Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

Fw: Link from City Pages

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts



Schulz under scrutiny for Seroquel study suicide

By Andy Mannix

Tuesday, Feb 1, 2011 at 2:33 pm

Weiss knew something wasn't right with her son.

Only a year before, Dan Markingson had seemed perfectly normal. But his latest

letter from Los Angeles suggested a troubled mind.

He claimed he was about to become famous. He was at a crossroads in his life,

and would soon have more free time. He even had a big movie premiere in the

works.

" I knew then that something was wrong, " says Weiss. " I knew that there wasn't a

premiere, and when he said he was going to have a lot more free time, I thought

he was quitting his job. "

Weiss immediately jumped in her car and drove to California. When she arrived,

she found her son far worse off than she'd feared. He was talking nonsense and

couldn't be reasoned with.

Weiss tried to convince Markingson to come back to Minnesota, where she could

look after him. But he had a stipulation: He would only return home if his dead

grandmother Daisy told him to.

Weiss went to an internet cafe down the street and created an email account

under the name " GuardianAngelDaisy. " Pretending to be her own deceased mother,

she urged Markingson to return to Minnesota. Eventually, he agreed.

He was home for only 10 days before he decided to return to California. Weiss

pleaded with him to stay, but he refused. She could either drive him to the

airport, or never see him again.

Weiss followed him to Los Angeles, where she again tried to urge her son to go

back to Minnesota. But this time, his grandmother's emails weren't enough.

Markingson wanted to talk to a higher authority: the Archangel.

Weiss created another fake email account as Archangel . The two exchanged

emails for more than a week before Markingson finally agreed to fly home.

Once he was back, Weiss called the South St. police. An officer came to her

home to evaluate her son. During the interview, Markingson casually mentioned he

would soon be attending a devil-worshipping event in Duluth, and might be

ordered to kill people.

That triggered a trip to Fairview University Medical Center, where Markingson

was diagnosed with psychosis and placed on a 72-hour hold.

In order to be released, Markingson agreed to a stay of commitment, which would

allow him to leave the hospital as long as he followed a treatment plan. The

plan involved Markingson enrolling in a study called Comparison of Atypicals in

First Episode, or CAFE. The research was sponsored by AstraZeneca, maker of

Seroquel, one of the anti-psychotic drugs being investigated.

When Weiss found out her son was a human guinea pig, she was furious. She called

the hospital and tried to pull her son out of the treatment plan, to no avail.

Although Markingson was mentally unfit, he was somehow able to consent to the

drug trial.

Over the next few months, Markingson's condition only worsened, Weiss says. His

doctor wouldn't return her calls, so she tried writing a letter to the head of

the department, Dr. S. Schulz. He didn't reply.

It wasn't until April 28, after Weiss's third letter, that she received a

cursory response, in which Schulz wrote, " it was not clear to me how you thought

the treatment team should deal with this issue. "

Ten days later, on May 8, Markingson sat in the bathtub of the halfway house

where he was staying and stabbed himself to death with a box cutter.

" I left this experience smiling! " read the suicide note.

MARKINGSON'S SUICIDE HAS cast a harsh spotlight on the University of Minnesota

psychiatry department. The Federal Drug Administration, the Attorney General's

Office, and the college's Internal Review Board all wanted to know how a

26-year-old research subject ended up dead.

So did his mom. After a year of combing through studies and public records,

Weiss filed a malpractice suit against Schulz and the U of M, accusing them of

putting Big Pharma's bottom line ahead of her son's mental health.

In December, a group of eight bioethicists at the U of M wrote a letter to the

college's Board of Regents, demanding the appointment of an independent board to

investigate whether lapses in ethics and judgment led to Markingson's suicide.

" This goes beyond everything and anything, and this should have brought the

house down on the university, " says Vera Sharav, president of the Alliance for

Human Research Protection, a patient-advocacy group. " There has to be zero

tolerance, because a lot hangs on it, including lives. "

The issue will soon come to a head. The U of M has been investigating a

complaint about Schulz's connections to Big Pharma and is expected to issue the

results in a matter of weeks.

" If there's any question that the investigation was superficial, it ought to be

by an independent group that can determine what the facts are, " says Jerome P.

Kassirer, former editor of the New England Journal of Medicine, who is familiar

with the circumstances surrounding the Markingson case. " It looks worrisome to

me. "

   

DR. SCHULZ DIDN'T start out on a traditional path to psychiatry. As an undergrad

at the University of Southern California, he majored in history even though he

planned on becoming a doctor... More at link below.

- Link from City Pages

Sent: Feb 4, 2011 8:49 PM

I thought you'd be interested in this content from the City Pages mobile site:

http://www.citypages.com/2011-02-02/news/charles-schulz-under-scrutiny-for-seroq\

uel-study-suicide/

Sent via BlackBerry by AT & T

Link to comment
Share on other sites



Schulz under scrutiny for Seroquel study suicide

By Andy Mannix

Tuesday, Feb 1, 2011 at 2:33 pm

Weiss knew something wasn't right with her son.

