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My only reaction to mefloquine was diarrhea, a couple days after taking it, each week. Thankfully that ended by the time I deployed. Unfortunately, no vivid dreams.
stealthylizard said:My only reaction to mefloquine was diarrhea, a couple days after taking it, each week. Thankfully that ended by the time I deployed. Unfortunately, no vivid dreams.
More from the same reporter, speaking to Kyle Brown.Former soldiers from the disbanded Canadian Airborne Regiment are pushing for a ban on the controversial anti-malaria drug mefloquine that some say plagued the disastrous 1993 Somalia mission.
Two events — the 2013 U.S. military ban on mefloquine for Special Forces and new scientific studies showing toxicity from the drug can cause permanent brain damage — should force a review of Canadian policy, says John Dowe, a former airborne soldier.
Two former military doctors also agree, given the new studies show evidence of long term, adverse effects similar to symptoms linked to post-traumatic stress disorder.
Dowe was witness to the horrific events in March 1993 — the beating death by two airborne soldiers of Somali civilian Shidane Arone, who stole into the Canadian desert compound in Belet Huen.
And he thinks mefloquine, with its many adverse side-effects, played a role in the appalling conduct of the two soldiers. Those side-effects include nightmares, insomnia, depression, cognitive impairment, mood swings and aggression.
Last fall, Dowe began to work with the International Mefloquine Veterans Alliance that is calling for a ban of the drug “in military forces worldwide.”
There are advocacy groups in Australia, the U.K., and Canada, Dowe said ...
sidemount said:I am very glad i opted not to take it when I went to the stan....I was given doxycyline(spelling?) since I am a diver and would be diving on hlta. And even then, after a week of not seeing mosquitos i stopped taking that as well. After hearing the stories of wacky wednesdays and all the reports on the dangers of it...I cant believe it was given to us
sidemount said:To me it was a risks/benefits analysis. After reading about the possible side effects especially wrt diving i opted from the ease of once a week to a (imo) safer once a day pill. Even then after a short time i opted away from that. Would I do it again....depends on the situation....would I ever take mefloquine....no, too much of a risk again imo.
YMMV
Hell ya!! :cheers:medicineman said:.....yet guzzle down unquantifiable amounts of dietary supplements, alcohol, anti-inflammatories, etc.
Journeyman said:Hell ya!! :cheers:
Oh, you meant that as a negative thing
Ah, well once you find stasis by eliminating that nasty "sobering up" phase..... ;DHumphrey Bogart said:Ibuprofen is like my go to hangover cure. Lately I've been taking it a lot :cheers:
Humphrey Bogart said:What if you're ordered to take it? Oh wait this is the CAF, where orders are just suggestions ;D
sidemount said:To me it was a risks/benefits analysis. After reading about the possible side effects especially wrt diving i opted from the ease of once a week to a (imo) safer once a day pill. Even then after a short time i opted away from that. Would I do it again....depends on the situation....would I ever take mefloquine....no, too much of a risk again imo.
YMMV
recceguy said:It's not a single article. The US and the British have recognised the problems and have stopped issuing it. I know people that have claimed no problem and others that were totally ****ed for three days every week after taking it. ÝMMV. Just because you had no problem doesn't mean others didn't. I've never seen a medic, especially a senior one, diagnose a group of people, over the Internet, based on their own experience.
Let's also not forget how the CF lied to get the stuff into Canada by saying it was for medical trials through Health Canada and then issued it to guinea pig soldiers . There are no test results at either organisation . So much for studies and those injured by the callous disregard of the liberal government of the time and others after them.
Veterans urge second look at soldier’s role in torture death of Somali teen in light of malaria drug’s side effects
Sheila Pratt, Postmedia News
Monday, Nov. 14, 2016
SASKATOON — Former Canadian Airborne soldier Clayton Matchee lives in a North Battleford, Sask., home afflicted with brain damage from a suicide attempt — a desperate act after he was charged in the murder of a Somali teenager.
That was more than 20 years ago, during Canada’s ill-fated Somali mission. Since then, Matchee’s name has carried the shame of that episode of Canadian military history.
But there’s a move afoot to change that view. Some of his fellow soldiers and a prominent U.S. medical expert now believe Matchee was experiencing severe psychological side effects of the controversial antimalarial drug mefloquine when he was involved in the beating death of Somali Shidane Arone in 1993.
Those veterans urged federal MPs on the parliamentary committee on veterans affairs to consider re-examining the incident in light of new research on the drug’s harmful side effects.
Lalancette changed his mind after learning of new research into the side effects of mefloquine, which include heightened aggression, paranoia, anxiety and vivid dreams.
“I feel shame because I put blame on Clayton Matchee and (Edmonton soldier) Kyle Brown,” Lalancette told the veterans affairs committee. (Brown spent four years in jail for his role in the beating death.)
“We should reach out to the victims of this pill and the first two would be Kyle Brown and the Matchee family,” Lalancette said.
In 1992-93, the 900 Canadian Airborne soldiers were among the very first Canadians to take mefloquine as part of a clinical drug trial run by the Canadian army. The side effects were not well understood or explained to soldiers.
Some of his fellow soldiers and a prominent U.S. medical expert now believe Clayton Matchee, shown here at a 2004 hearing in Saskatoon, was experiencing severe psychological side effects of the controversial antimalarial drug mefloquine when he was involved in the beating death of Shidane Arone in 1993.
That’s why the Matchee case should be reopened, said Dr. Remington Nevin, the leading U.S. expert on mefloquine’s neuropsychiatric side effects.
“I feel confident I can render an opinion as to whether his behaviour during that time may have been in some way affected by the drug,” Nevin told the MPs on the committee.
Given the new research into the drug, “many of the points of confusion that dominated discussion then no longer apply,” he said.
“We could come to a more solid mutual conclusion about the events of that day and the role of the drug in his particular case,” Nevin told the committee.
Leon Matchee, father of Clayton Matchee, reacted cautiously to the suggestion that his son’s case should be reopened. After so many years, it is difficult to hear about those terrible events again, he said in a phone call from his home in Meadow Lake, Sask.
John Dowe was one of the few Canadian Airborne soldiers to witness the beating of the Somali teen, who had stolen supplies from the Canadian Forces’ compound. He’s also convinced Matchee was hallucinating at the time and that his heightened aggression was a result of the drug’s side effects.
He described Matchee striking the bunker walls and the prisoner Arone with a wooden baton, calling out that he was killing camel spiders when clearly there were no spiders in the bunker.
“Him beating spiders that were not there — he was hallucinogenic,” Dowe said.
The 1996 Somalia Inquiry into those fateful events was shut down just a few days before evidence on mefloquine was to be heard, former Canadian army psychiatrist Greg Passey told the committee.
The inquiry commission’s final report said it was “not able to explore fully the impact of mefloquine.” The committee said it could only report some “general conclusions.”
“If mefloquine did in fact cause or contribute to some of the misbehaviour that is the subject of this inquiry, CF personal who were influenced by the drug might be partly or totally excused for their behaviour. However we were not able to reach a final conclusion on the issue,” the report said.