In the hospital she was being given an oral dose of both Haldol and a countering agent. When she got out it was converted to an injection. We didn't see her records and he never stated what the oral dose was or how he calculated the transition. He was supposed to be reducing her dosage to find the minimum dosage needed to control her condition. It doesn't seem he did that for her to receive such a high dosage still after a month of treatment or his calcualtion of the injeciton dosage was way off what it should have been. It doesn't matter that Ferguson was unaware at the time of things we know now about Haldol all that matters is what we know about it. We are not looking into whether he harmed her with the dosage and such be liable, we care about whther the dosage would have been effective and the impact on her physical abilities.
We know now that 200MG was way too high and that even 100MG can be too high a dosage. Whether a patient needs the 100MG instead of 50MG will depend on the patient. There is only a couple of percentage points separating the effectiveness of 50MG and 100MG. Even with the 50MG a countering agent is prescribed. We have no way to know why Sheila wasn't taking it regularly. We simply know she wasn't so the tranquilizing effects of the drug as well as the side effects were not being countered at all at the time of the murders. Whether she had been taking it at any point after leaving the hospital is unknown and will neve rbe known becaus eonly she knows.
After her reduction to 100MG things did not change she was still observed as being sleepy, vacant and having speech difficulties. The bottom line is that the efficacy of the dose is not in question, there is little difference in the medical effectiveness of 100G and 200MG, so there is no reason she would have had a psychotic episode at all let alone an episode in the middle of the night where for the first time she became violent towards others. In fact she would have had difficulty carrying out the murders given the overall reduction in her physical abilities as a result of taking the medication without any counter.
without no countering agent can cause severe problems.
Scipio, for the first time I feel as if you've heard me!!!!!!! It's possible you may know where I'm coming from now.
We are still at variance about HOW sleepy Sheila was. There is a statement somewhere by someone who I believe Sheila met by accident and just happened to be a psychiatric nurse. The first time they met Sheila appeared unkempt and not entirely with it. The next time they met -within a few days- Sheila appeared brighter. She'd taken care with her clothes, had washed her hair and applied make up.
We hear from Colin how distant and quiet she was on the journey to Essex. This MAY have been caused by the medication but could equally well have been caused by something Colin said OR she didn't want to go where she was being taken. We know that a local shopkeeper said she was lethargic.
We also know that during her stay she WALKED!!! -nobody has admitted to giving her a lift- approximately 7 miles to the monastery from which she later RAN, screaming approximately 7 miles back. We know she managed, by screaming at him, to frighten the meter man into retreating to the safety of his car and we are told that she was seen skipping with the children. All this activity requires enormous ENERGY which you imply wouldn't have been possible because of the level of her medication. I can only believe that her energy levels, MAYBE because of the medication, fluctuated.