Should we add antipsychotics in water like we added flouride? To make poeple healthier?

Should we add anti-psychotic medication into our drinking water supply like we did with fluoride?

Fluoride keeps kids’ teeth healthy.
Anti-psychotic to help people become rational.
Ideas?

Probably would have helped me out some years ago,lol.

21 Responses to “Should we add antipsychotics in water like we added flouride? To make poeple healthier?”

  1. Ugh hell no
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  2. Doesn’t work. They just found prozac in New Yorks water and they’re all still nuts.
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  3. You my freind are a maniac
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  4. That’s the best suggestion I have heard all week!
    What’s so bad about feeling good?!
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  5. Pangel - walking in your shoes on February 22nd, 2010 at 8:41 pm

    http://wolfsmoke.tripod.com/stickers/yourejuststicker.gif
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  6. What, and destroy religion once and for all?
    Heretic! Anyone have a stone to throw?
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  7. Hmm, yet there are still so many kids with rotten teeth – go figure. Fluride in water in not the answer, niehter is prozac.
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  8. no. you cant force people to take an anti-psychotic.

    drugs like this affect people differently, while they may help someone who suffers from a psycosis, they will harm an otherwise "normal" person.
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  9. no, not every one is mental/ in need of medical help, and flouride build up in the body over time leading to death, also there already are trace amouts of all kinds of drugs in your tap water from the "reclaimed water" drugs arnt on the filtering list at the water works
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  10. Er i dont think so! These are serious drugs with serious side effects!
    Side-effects

    Antipsychotics are associated with a range of side effects. It is well recognized that many people (around two-thirds in controlled drug trials) discontinue antipsychotics, partly due to adverse effects.

    Extrapyramidal reactions include tardive psychosis, acute dystonias, akathisia, parkinsonism (rigidity and tremor), tardive dyskinesia, tachycardia, hypotension, impotence, lethargy, seizures, and hyperprolactinaemia.

    The atypical antipsychotics (especially olanzapine) seem to cause weight gain more commonly than the typical antipsychotics. The well-documented metabolic side effects associated with weight gain include diabetes that, frequently, can be life-threatening.

    Clozapine also has a risk of inducing agranulocytosis, a potentially dangerous reduction in the number of white blood cells in the body. Because of this risk, patients prescribed clozapine may need to have regular blood checks to catch the condition early if it does occur, so the patient is in no danger.[citation needed]

    One of the more serious of these side effects is tardive dyskinesia,[2] in which the sufferer may show repetitive, involuntary, purposeless movements often of the lips, face, legs, or torso. It is believed that there is a greater risk of developing tardive dyskinesia with the older, typical antipsychotic drugs, although the newer antipsychotics are now also known to cause this disorder. It is believed by some that the risk of tardive dyskinesia can be reduced by combining the anti-psychotics with diphenhydramine or benztropine, though this has not been established. Central nervous system damage is also associated with irreversible tardive akathisia and/or tardive dysphrenia.

    Another antipsychotic side effect is deterioration of teeth due to a lack of saliva.

    A potentially serious side effect of many antipsychotics is that they tend to lower an individuals seizure threshold. Chlorpromazine and clozapine, in particular, have a relatively high seizurogenic potential. Fluphenazine, haloperidol, pimozide and risperidone exhibit a relatively low risk. Caution should be exercised in individuals that have a history of seizurogenic conditions (such as epilepsy, or brain damage).

    Another serious side effect is neuroleptic malignant syndrome, in which the drugs appear to cause the temperature regulation centers to fail, resulting in a medical emergency, as the patient’s temperature suddenly increases to dangerous levels.

    Another problematic side effect of antipsychotics is dysphoria.

    Loss of glial cells was observed in monkeys[3] and signs of neuron death were detected in women[4].

    Some people suffer few of the obvious side effects from taking antipsychotic medication, whereas others may have serious adverse effects. Some side effects, such as subtle cognitive problems, may go unnoticed.
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    wikipedia

  11. I don’t think so. Antipsychotics are intended to fix problems and when there is no problem, it can cause an imbalance and cause a new one. My cousin is a bit of a druggie and he has told me that antipsychotics can really mess you up. I’m not sure about tiny tiny amounts, but I still don’t like the idea – its too similar to mind control for my comfort.
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  12. NO. Anti-psychotics impede on spiritual thinking. As well as preventing clairvoyant visions. I sure wouldn’t want that.
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  13. Circle Takes The Square on February 23rd, 2010 at 12:19 am

    I think they should infuse THC to the water supply. People would be a lot more mellow.
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  14. Ahhhh, NO!!!!

    How is that healthy? You would be hurting the people that are not psychotic. And there is not one medication that is universally effective on everyone.
    You are putting a new spin on "Don’t drink the water"!
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  15. They don’t make people more rational, but there was once a serious plan to add lithium carbonate, an antidepressant, to drinking water.
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  16. From what I’ve heard recently they say there is already a HUGE amount of unfiltered medication in our drinking supply because they are not required by law to test for it or filter it OUT and for years people have been DUMPING their old prescription medication down the toilet and into our water supply….. scarey if ya ask me!

    Add antipsychotic medication to our drinking water!!! Aren’t you a hoot! Sounds like something outta some horrible futuristic sci-fi movie theme to me!!!
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  17. no
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  18. Fluoride may be good for your teeth, but it’s poison to the rest of your body. Anti-psychotics with a little anti-depressants sprayed in the air just might be beneficial, though : )
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  19. Dear gentle and kind reader, not all of us are psychotic. Perhaps a pharmacist/chemist can help you out.
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  20. Antipsychotics actually cause psychosis in relatively healthy individuals. Amazing, no? Antipsychotics do NOT make people "rational". Instead, they are very deep-acting sedative drugs.
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  21. Probably would have helped me out some years ago,lol.
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