Paxil is a mind alternig substance that is used to ameliorate a variety of clinical conditions such as chronic depression and obsessive compulsive disorder. However, it is not a natural remedy for such issues in the way that marijuana is. To that end, there are several sources that indicate that this substance is being "pushed" to people by the medical field for capitalist exploitation.
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Analyze Paxil
In order to properly analyze the drug known as Paxil, one must give prudent consideration to a number of factors. The first of these, of course, is the fact that by the very definition of this narcotic, it is a mind altering substance that is able to readily induce changes in one's brain or psychological state that often time have effects upon the physical body as well. Additionally, it should be noted that the very nature of this particular narcotic is quite different from other narcotics, in particular those which are used for recreational purposes -- namely mind altering substances such as alcohol and marijuana. It is quite possible for users to view occasions to engage in either of these substances as opportunities for fun and pleasure, particularly marijuana. However, although there may be medicinal purposes of marijuana, Paxil is used nearly exclusively for such curative purposes, and almost never for the sake of the sensation of pleasure that it produces. To that extent, it may be contrasted with recreational mind altering substances such as marijuana -- and even harder drugs such as cocaine or heroin that, while eventually becoming addictive and engendering a physical dependency for the user, initially produce feelings that can be considered fun -- since in most cases of prescription, Paxil is merely the means for a user to cope with some issue in his or her life. Most of these issues include depression, posttraumatic disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder, or marked social anxiety.
What is truly interesting about this aspect of Paxil is that certain recreational drugs, among them marijuana, may be employed for curative effects for these same issues -- though it should be noted that the degree of these issues is oftentimes considerably less severe than the clinical form of say, depression or social anxiety. However, the number of people that utilize marijuana for recreation and not for any palpably discernible medical purposes greatly exceeds the number of people that claim to do so for Paxil. Moreover, there is an incidence of the formation of a habitual use that is oftentimes associated with Paxil, which manifests itself in highly difficult withdrawal symptoms, that does not exist with marijuana, as the following quotation suitably demonstrates.
Marijuana does not produce addiction, as do alcohol and the opiate drugs; there is no withdrawal symptoms and no ineradicable craving for the drug…The drug is used occasionally for the pleasure the user finds in it, a relatively casual kind of behavior in comparison with that connected with the use of addicting drugs (Becker 1953, 235).
Unfortunately, although it may not be quite be termed as pejoratively as to be called an "addicting drug," there is quite a controversy regarding the withdrawal sysmptos associated with the discontinuance of Paxil. Such symptoms may very well include a recurrence (oftentimes in a considerably greater degree than that which the medication was initially used for) of anxiety, as well as other commonly symptoms such as lightheadedness and difficulty with sleeping.
Another fairly intriguing aspect about Paxil is that due to the fact that it is a prescribed medication, which is disseminated to patients for such a wide variety of reasons, there is a considerable market for it. The revenues produced by the sale of this narcotic may also be factors in its panacea like perception for several clinical conditions. Author Richard DeGrandpre explores this notion in his book The Cult of Pharmacology: How America Became the World's Most Troubled Drug Culture.
The competitiveness of the drug market and the fact that one or two successfully approved and marketed compounds could raise a company from rags to riches almost overnight made for an increasingly aggressive and reckless industry. The medicopharmaceutical industrial complex… benefited from differential prohibition… in the demonization of certain natural substances-marijuana...-…set…apart from the "ethical" pharmaceutical compounds, even if the latter had equal or greater toxicity (241).
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