The PennZone

  • Home
  • Business
  • Construction
  • Real Estate
  • Technology
  • Non-profit
  • Travel
  • Music
  • Legal

CCHR Says Mounting Evidence of Persistent Sexual Dysfunction From Antidepressants Demands FDA Action
The PennZone/10327041

Trending...
  • Platinum Car Audio LLC Focuses on Customer-Driven Vehicle Audio and Electronics Solutions
  • Mecpow M1: A Safe & Affordable Laser Engraver Built for Home DIY Beginners
  • $38 Million in U.S. Government Contract Awards Secured Through Strategic Partner. Establishing Multi-Year Defense Revenue Platform Through 2032: $BLIS
Persistent Sexual Dysfunction from Antidepressants
New research confirms that a significant percentage of antidepressant users develop severe sexual dysfunction that is physiologically damaging and may persist for years after the drugs are stopped.

LOS ANGELES - PennZone -- By CCHR International

The Citizens Commission on Human Rights International (CCHR), a 57-year mental health industry watchdog, is calling for an urgent investigation into the clinical trials and regulatory decisions that led to the approval and continued marketing of antidepressants, due to long-standing evidence of devastating and enduring side effects that patients were never adequately warned about, including sexual dysfunction and emotional numbing.

More than 45 million Americans take antidepressants annually. Approximately 1.6 million are adolescents aged 13–17.

Yet antidepressants have long been associated with suicidality, violence, psychosis, cardiac arrhythmias, and serotonin syndrome (marked by muscle rigidity, high fever, seizures, irregular heartbeat, and organ failure). Critically, there is a high risk of drug-induced sexual dysfunction, including post-SSRI sexual dysfunction (PSSD), a condition increasingly recognized as neurological injury, not a psychological complaint.

Psychiatrist Dr. Josef Witt-Doering, former Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Medical Officer and Global Pharmacovigilance Medical Director, has warned that SSRI and SNRI antidepressants can leave people "essentially lobotomized," causing cognitive impairment alongside profound sexual dysfunction. He describes emotional numbing, loss of sexual sensation, and detachment from pleasure that may persist indefinitely.[1]

A recent study confirms that antidepressant-induced sexual dysfunction involves lasting structural and neurological damage. A preliminary 15-year retrospective chart review presented at the 26th Annual Fall Scientific Meeting of the Sexual Medicine Society of North America examined 43 young men (average age 27.6) diagnosed with PSSD. None had sexual dysfunction prior to antidepressant exposure. The findings were stark: 89% showed abnormal sensory nerve testing, indicating sensory nerve dysfunction that persisted six months or longer after discontinuation.[2]

These results refute the long-repeated claim that antidepressant sexual side effects are temporary and reversible.

Dr. Witt-Doering states that once PSSD symptoms begin, they can last for years or be permanent, yet the condition remains underrecognized by the medical community despite acknowledgment by major health authorities. He further stated: "You're essentially castrating people. But it's worse than that because … it causes cognitive damage as well… People will talk about being completely dissociated from their emotions…" and experience sexual dysfunction.

More on The PennZone
  • Tarrytown Expocare Pharmacy Announces Strategic Leadership Appointments to Accelerate Growth and Innovation
  • New Environmental Thriller "The Star Thrower" Reimagines a Classic Lesson in Individual Impact
  • Summit Appoints Javier Cabeza as Data, AI, and Analytics Practice Lead
  • TrueNorth Wellness Services is Excited to Participate in Give Local York
  • March Is Skiing's Smartest Buying Window

For decades, drug regulators knew of this damage but failed to act. As early as 1991, researchers identified serotonin reuptake inhibitors as reducing genital sensation. In 2000, Harvard psychiatrist Dr. Joseph Glenmullen warned in Prozac Backlash that SSRIs caused sexual dysfunction in up to 60% of users and could produce a "chemical lobotomy" by damaging nerve endings in the brain.[3]

In 2011, the FDA acknowledged that sexual dysfunction from fluoxetine may persist after discontinuation, amending product labeling. The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual for Mental Disorders (DSM-5) later echoed this warning.[4] Yet, no boxed warning was issued.

In 2018, 22 international experts, led by psychopharmacologist Dr. David Healy, petitioned the FDA to mandate prominent warnings for all SSRIs and SNRIs, citing evidence that reduced genital sensitivity can occur rapidly. sometimes within 30 minutes of the first dose, with effects that may last for years or indefinitely after drug discontinuation.[5] The FDA failed to act.

