July 21, 2025 at 8:38 am

Akathisia Takes Center Stage in Lisa Loomer’s Bold New Play

MISSD applauds award-winning playwright Lisa Loomer for her powerful and deeply personal play, Side Effects May Include…, now running at the Contemporary American Theater Festival. The festival is recognized as one of the top theater festivals in the world by publications such as The New York Times and American Theater.

Inspired by her own son’s heartbreaking experience, Loomer adeptly brings akathisia and related iatrogenic harm into the spotlight. Akathisia is a devastating, medication-induced disorder that can lead to self-harm, violence, and suicide. Yet most sufferers report they were never warned about the risk, nor given fully informed consent before being prescribed medications associated with akathisia. Most sufferers also report their akathisia symptoms were missed, dismissed or misdiagnosed as signs of DSM-labeled disorders.

Critics are praising Side Effects May Include… for its emotional impact, gripping storytelling, and steadfast look at a global public health crisis.

“Like being burned alive in a locked coffin.”
“Living in a scream.”
These are the words used to describe akathisia in the play—and for many, they are all too real.

MISSD is honored to be listed as a resource in this critically acclaimed production. We are deeply grateful to Lisa Loomer for using her voice to raise awareness about a condition that affects millions, demands informed consent, and deserves urgent attention. For more information about this production, see https://dctheaterarts.org/2025/07/17/side-effects-may-include-at-contemporary-american-theater-festival/.

July 20, 2025 at 9:28 am

Jake’s Amendment Would Accurately Record Akathisia-Induced Deaths

We stand with Stephanie McGill-Lynch and her campaign for Jake’s Amendment in Ireland. After losing her 14-year-old son Jake in 2013, she’s been calling for essential reforms to the Coroner’s Act—so that iatrogenic harm (medically induced harm) can be properly recorded as a contributing cause of death when warranted.

When healthcare contributes to a tragedy, families deserve truth—not silence. Blaming victims of iatrogenesis for their own prescribed demise is morally wrong and can perpetuate stigma and lead to further medical harm.

Stephanie’s advocacy is a powerful step toward honesty, healing, and accountability. Listen and learn more about Jake’s Amendment at: https://www.goloudplayer.com/episodes/jakes-amendment-why-sinn-fein-wa-ZjQ5NjgzZTY3NGE5NTEyMGI4MGY0NmQ1MDQ0YzQyYjA=.

July 17, 2025 at 9:52 am

Finally: NPR Highlights Depression Pill Withdrawal; Adverse Effects Include Akathisia

Akathisia is often one of many symptoms of SSRI withdrawal. “What most prescribers and consumers don’t understand is that depression pills can cause “symptoms that persist for long periods after you stop them,” said British psychiatrist Mark Horowitz.

Symptoms include insomnia, anxiety, electronic brain zaps, dizziness…and can be permanenet or last an average of eight years. Read the full article at https://www.npr.org/sections/shots-health-news/2025/07/09/nx-s1-5460018/antidepressant-ssri-side-effects-withdrawal-symptoms.

July 15, 2025 at 10:07 am

July 9, 2025 at 12:08 pm

South Dakota Billboards Launch MISSD’s Bold “50 in 5″Initiative

New billboards in the Mount Rushmore state reflect MISSD’s bold “50 in 5” initiative. 50 States, 5 Years, 1 Mission: Raise Akathisia Awareness to Save Lives.

“Just as South Dakota’s Badlands conceal sudden drop-offs—and Mount Rushmore reminds us of enduring legacies—akathisia can surface without warning, causing avoidable suffering and tragedies. But with greater awareness and education, we can build a legacy of prevention, early diagnosis, and better care,” said Wendy Dolin, founder of MISSD.

Read more at https://www.einpresswire.com/article/829561721/missd-launches-national-campaign-to-prevent-medication-induced-harm.