Only a year before, Dan Markingson had seemed perfectly normal. But his latest

letter from Los Angeles suggested a troubled mind.

He claimed he was about to become famous. He was at a crossroads in his life,

and would soon have more free time. He even had a big movie premiere in the

works.

" I knew then that something was wrong, " says Weiss. " I knew that there wasn't a

premiere, and when he said he was going to have a lot more free time, I thought

he was quitting his job. "

Weiss immediately jumped in her car and drove to California. When she arrived,

she found her son far worse off than she'd feared. He was talking nonsense and

couldn't be reasoned with.

Weiss tried to convince Markingson to come back to Minnesota, where she could

look after him. But he had a stipulation: He would only return home if his dead

grandmother Daisy told him to.

Weiss went to an internet cafe down the street and created an email account

under the name " GuardianAngelDaisy. " Pretending to be her own deceased mother,

she urged Markingson to return to Minnesota. Eventually, he agreed.

He was home for only 10 days before he decided to return to California. Weiss

pleaded with him to stay, but he refused. She could either drive him to the

airport, or never see him again.

Weiss followed him to Los Angeles, where she again tried to urge her son to go

back to Minnesota. But this time, his grandmother's emails weren't enough.

Markingson wanted to talk to a higher authority: the Archangel.

Weiss created another fake email account as Archangel . The two exchanged

emails for more than a week before Markingson finally agreed to fly home.

Once he was back, Weiss called the South St. police. An officer came to her

home to evaluate her son. During the interview, Markingson casually mentioned he

would soon be attending a devil-worshipping event in Duluth, and might be

ordered to kill people.

That triggered a trip to Fairview University Medical Center, where Markingson

was diagnosed with psychosis and placed on a 72-hour hold.

In order to be released, Markingson agreed to a stay of commitment, which would

allow him to leave the hospital as long as he followed a treatment plan. The

plan involved Markingson enrolling in a study called Comparison of Atypicals in

First Episode, or CAFE. The research was sponsored by AstraZeneca, maker of

Seroquel, one of the anti-psychotic drugs being investigated.

When Weiss found out her son was a human guinea pig, she was furious. She called

the hospital and tried to pull her son out of the treatment plan, to no avail.

Although Markingson was mentally unfit, he was somehow able to consent to the

drug trial.

Over the next few months, Markingson's condition only worsened, Weiss says. His

doctor wouldn't return her calls, so she tried writing a letter to the head of

the department, Dr. S. Schulz. He didn't reply.

It wasn't until April 28, after Weiss's third letter, that she received a

cursory response, in which Schulz wrote, " it was not clear to me how you thought

the treatment team should deal with this issue. "

Ten days later, on May 8, Markingson sat in the bathtub of the halfway house

where he was staying and stabbed himself to death with a box cutter.

" I left this experience smiling! " read the suicide note.

MARKINGSON'S SUICIDE HAS cast a harsh spotlight on the University of Minnesota

psychiatry department. The Federal Drug Administration, the Attorney General's

Office, and the college's Internal Review Board all wanted to know how a

26-year-old research subject ended up dead.

So did his mom. After a year of combing through studies and public records,

Weiss filed a malpractice suit against Schulz and the U of M, accusing them of

putting Big Pharma's bottom line ahead of her son's mental health.

In December, a group of eight bioethicists at the U of M wrote a letter to the

college's Board of Regents, demanding the appointment of an independent board to

investigate whether lapses in ethics and judgment led to Markingson's suicide.

" This goes beyond everything and anything, and this should have brought the

house down on the university, " says Vera Sharav, president of the Alliance for

Human Research Protection, a patient-advocacy group. " There has to be zero

tolerance, because a lot hangs on it, including lives. "

The issue will soon come to a head. The U of M has been investigating a

complaint about Schulz's connections to Big Pharma and is expected to issue the

results in a matter of weeks.

" If there's any question that the investigation was superficial, it ought to be

by an independent group that can determine what the facts are, " says Jerome P.

Kassirer, former editor of the New England Journal of Medicine, who is familiar

with the circumstances surrounding the Markingson case. " It looks worrisome to

me. "

   

DR. SCHULZ DIDN'T start out on a traditional path to psychiatry. As an undergrad

at the University of Southern California, he majored in history even though he

planned on becoming a doctor... More at link below.

- Link from City Pages

Sent: Feb 4, 2011 8:49 PM

I thought you'd be interested in this content from the City Pages mobile site:

http://www.citypages.com/2011-02-02/news/charles-schulz-under-scrutiny-for-seroq\

uel-study-suicide/

Sent via BlackBerry by AT & T

Link to comment
Share on other sites



Schulz under scrutiny for Seroquel study suicide

By Andy Mannix

Tuesday, Feb 1, 2011 at 2:33 pm

Weiss knew something wasn't right with her son.