This regulatory inaction is particularly troubling given that a substantial portion of the FDA's drug-approval budget is funded by industry user fees. User fees for human drugs (which account for a third of the agency's total budget) were 65%, or about $656 million.[6] Conflict of interest critics say this undermines patient protection.

Multiple studies confirm the scale of harm. A 2022 Psychology Today review found sexual dysfunction in 40–65% of antidepressant users, with nearly four in ten describing their symptoms after SSRI treatment as intolerable.[7] A 2023 Annals of General Psychiatry study stated that PSSD is a "well-documented side effect" that can persist indefinitely.[8]

The risks extend beyond adults. An estimated 9–10% of pregnant women in the U.S. take antidepressants, often without informed consent regarding fetal harm. Studies link prenatal SSRI exposure to altered sensory processing, disrupted neurodevelopment, and increased risks of autism, cardiac defects, and cleft palate.[9]

CCHR's Freedom of Information Act investigations across 32 states revealed that 920,411 children aged 0–17 were prescribed antidepressants under Medicaid in 2023 alone, including 25,000 aged five or younger.

In December, an Expert Working Group advising the UK's Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency concluded that patient information must more clearly communicate the risks of suicidal behavior and persistent sexual dysfunction associated with 28 antidepressants.[10]

More on The PennZone
  • Hope Survives Launches The Hope Collective, A Curated Publication Centering Lived Experience After Brain Injury
  • Cancun Airport Transportation Expands Fleet Ahead of Record Passenger Growth at Cancun International Airport
  • Tobu Group's "T-home Series" of Accommodations in Tokyo Just Opened "T-home KEI."
  • Custom Wooden Token Manufacturer Celebrates 10 Years of Helping Brands Stay Top of Mind
  • NaturismRE Launches the NRE Health Institute to Advance Evidence-Informed Public Health Research

CCHR asks why these drugs remain on the market without the strongest possible warnings. The answer, it says, lies in misleading marketing, adverse effects being misattributed to "mental illness," and global antidepressant sales exceeding $22 billion annually, taking precedence over patient safety.

Jan Eastgate, president of CCHR International, says: "From pre-birth to adulthood, millions are exposed to drugs capable of inducing emotional blunting, suicidality, and potentially permanent sexual injury without adequate warning, while sanctioned by the FDA and driven by the psychiatric-pharmaceutical industry. They must be held accountable."

CCHR, established in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and professor of psychiatry Dr. Thomas Szasz, urges those harmed by antidepressants to seek legal redress for failure to warn and damage. It demands an independent investigation into FDA approval and labeling decisions. Proven damaging psychotropic drugs, the organization says, should be removed from the market.

Reports of harm or abuse can be submitted through CCHR's reporting system.

Sources:

[1] Dr. Joseph Mercola, "Why Antidepressants Aren't Fixing Depression — and How the System Keeps That Truth Buried," Mercola.com, 4 Jan. 2026, articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2026/01/04/ssri-side-effects-long-term.aspx

[2] A Goldstein, N Kim, et al., "Sexual Symptoms and Biologic Pathophysiologies of Post-SSRI Sexual Dysfunction (PSSD): A 15-Year Review," Journal of Sexual Medicine, 9 Dec. 2025, academic.oup.com/jsm/article/22/Supplement_4/qdaf320.309/8375231

[3] Joseph Glenmullen, M.D., Prozac Backlash, (Simon & Schuster, NY, 2000), p. 8

[3] David Healy, "Citizen petition: Sexual side effects of SSRIs and SNRIs," Int J Risk Saf Med, 4 June 2018, pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6004927/

[4] David Healy, "Citizen petition: Sexual side effects of SSRIs and SNRIs."

[5] www.usatoday.com/story/news/factcheck/2021/08/27/fact-check-some-fdas-budget-does-come-industry-funding/5572076001/

[6] "Diagnosing Long-Term Sexual Dysfunction from SSRIs," Psychology Today, 20 Jan. 2022, www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/side-effects/202201/diagnosing-long-term-sexual-dysfunction-ssris

[7] Ben-Sheetrit, J, et al., "Estimating the risk of irreversible post-SSRI sexual dysfunction (PSSD) due to serotonergic antidepressants," Annals of General Psychiatry, 22, 15 (2023), doi.org/10.1186/s12991-023-00447-0

[8] www.impactlaw.com/dangerous-drugs/zoloft/birth-defects/; pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7814075/; pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4006441/

[9] "Patient and family experiences inform antidepressant safety information review," UK Government, 1 Dec. 2025, www.gov.uk/government/news/patient-and-family-experiences-inform-antidepressant-safety-information-review

