Child is helpless victim of mother's use of Paxil during pregnancy

April 17th, 2009 by Jennifer Walker-Journey

preemie baby 150x150 Child is helpless victim of mothers use of Paxil during pregnancyChristine K’s newborn baby spent her first four days of life hooked up to tubes in an incubator at a hospital’s neonatal intensive care unit, a helpless victim of her mother’s longtime use of prior to and for the first six months of her .

Christine K had been prescribed a combination of Paxil, Risperdal and Depakote five years prior to becoming pregnant. While pregnant she read that could be harmful to her unborn baby. She asked her doctor take her off the meds, but he insisted she stay on them.

Christine K did more research on the medications and learned that a scientific study on infants born to women taking during the first trimester of showed that women who took had a greater risk of birth defects compared to other .

As a result of the study, in 2005, GlaxoSmithKline informed health care professionals that it was updating the precautions section of the label for its antidepressant to include the risk of and, in particular, .

In 2006, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) released another Public Health Advisory based on another study that indicated additional risks associated with taking during including persistent pulmonary hypertention (PPHN), a serious and life-threatening lung condition that occurs soon after birth, omphalocele and craniosynostosis.

Six months into her , against her doctor’s orders, Christine K heeded the warning signs she had read about online and weaned herself off and the other . But the damage had already been done. While her son doesn’t have any of the above mentioned severe , he does experience sleep problems, aversions to eating, and overall poor health.

“In the first three years of his life, this child has needed more medical care and doctor’s appointments than my other three children combined,” she told the Dissident Voice. “All I can do is watch and wait and hope (his medical problems) resolve on their own.”

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