Only a year before, Dan Markingson had seemed perfectly normal. But his latest

letter from Los Angeles suggested a troubled mind.

He claimed he was about to become famous. He was at a crossroads in his life,

and would soon have more free time. He even had a big movie premiere in the

works.

" I knew then that something was wrong, " says Weiss. " I knew that there wasn't a

premiere, and when he said he was going to have a lot more free time, I thought

he was quitting his job. "

Weiss immediately jumped in her car and drove to California. When she arrived,

she found her son far worse off than she'd feared. He was talking nonsense and

couldn't be reasoned with.

Weiss tried to convince Markingson to come back to Minnesota, where she could

look after him. But he had a stipulation: He would only return home if his dead

grandmother Daisy told him to.

Weiss went to an internet cafe down the street and created an email account

under the name " GuardianAngelDaisy. " Pretending to be her own deceased mother,

she urged Markingson to return to Minnesota. Eventually, he agreed.

He was home for only 10 days before he decided to return to California. Weiss

pleaded with him to stay, but he refused. She could either drive him to the

airport, or never see him again.

Weiss followed him to Los Angeles, where she again tried to urge her son to go

back to Minnesota. But this time, his grandmother's emails weren't enough.

Markingson wanted to talk to a higher authority: the Archangel.

Weiss created another fake email account as Archangel . The two exchanged

emails for more than a week before Markingson finally agreed to fly home.

Once he was back, Weiss called the South St. police. An officer came to her

home to evaluate her son. During the interview, Markingson casually mentioned he

would soon be attending a devil-worshipping event in Duluth, and might be

ordered to kill people.

That triggered a trip to Fairview University Medical Center, where Markingson

was diagnosed with psychosis and placed on a 72-hour hold.

In order to be released, Markingson agreed to a stay of commitment, which would

allow him to leave the hospital as long as he followed a treatment plan. The

plan involved Markingson enrolling in a study called Comparison of Atypicals in

First Episode, or CAFE. The research was sponsored by AstraZeneca, maker of

Seroquel, one of the anti-psychotic drugs being investigated.

When Weiss found out her son was a human guinea pig, she was furious. She called

the hospital and tried to pull her son out of the treatment plan, to no avail.

Although Markingson was mentally unfit, he was somehow able to consent to the

drug trial.

Over the next few months, Markingson's condition only worsened, Weiss says. His

doctor wouldn't return her calls, so she tried writing a letter to the head of

the department, Dr. S. Schulz. He didn't reply.

It wasn't until April 28, after Weiss's third letter, that she received a

cursory response, in which Schulz wrote, " it was not clear to me how you thought

the treatment team should deal with this issue. "

Ten days later, on May 8, Markingson sat in the bathtub of the halfway house

where he was staying and stabbed himself to death with a box cutter.

" I left this experience smiling! " read the suicide note.

MARKINGSON'S SUICIDE HAS cast a harsh spotlight on the University of Minnesota

psychiatry department. The Federal Drug Administration, the Attorney General's

Office, and the college's Internal Review Board all wanted to know how a

26-year-old research subject ended up dead.

So did his mom. After a year of combing through studies and public records,

Weiss filed a malpractice suit against Schulz and the U of M, accusing them of

putting Big Pharma's bottom line ahead of her son's mental health.

In December, a group of eight bioethicists at the U of M wrote a letter to the

college's Board of Regents, demanding the appointment of an independent board to

investigate whether lapses in ethics and judgment led to Markingson's suicide.

" This goes beyond everything and anything, and this should have brought the

house down on the university, " says Vera Sharav, president of the Alliance for

Human Research Protection, a patient-advocacy group. " There has to be zero

tolerance, because a lot hangs on it, including lives. "

The issue will soon come to a head. The U of M has been investigating a

complaint about Schulz's connections to Big Pharma and is expected to issue the

results in a matter of weeks.

" If there's any question that the investigation was superficial, it ought to be

by an independent group that can determine what the facts are, " says Jerome P.

Kassirer, former editor of the New England Journal of Medicine, who is familiar

with the circumstances surrounding the Markingson case. " It looks worrisome to

me. "

   

DR. SCHULZ DIDN'T start out on a traditional path to psychiatry. As an undergrad

at the University of Southern California, he majored in history even though he

planned on becoming a doctor... More at link below.

- Link from City Pages

Sent: Feb 4, 2011 8:49 PM

I thought you'd be interested in this content from the City Pages mobile site:

http://www.citypages.com/2011-02-02/news/charles-schulz-under-scrutiny-for-seroq\

uel-study-suicide/

Sent via BlackBerry by AT & T

Link to comment
Share on other sites



Schulz under scrutiny for Seroquel study suicide

By Andy Mannix

Tuesday, Feb 1, 2011 at 2:33 pm

Weiss knew something wasn't right with her son.