July 3, 2025 at 10:38 am

Safe Tapering Education for Healthcare Professionals

Outro Health has just released an excellent webinar about SSRI tapering. Most healthcare professionals remain unaware of the slow process of safe tapering, and that for some people, getting off depression pills is a worse experience than what they experienced before initially being prescribed the drugs. Outro Health is an evidence-based tapering service for people looking to stop their antidepressants. Listen and learn at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jSEEAfbuCv8.

July 2, 2025 at 4:22 pm

Pharma Hides Pertinent Data Under the Guise of “Commercially Sensitive” Info

Does pharma sprinkle “commercially sensitive information” into drug protocol docs to later block public access to efficacy and safety data? Or is their “commercially sensitive” claim pure fiction?

This recent blog posts shows how pharma gets drug regulators to cover for them when it comes to freedom of information requests–requests that can benefit the public and improve personal decision making regarding healthcare choices. “Common sense suggests drug company commercial interests should never over-ride patient welfare.” Read more at https://davidhealy.org/secret-moderna-trial-documents/.

June 23, 2025 at 6:01 pm

Loomer’s New Play Opens Soon: Side Effects May Include…Akathisia

Award winning playwright, Lisa Loomer, premiers a new production in the Washington, DC area about adverse drug effects, including akathisia. Loomer and her son previously shared their akathisia experiences on MISSD’s podcast and mentions MISSD as a resource.

Click on the links below for Loomer’s bio, ticket information, and learn more about her efforts to spotlight a medical system that too often makes us sicker.

Award winning playwright, Lisa Loomer, premiers a new production about adverse drug effects, including akathisia. Loomer and her son previously shared their akathisia experiences on MISSD’s podcast and mention MISSD as a resource.

For ticket information and to learn more about Loomer and her efforts to spotlight a medical system that too often makes us sicker, see https://catf.org/2025-play-side-effects-may-include-by-lisa-loomer/.

June 19, 2025 at 5:39 pm

FDA Warns of Benzo Risks

The FDA warns that benzos—like Xanax, Ativan, and Klonopin—can cause serious problems, problems that many consumers have been warning about for decades. Even a few weeks of benzo use can lead to dependence, and stopping too fast can trigger anxiety, seizures, and akathisia. Doctors are advised to limit prescriptions to 1–2 weeks.

Read the full article at https://www.center4research.org/fda-black-box-warnings-benzodiazepines-miscarriages/.

June 10, 2025 at 5:52 pm

Ohio Public Health Campaign Sounds Alarm on Akathisia & Psychiatric Drug Dangers

By Ajay Singh – June 6, 2025 Psychiatric drug side effects like akathisia are too often dismissed—until it’s too late.

Is it akathisia?” asks the digital billboard, its bold white letters etched against a scrubs-blue sky—the color of calm and care—like a diagnosis writ large on the highway of denial. “Akathisia: an adverse medication effect often misdiagnosed as anxiety. It can cause suicide.”

Strategically placed in the high-traffic corridor of Sandusky, Ohio—just miles from Cedar Point Amusement Park and a bustling sports complex—the message reached tens of thousands of holiday travelers over Memorial Day weekend.

But for those who know the horror behind the word, the message doesn’t just inform—it warns.

Akathisia—derived from the Greek term for “inability to sit”—is not a household term. Yet, according to a 2023 study, it’s a well-documented side effect of commonly prescribed drugs, from antidepressants to anti-nausea pills. The syndrome, often misidentified as anxiety or depression, can provoke unbearable inner restlessness, violent agitation and, tragically, suicide. As the pharmaceutical industry expands and prescriptions multiply, patient advocates warn: This silent side effect is claiming lives in plain sight, with doctors too often unaware and patients left misjudged—or worse, dead.

The Ohio public health campaign is the brainchild of the Chicago-based nonprofit MISSD—short for Medication-Induced Suicide Prevention and Education Foundation in Memory of Stewart Dolin. The organization has made it its mission to publicize the often-overlooked risks of akathisia, particularly as they pertain to psychiatric drugs and even commonly used medications.

“May is Mental Health Awareness Month,” said Wendy Dolin, the foundation’s founder. “Yet few—if any—suicide prevention and mental health nonprofits ever mention that medications can cause psychiatric symptoms and suicide.”