Contact
CCHR International
***@cchr.org


Source: Citizens Commission on Human Rights International

Show All News | Report Violation

0 Comments
1000 characters max.

Latest on The PennZone
  • Primeindexer Google indexing platform launched by SEO Danmark APS
  • Kaltra Introduces New Downward-Spraying Distribution Technology to Boost Microchannel Evaporator Performance
  • Talentica Announces Winners of Multi-Agent Hackathon 2026
  • Special Alert: Undervalued Opportunity: IQSTEL (N A S D A Q: IQST) Positioned for Explosive Multi-Year Growth
  • Triple-Digit Growth, Strategic N A S D A Q Uplist, Plus A Scalable Healthcare Rollout Model: Stock Symbol: CDIX
  • Vesica Health Receives FDA Breakthrough Device Designation for AssureMDx
  • Lineus Medical's SafeBreak® Vascular Added to Alliant GPO Contract
  • Cancun All Inclusive is ready for Spring Break 2026 with new Resorts, Exclusive Deals, activities and more!
  • 66% of US Bankruptcies Are Medical — So Americans Are Building Businesses That Cover Healthcare Emergencies
  • Ludex Partners With Certified Trading Card Association (CTCA) To Elevate Standards And Innovation In The Trading Card Industry
  • Best Book Publishing Company for Aspiring Authors
  • Dr. Nadene Rose Releases Moving Memoir on Faith, Grief, and Divine Presence
  • Gigasoft Solves AI's Biggest Charting Code Problem: Hallucinated Property Names
  • ASTI Ignites the Space Economy: Powering SpaceX's NOVI AI Pathfinder with Breakthrough Solar Technology: Ascent Solar Technologies (N A S D A Q: ASTI)
  • Hiring has reached a "Digital Stalemate"—Now, an ex-Google recruiter is giving candidates the answers
  • 2026 Pre-Season Testing Confirms a Two-Tier Grid as Energy Management Defines Formula 1's New Era
  • The Philadelphia Party Launches to Expand Civic Leadership, Candidate Pathways, and Education
  • Platinum Car Audio LLC Focuses on Customer-Driven Vehicle Audio and Electronics Solutions
  • Postmortem Pathology Expands Independent Autopsy Services in Kansas City
  • Postmortem Pathology Expands Independent Autopsy Services Across Colorado

Popular on PennZone

  • Still Using Ice? FrostSkin Reinvents Hydration
  • OneVizion Announces Next Phase of Growth as Brad Kitchens Joins Board of Directors
  • Cold. Clean. Anywhere. Meet FrostSkin
  • Luxury Lake-View Home Launches in Kissimmee's Bellalago community, Offering Privacy, Space, and Florida Resort-Style Living
  • Ice Melts. Infrastructure Fails. What Happens to Clean Water?
  • Roshni Online Services Unveils Plans for Innovative Digital Consultation Platform
  • Nest Finders Property Management Named #1 in Jacksonville and Ranked #99 Nationwide
  • Wala Blegay to Announce Run for Congress in Maryland's 5th District on Feb. 4
  • Mend Colorado Launches Revamped Sports Performance Training Page
  • Jacob Emrani's Annual "Supper Bowl" Expected To Donate Thousands Of Meals

Similar on PennZone

  • National Expansion Ignited Across Amazon $AMZN, Chewy $CHWY & Walmart $WMT: NDT Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Stock Symbol: NDTP) $NDTP
  • Tarrytown Expocare Pharmacy Announces Strategic Leadership Appointments to Accelerate Growth and Innovation
  • TrueNorth Wellness Services is Excited to Participate in Give Local York
  • Hope Survives Launches The Hope Collective, A Curated Publication Centering Lived Experience After Brain Injury
  • NaturismRE Launches the NRE Health Institute to Advance Evidence-Informed Public Health Research
  • Progressive Dental & The Closing Institute Partner with Zest Dental Solutions to Elevate Full-Arch Growth and Patient Outcomes
  • CCHR: While Damaging Antipsychotics Win Approval, Proven Non-Drug Alternatives Remain Ignored
  • Arcuri Group Announces Long‑Term Partnership with WakeMed Health & Hospitals to Deliver Situational Awareness and De‑escalation Training
  • Colonial Nissan Service Named Top 5 Auto Repair in Feasterville-Trevose for 2025
  • At 25, She Became One of the Youngest AAPI Female Founders to Win One of the World's Most Prestigious Design Awards for a Lamp That Makes You Smile
Copyright © The PennZone | Theme: OMag by LilyTurf Themes
  • Contribute
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Contact Us