US Military Blows $41.6 Million A Year On Viagra For Its Troops

FYI.

US military blows millions a year on Viagra for its troops:

THIS is hard to swallow.

The US military blows $US41.6 million ($52 million) a year on Viagra for its troops — about five times more than the estimated medical costs for transgender servicepeople, according to a new report.

Spending on the little blue pills is part of $US84 million ($105 million) total the military plunks down annually for erectile dysfunction medicines, according to the Washington Post, which cited a 2015 report by the Military Times.

Read moreUS Military Blows $41.6 Million A Year On Viagra For Its Troops

AND NOW: ‘Female Viagra’ pill has now been approved – good times for all

itching-vagina
DO you want the urge back?

‘Female Viagra’ pill has now been approved – good times for all (Metro, June 6, 2015):

There is a drug on the way designed to help women recover the magic.

FDA approval has been finally given to a pill designed that increase the psychological desire for sex in women.

Read moreAND NOW: ‘Female Viagra’ pill has now been approved – good times for all

Antidepressant drugs don’t work – official study

capsule_17601t.jpg
Six capsules of Prozac

They are among the biggest-selling drugs of all time, the “happiness pills” that supposedly lift the moods of those who suffer depression and are taken by millions of people in the UK every year. But one of the largest studies of modern antidepressant drugs has found that they have no clinically significant effect. In other words, they don’t work.

The finding will send shock waves through the medical profession and patients and raises serious questions about the regulation of the multinational pharmaceutical industry, which was accused yesterday of withholding data on the drugs.

It also came as Alan Johnson, the Health Secretary, announced that 3,600 therapists are to be trained during the next three years to provide nationwide access through the GP service to “talking treatments” for depression, instead of drugs, in a £170m scheme. The popularity of the new generation of antidepressants, which include the best known brands Prozac and Seroxat, soared after they were launched in the late 1980s, heavily promoted by drug companies as safer and leading to fewer side-effects than the older tricyclic antidepressants.

The publication in 1994 of Listening to Prozac by Peter Kramer, in which he suggested anyone with too little “joy juice” might give themselves a dose of the “mood brightener” Prozac , lifted sales into the stratosphere.

Read moreAntidepressant drugs don’t work – official study