Dolin’s advocacy began after the 2010 death of her husband, Stewart, a successful Chicago attorney who had no prior history of disturbance. On an ordinary afternoon, shortly after lunching with a client, Stewart inexplicably left his office, walked to a train station he’d never used and jumped in front of an oncoming train.

“I kept saying, ‘What could happen in that hour?’” Wendy recalled in a 2021 interview. Her husband’s sudden death seemed inexplicable—until she began digging into the known side effects of Paxil, the antidepressant he had recently begun taking.

A nurse who saw Stewart shortly before his death told Wendy he was “pacing like a caged polar bear”—a textbook sign, she later learned, of akathisia.

It’s like a switch gets flipped, an authority on akathisia explained to her, referencing a phenomenon sometimes seen in Parkinson’s patients: fluid motion one moment, frozen the next. Akathisia, Wendy realized, could likewise trigger such drastic shifts—“the flip”—from calm to chaos. From coping to catastrophe.

Indeed, the 2023 study describes akathisia as a syndrome of relentless physical and internal agitation. “The individual may cross, uncross, swing or shift from one foot to the other,” the authors state, appearing to outsiders as “a persistent fidget.” But the internal experience is more than discomfort—it’s torment.

Some estimates suggest that up to 5 percent of people taking certain drugs may develop akathisia. A MISSD-produced video doesn’t mince words: “Death,” it declares, “can be a welcome result.”

And sometimes, the cause is not misuse. “Akathisia can occur even when medications are taken exactly as prescribed—or when they are stopped,” warns the foundation.

Still, unsurprisingly, drug manufacturers tread carefully around the word, trying to recast “akathisia” as something relatively benign. “The pharmaceutical industry has pretty much tried to water down the term,” said Wendy. “They’ll say it’s restless leg syndrome or emotional lability.” But “being moody doesn’t lead to ending your life.”

MISSD’s latest billboard campaign, which is expected to reach millions this year, owes its launch to an Ohio resident named Shelly, whose personal brush with the disorder nearly cost her her life.

Following the death of her mother from cancer, Shelly sought help from her family doctor, who prescribed Ativan, a Schedule IV controlled substance.

“Having an academic degree in the healthcare field and a previous career in the profession, I made sure to ask him about possible side effects,” Shelly said. “He casually described the medication as ‘like drinking two beers.’ That was it.”

What followed was five years of hell. Although she took the drug in small, physician-approved doses—four to five pills per month—Shelly’s symptoms steadily escalated. Severe insomnia. Heart palpitations. A surreal sensation of being “on a boat.” Unbearable sensitivity to light and sound.

Then came the night terrors—what she describes as “a constant state of terror,” complete with electric flashes in the brain and violent chest vibrations. “I asked my husband to put his legs over mine to reduce my shaking,” she recalled. “I thought he could see all my movements, but later realized that some of what I felt—the restlessness—was also internal.”

The condition grew so debilitating that she could no longer walk unaided, climb stairs or even read or listen to music. “The worst of it all is the trauma of being gaslighted by the very professionals I trusted and turned to for help,” Shelly said. 

Her story is no outlier. As the list of drugs linked to akathisia grows—including drugs for depression, asthma, hypertension, nausea, even weight loss—experts and survivors alike are sounding the alarm.

“The lack of education about this condition is scary—especially given how many medications can cause it,” Shelly’s husband said. “This entire experience turned my wife’s life upside down and could have been prevented if doctors were properly trained and truly listened to their patients.”

The billboard stands where locals and tourists alike pass, most of them probably untroubled, on their way to roller coasters and baseball games. But for those who know the torment of akathisia, it stands as an indictment—not of what the psychiatric establishment forgets, but of what it refuses to admit: that in its so-called effort to “treat,” it readily destroys.

In a world saturated with prescriptions but starved for informed consent, MISSD’s urgent question hangs in the air, chillingly relevant to many:

“Is it akathisia?”