From: Ilena Rose on
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/n/a/2006/03/14/state/n144323S67.DTL&type=printable


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Parents sue after son buys antidepressants, commits suicide
-
Tuesday, March 14, 2006


(03-14) 14:43 PST Menlo Park, Calif. (AP) --


The parents of a teenage debate champion who killed himself after
taking a generic version of Prozac he secretly bought over the
Internet have sued the Web site's operators, the doctor who wrote the
prescription, and the pharmacy that mailed the pills.


David and Sheila McKay filed the wrongful death lawsuit in February in
federal court in San Francisco.


The suit accuses the USAnetRX.com, Colorado psychiatrist Christian
Hageseth III, and Mississippi-based Gruich Pharmacy Shoppe of
negligence in helping their son John buy 90 capsules of the
antidepressant fluoxetine last summer.


They are not suing the drug's manufacturer.


John McKay, 19, had fluoxetine in his system when he died on Aug. 2 of
carbon monoxide and alcohol poisoning, according to the San Mateo
County Coroner's Office. He had bought the pills seven weeks earlier.


McKay had just finished his freshman year at Stanford University and
was a nationally ranked debate team champion at Menlo-Atherton High
School.


His parents said their son did not show signs of depression and was
not informed of possible side effects from the medication.


Prozac and similar antidepressants have been linked to suicides, but
studies have not proven a connection. The U.S. Food and Drug
Administration is reviewing whether antidepressants cause suicidal
thoughts or behavior.


"I think John would still be alive if he hadn't been able to get these
pills," said David McKay.


The Web site does not require customers to fax or mail prescriptions
like many mainstream pharmacies do. Instead, the site asks customers
to complete an online questionnaire which is reviewed by one of its
physicians.


A call by The Associated Press to the company's attorney Tuesday
morning was not immediately returned.


Hageseth, the doctor who authorized the prescription, was not allowed
to prescribe medication at the time because of a restricted license in
Colorado due do an improper relationship with a patient, according to
the suit.


Hageseth, who has since surrendered his license, told the San Jose
Mercury News that he does not feel responsible for the teen's death.


"When somebody commits suicide usually there are many factors," he
said.


Frank Gruich Jr., a representative for the Gruich Pharmacy Shoppe,
said he also did not feel responsible for the teen's death.


___


Information from: San Jose Mercury News,


www.sjmercury.com



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From: Twittering One on
I hope they win.

From: amanda on

Twittering One wrote:
> I hope they win.

Isn't it possible that the kid was depressed and tried to solve his
problem with anti-depressant but failed?

Of course, no one should sell such medicine without Rxn.

From: Twittering One on
The Internet can a deadly place,
with deadly consequences.

From: Robert on

"amanda" <amanda772007(a)yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:1142393650.984553.187840(a)p10g2000cwp.googlegroups.com...
>
> Twittering One wrote:
> > I hope they win.
>
> Isn't it possible that the kid was depressed and tried to solve his
> problem with anti-depressant but failed?
>
> Of course, no one should sell such medicine without Rxn.
>

The money would go a long way in relieving the parents guilt in not being
able to help him.