Katinka Blackford Newman

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Katinka Blackford Newman is a journalist, documentary filmmaker and the author of The Pill That Steals Lives: One Woman's Terrifying Journey to Discover the Truth about Antidepressants. She is primarily known for her work investigating the adverse effects of psychiatric medication and for challenging the diagnosis of normal human emotions as illnesses that need to be medicated.

Documentaries

Blackford Newman began her career directing episodes of Banged Up Abroad, Body Shock (Half Ton Man), Murder in the Family,[1] and Channel 4's Surrendered Wives, based on the book Surrendered Wife by Laura Doyle.[2][3]

Writing and journalism

In 2012, Blackford Newman was prescribed the antidepressants mirtazapine and escitalopram for insomnia and stress.[4] Shortly after starting the medication, she experienced psychosis and hallucinations.[5] [6] She was hospitalised and placed on multiple psychiatric medications. When she reported feeling an acute inability to stop moving,[7] and the medical staff failed to recognise that the medication had triggered a side effect known as akathisia. She moved to St Charles' Hospital in the NHS when her private health insurance ran out. St Charles' sectioned her and discontinued her medication. Her withdrawals lasted for three weeks, but she reported making a full recovery.[1][5]

Blackford Newman asserted that her initial psychosis was a result of an extreme adverse reaction and that her subsequent year long illness was caused by side effects of the drugs she was being forced to take.[4]

She subsequently began researching the potential links between antidepressants, psychosis, suicide, and violence. In 2016, she published a book titled The Pill That Steals Lives, in which she documented her experience and the experiences of others who reported similar reactions. She has also contributed to media coverage of the topic, including the BBC Panorama documentary A Prescription for Murder?, which explored the case of James Holmes.[5]

Blackford Newman has worked with other individuals who attribute acts of violence to adverse drug reactions, including David Carmichael and David Crespi, both of whom committed filicide while taking antidepressants. She has also provided expert commentary in court cases where psychiatric medication has been raised as a factor.[5] Additionally, she co-founded the non-profit, antidepressantrisks.org.[8]

Blackford Newman continues to campaign for increased awareness of potential side effects associated with psychiatric medication and advocates for closer scrutiny of prescription practices.[5]

Publications

Filmography

References

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