster, M.D. and Susan Meltsner See book keywords and concepts | Sphere: Mental Page: 000 Action rating: Moderate to difficult
Booster 46: Manage Anger Impact *****
Amplifiers Family or personal history or other risk factors for heart disease, stroke, or high blood pressure; stress; chronic medical conditions; excessive alcohol consumption; financial, work, or relationship problems
Hissy fits, Mights and temper tantrums, road rage and shouting matches-take your pick. Anger isn't pretty, and it isn't healthy. Expressing it exacerbates heart problems, raises blood pressure, breeds violence, and cuts us off from people who could care about us. | Robert W. Hill, Ph.D. and Eduardo Castro, M.D. See book keywords and concepts | These same symptoms apply to both teenagers and adults, and are likely to lead to problems behind the wheel, such as accidents, tickets, and road rage.
We have had countless conversations with parents of ADD teenagers about driver's licenses. ADD teenagers, like most other teens, want their driver's permits as soon as possible. They also like other motorized vehicles such as four-wheelers and motorcycles. Our advice is always treatment first, then when the behavior improves, get a driver's license. | Gayle Reichler, M.S., R.D., C.D.N. See book keywords and concepts | At the root of health and social problems, such as drug addiction, smoking, overdrinking, overeating, road rage, and physical abuse (to name just a few), is the inability to "own" or "digest" our uncomfortable or negative feelings and to find constructive ways of channeling our energies. With overeaters, for example, grief and anger are often swallowed along with the unhealthy foods. Someone who is dealing with sadness and says, "I feel like eating a pint of ice cream," is sending out a powerful statement. | Ann Blake Tracy, Ph.D. See book keywords and concepts | | So here we sit in a society now filled with cases of road rage, air rage, desk rage, sports rage and every other type of rage you can think of wondering where all the rage is coming from. No one is thinking to suspect their medicine.
- - 5/18/00-The New England Journal of Medicine, Vol. 342, No. 20, Editorial; "Is Academic Medicine for Sale?," This was Dr. Marcia Angell's parting editorial as she left the New England Journal of Medicine. Her exposure of the corruption between medical "science" and the pharmaceutical giants is an eye-opener! | | But we have seen increases in murder/suicide, suicide, unwed pregnancies, domestic violence, manic-depression, MS, mothers (parents) killing children, road rage, school shootings, bankruptcies, divorce, hypoglycemia, diabetes, cancer, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, and fibromyalgia since these serotonergic drugs have become so popular and I relate it directly to the effects of these serotonergic drugs. As the serotonergic-induced sleepwalk nightmares are acted out by these patients, the death toll has continued to climb drastically since the first publication of PROZAC: PANACEA OR PANDORA? | Robert W. Hill, Ph.D. and Eduardo Castro, M.D. See book keywords and concepts | ADD likely plays a major role in what is now labeled "Road Rage." Individuals with ADD have less impulse control, so if they experience a sudden burst of anger, they are likely to act on that angry impulse rather than control it.
To give a person with ADD a driver's license is to put someone behind the wheel of a vehicle who, in varying degrees, may be disorganized, unfocused, forgetful, highly distractible, and possibly irritable. They have a low frustration tolerance and they may be hyperactive. |
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ABOUT THE CREATOR OF NATURALPEDIA: Mike Adams, the creator of this NaturalNews Naturalpedia, is the editor of NaturalNews.com, the internet's top natural health news site, creator of the Honest Food Guide (www.HonestFoodGuide.org), a free downloadable consumer food guide based on natural health principles, author of Grocery Warning, The 7 Laws of Nutrition, Natural Health Solutions, and many other books available at www.TruthPublishing.com, creator of the earth-friendly EcoLEDs company (www.EcoLEDs.com) that manufactures energy-efficient LED lighting products, founder of Arial Software (www.ArialSoftware.com), a permission e-mail technology company, creator of the CounterThink Cartoon series (www.NaturalNews.com/index-cartoons.html) and author of over 1,500 articles, interviews, special reports and reference guides available at www.NaturalNews.com. Adams' personal philosophy and health statistics are available at www.HealthRanger.org.
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