Only a year before, Dan Markingson had seemed perfectly normal. But his latest

letter from Los Angeles suggested a troubled mind.

He claimed he was about to become famous. He was at a crossroads in his life,

and would soon have more free time. He even had a big movie premiere in the

works.

" I knew then that something was wrong, " says Weiss. " I knew that there wasn't a

premiere, and when he said he was going to have a lot more free time, I thought

he was quitting his job. "

Weiss immediately jumped in her car and drove to California. When she arrived,

she found her son far worse off than she'd feared. He was talking nonsense and

couldn't be reasoned with.

Weiss tried to convince Markingson to come back to Minnesota, where she could

look after him. But he had a stipulation: He would only return home if his dead

grandmother Daisy told him to.

Weiss went to an internet cafe down the street and created an email account

under the name " GuardianAngelDaisy. " Pretending to be her own deceased mother,

she urged Markingson to return to Minnesota. Eventually, he agreed.

He was home for only 10 days before he decided to return to California. Weiss

pleaded with him to stay, but he refused. She could either drive him to the

airport, or never see him again.

Weiss followed him to Los Angeles, where she again tried to urge her son to go

back to Minnesota. But this time, his grandmother's emails weren't enough.

Markingson wanted to talk to a higher authority: the Archangel.

Weiss created another fake email account as Archangel . The two exchanged

emails for more than a week before Markingson finally agreed to fly home.

Once he was back, Weiss called the South St. police. An officer came to her

home to evaluate her son. During the interview, Markingson casually mentioned he

would soon be attending a devil-worshipping event in Duluth, and might be

ordered to kill people.

That triggered a trip to Fairview University Medical Center, where Markingson

was diagnosed with psychosis and placed on a 72-hour hold.

In order to be released, Markingson agreed to a stay of commitment, which would

allow him to leave the hospital as long as he followed a treatment plan. The

plan involved Markingson enrolling in a study called Comparison of Atypicals in

First Episode, or CAFE. The research was sponsored by AstraZeneca, maker of

Seroquel, one of the anti-psychotic drugs being investigated.

When Weiss found out her son was a human guinea pig, she was furious. She called

the hospital and tried to pull her son out of the treatment plan, to no avail.

Although Markingson was mentally unfit, he was somehow able to consent to the

drug trial.

Over the next few months, Markingson's condition only worsened, Weiss says. His

doctor wouldn't return her calls, so she tried writing a letter to the head of

the department, Dr. S. Schulz. He didn't reply.

It wasn't until April 28, after Weiss's third letter, that she received a

cursory response, in which Schulz wrote, " it was not clear to me how you thought

the treatment team should deal with this issue. "

Ten days later, on May 8, Markingson sat in the bathtub of the halfway house

where he was staying and stabbed himself to death with a box cutter.

" I left this experience smiling! " read the suicide note.

MARKINGSON'S SUICIDE HAS cast a harsh spotlight on the University of Minnesota

psychiatry department. The Federal Drug Administration, the Attorney General's

Office, and the college's Internal Review Board all wanted to know how a

26-year-old research subject ended up dead.

So did his mom. After a year of combing through studies and public records,

Weiss filed a malpractice suit against Schulz and the U of M, accusing them of

putting Big Pharma's bottom line ahead of her son's mental health.

In December, a group of eight bioethicists at the U of M wrote a letter to the

college's Board of Regents, demanding the appointment of an independent board to

investigate whether lapses in ethics and judgment led to Markingson's suicide.

" This goes beyond everything and anything, and this should have brought the

house down on the university, " says Vera Sharav, president of the Alliance for

Human Research Protection, a patient-advocacy group. " There has to be zero

tolerance, because a lot hangs on it, including lives. "

The issue will soon come to a head. The U of M has been investigating a

complaint about Schulz's connections to Big Pharma and is expected to issue the

results in a matter of weeks.

" If there's any question that the investigation was superficial, it ought to be

by an independent group that can determine what the facts are, " says Jerome P.

Kassirer, former editor of the New England Journal of Medicine, who is familiar

with the circumstances surrounding the Markingson case. " It looks worrisome to

me. "

   

DR. SCHULZ DIDN'T start out on a traditional path to psychiatry. As an undergrad

at the University of Southern California, he majored in history even though he

planned on becoming a doctor... More at link below.

- Link from City Pages

Sent: Feb 4, 2011 8:49 PM

I thought you'd be interested in this content from the City Pages mobile site:

http://www.citypages.com/2011-02-02/news/charles-schulz-under-scrutiny-for-seroq\

uel-study-suicide/

Sent via BlackBerry by AT & T

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...