Taken-As-Prescribed Support Services, (T-A-P), will revolutionise how we think about and manage our use of prescribed medication.
https://vimeo.com/392429956
PLEASE SIGN OUR PETITION TO BUILD WORLDWIDE EVIDENCE OF THE NEED FOR OUR BEST-PRACTICE SUPPORT SERVICE
https://www.ipetitions.com/petition/taken-as-prescribed-support-services
The aim is to establish a best-practice not-for-profit support service for people affected by prescribed drugs; antidepressants. benzodiazepines, opioids and ADHD Drugs.
Taken-As-Prescribed Support Services, (T-A-P), will provide support and education taking a collaborative approach to help revolutionise the way we think about and manage our use of prescribed medication.

One of the greatest issues facing medicine today is that of dependence on and withdrawal from prescribed drugs, in particular benzodiazepines, antidepressants and opioids. We desperately need a dedicated specialist service in the UK.
This is a significant public health and human rights issue. Everyone has the right to health and to live free from the harm of drugs and that includes prescribed drugs.

"In 2017 to 2018, 11.5 million adults in England (26% of the adult population) received, and had dispensed, one or more prescriptions for any of the medicines within the scope of the review. The totals for each medicine were: •antidepressants 7.3 million people (17% of the adult population) • opioid pain medicines 5.6 million (13%) • gabapentinoids 1.5 million (3%) • benzodiazepines 1.4 million (3%) • z-drugs 1.0 million (2%)"PHE Review 2019
Prescribed drug withdrawal is said to affect 'millions'. A major new study has found that withdrawal / discontinuation problems are widespread, often chronic and can last years.
There have recently been landmark petitions in the Scottish and Welsh Parliaments and the establishment of an All Party Parliamentary Group at Westminster, with calls for public enquiries, public feedback, reviews, and the introduction of a national 24-hour helpline.
Relevant health departments and local authorities are being asked to establish adequately resourced specialist support services and clear guidance on tapering and withdrawal management. As the medical profession, academics and politicians continue to undertake their lengthy reviews, research and consultations, it is time to develop our service.
There are enormous differences between the needs of illicit drug users and those who have become dependent on antidepressants, benzodiazepines and opioids. There is no ‘one size fits all’ solution and individual experiences of management and withdrawal vary widely.
A non-clinical organisation can support people and be unconditionally ‘on their side’. People are suffering the iatrogenic effects of these drugs often leading to disability claims, further health care costs, deaths and additional psychiatric diagnoses. The cost to us socially, individually and economically is unquantifiable.
As the scale of the problem of prescribed drug dependence and lack of specialist support services escalate, we owe it to the people inadvertently suffering dependence on and harmed by prescribed medication to make this happen.

"Effective, personalised care should include shared decision making with patients and regular reviews of whether treatment is working. Patients who want to stop using a medicine must be able to access appropriate medical advice and treatment, and must never be stigmatised. There needs to be increased public and clinical awareness of other interventions." Public Health England. 2019.
Beverley
Twitter @T_A_Psupport





This project successfully funded on 30th March 2020