By Mark Benjamin, Huffington Post, March 25, 2012 http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/03/25/robert-bales-malaria-drug_n_1378671.html WASHINGTON — Nine days after a U.S. soldier allegedly massacred 17  civilians in Afghanistan, a top-level Pentagon health official ordered a  widespread, emergency review of the military’s use of a notorius  anti-malaria drug called mefloquine. Mefloquine, also called Lariam, has severe psychiatric side effects.  Problems include psychotic behavior, paranoia and hallucinations. The  drug has been implicated in numerous suicides and homicides, including  deaths in the U.S. military. For years the military has used the weekly  pill to help prevent malaria among deployed troops. The U.S. Army nearly dropped use of mefloquine entirely in 2009  because of the dangers, now only using it in limited circumstances,  including sometimes in Afghanistan. The 2009 order from the Army said  soldiers who have suffered a traumatic brain injury should not be given  the drug. The soldier accused of grisly Afghanistan murders on March 17 of men,  women and children, Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, suffered a traumatic brain  injury in Iraq in 2010 during his third combat tour. According to New  York Times reporting, repeated combat tours also increase the risk of  post-traumatic stress disorder. Bales’ wife, Karilyn Bales, broke her silence in an interview Sunday  with NBC’s Matt Lauer, airing on Monday’s Today show. “It is  unbelievable to me. I have no idea what happened, but he would not — he  loves children. He would not do that,” she said in excerpts released  Sunday. On March 20, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs  Jonathan Woodson ordered a new, urgent review to make sure that troops  were not getting the drug inappropriately. The task order from Woodson,  obtained by The Huffington Post, orders an immediate “review of  mefloquine prescribing practices” to be completed by the following  Monday, six days after the order was issued. “Some deployed service members may be prescribed mefloquine for  malaria prophylaxis without appropriate documentation in their medical  records and without proper screening for contraindications,” the order  says. It notes that this review must include troops at “deployed  locations.” Army and Pentagon officials would not say whether Bales took the  drug, citing privacy rules. When asked if Woodson’s mefloquine review  was a response to the massacre, the military in Afghanistan referred the  question to the Army. Army officials said they were “unaware” of the  review. After being shown the task order via email, they stopped responding.  The Secretary of Defense Office referred questions to the Army — and  then back to medical officials in the secretary’s office. Those  officials have not responded. But the sudden violence and apparent cognitive problems related to the crime Bales is accused of mirrors other gruesome cases. A former Army psychiatrist who was the top advocate for mental health  at the Office of the Army Surgeon General recently voiced concern about  Bales’ possible mefloquine exposure. “One obvious question to consider  is whether he was on mefloquine (Lariam), an anti-malarial medication,”  Elspeth Cameron Ritchie wrote this week in TIME’s “Battleland” blog,  noting that the drug is still used in Afghanistan. “This medication has been increasingly associated with  neuropsychiatric side effects, including depression, psychosis, and  suicidal ideation.” In 2004 in the United Press International, this reporter and reporter  Dan Olmsted chronicled use of the drug by six elite Army Special Forces  soldiers who took mefloquine then committed suicide. (Suicide is  relatively infrequent among Special Forces soldiers). “You’re ready to take that plunge into hurting someone or hurting and  killing yourself, and it comes on unbelievably quickly,” said one  Special Forces soldier diagnosed with permanent brain damage from  Lariam. “It’s just a sudden thought, it’s the right thing to do. You’ll  get a mental picture, and it’s in full color.” Also that year, the UPI report showed how mefloquine use was a factor  in half of the suicides among troops in Iraq in 2003 -– and how  suicides dropped by 50 percent after the Army stopped handing out the  drug. In a case that echoes the Bales’ case, that year the Army dropped  charges against Staff Sgt. Georg-Andreas Pogany. Pogany had been the  first soldier since Vietnam charged with cowardice. Like Bales, Pogany  faced a possible death sentence. The Army dropped the charges after  doctors determined that Pogany suffered from Lariam toxicity, which  affected his behavior in Iraq. In 2002, three elite soldiers, who took mefloquine in Afghanistan,  returned to murder their wives and then commit suicide. Friends and  neighbors described the soldiers’ behavior after taking the drug as  incoherent, strange and angry. Maj. Gary Kolb, spokesman for the Army’s Special Operations Command,  was skeptical when asked at the time if mefloquine could have played a  role in the tragedies at Fort Bragg. “I think you are heading down the  wrong road. That is just my personal opinion.” Bales’ attorney, John Henry Browne, has said his client has apparent  mental health issues and is suffering with memory loss, among other  things. A call to his office was not immediately returned.US Military Scrambles to Limit Malaria Drug with Severe Psychiatric Side-effects 
US Military Scrambles To Limit Malaria Drug
US Military Scrambles to Limit Malaria Drug with Severe Psychiatric Side-effects
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crammed into the end of that commercial. I don't believe that any drug will ever "cure" malaria, as that is not the intention of the people making them. Quinine is cheap, and works quite well,but I imagine over a long period of time it might not work. zappers will kill anything in your blood, including malaria. Urine therapy will cure all cases, and prevent most. i know I have mentioned these things before, and I will whenever I see awful stories like this. I had no idea there was any threat of malaria in afghanistan. i thought the climate was dry there. is this just a case of testing drugs on soldiers. it sure smells like it.