The Psychiatric Drugging of Children

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The Psychiatric Drugging of Children
Inventing Disorders

By EVELYN PRINGLE
April 21, 2010

Of all the harmful actions of modern psychiatry, "the mass diagnosing and drugging of children is the most appalling with the most serious consequences for the future of individual lives and for society," warns the world-renowned expert, Dr Peter Breggin, often referred to as the "Conscience of Psychiatry."

"We're bringing up a generation in this country in which you either sit down, shut up and do what you're told, or you get diagnosed and drugged," he points out.

Breggin considers the situation to be "a national tragedy." "To inflict these drugs on the growing brains of infants and children is wrong and abusive," he contends.

The kids who get drugged are often our best, brightest, most exciting and energetic children, he points out. "In the long run, we are giving children a very bad lesson that drugs are the answer to emotional problems."

Dr Nathaniel Lehrman, author of the book, "Coming Off Psychiatric Drugs," believes that giving infants and toddlers "powerful, brain-effecting psychiatric medication is close to criminal activity."

"Giving them these drugs," he says, "has no rationale, and ignores the basic fact that youngsters are very sensitive to their environments, both social and chemical, with the juvenile brain easily damaged by the latter."

During an interview on ABC Radio National in August 2007, Dr David Healy, the noted British pharmacology expert, and author of the book, "Mania: A Short History of Bipolar Disorder," told reporter Jane Shields: "Just to give you a feel for how crazy things have actually got recently, it would appear that clinicians in the US are happy to look at the ultrasounds of children in the womb, and based on the fact that they appear to be more overactive at times, and then possibly less active later, they're prepared to actually consider the possibility that these children could be bipolar."

On April 9, 2009, Christopher Lane, author of the book, "Shyness: How Normal Behavior Became a Sickness," published an interview on his Psychology Today blog with Dr Healy. In the interview, Healy explained the history behind the drastic rise in the sale of anticonvulsants and antipsychotics as "mood stabilizers," and the diagnosis of bipolar disorder.

"The key event in the mid-1990s that led to the change in perspective was the marketing of Depakote by Abbott as a mood stabilizer," Healy tells Lane, and further explains:

"Mood stabilization didn’t exist before the mid-1990s. It can’t be found in any of the earlier reference books and journals. Since then, however, we now have sections for mood stabilizers in all the books on psychotropic drugs, and over a hundred articles per year featuring mood stabilization in their titles.

"In the same way, Abbott and other companies such as Lilly marketing Zyprexa for bipolar disorder have re-engineered manic-depressive illness. While the term bipolar disorder was there since 1980, manic-depression was the term that was still more commonly used until the mid-1990s when it vanishes and is replaced by bipolar disorder. Nowadays, over 500 articles per year feature bipolar disorder in their titles."

"As of 2008, upwards of a million children in the United States—in many cases preschoolers—are on "mood-stabilizers" for bipolar disorder, even though the condition remains unrecognized in the rest of the world," Healy points out.

"But there is no evidence that the drugs stabilize moods," he says. "In fact, it is not even clear that it makes sense to talk about a mood center in the brain."

"A further piece of mythology aimed at keeping people on the drugs," he reports, "is that these are supposedly neuroprotective—but there's no evidence that this is the case and in fact these drugs can lead to brain damage."

Healy says the FDA's decision to add a black-box warning about suicide to SSRIs likely had little to do with the switch to prescribing antipsychotics as safer for children. What "was quite striking was how quickly companies were able to use the views of the few bipolar-ologists who argued that when children become suicidal on antidepressants it's not the fault of the drug," he points out.

"The problem, they said, stems from a mistaken diagnosis and if we could just get the diagnosis right and put the child on mood stabilizers then there wouldn't be a problem," he explains.

"There is no evidence for this viewpoint, but it was interesting to see how company support could put wind in the sails of such a perspective," he says.

Because having just one label was very limiting, Healy says, child psychiatry "needed another disorder—and for this reason bipolar disorder was welcome."

He reports that the same thing is happening to children labeled with ADHD. "Not all children find stimulants suitable," he advises, "and just as with the SSRIs and bipolar disorder it has become very convenient to say that the stimulants weren't causing the problem the child was experiencing; the child in fact had a different disorder and if we could just get the diagnosis correct, then everything else would fall into place."

A report titled, "Adverse Events Associated with Drug Treatment of ADHD: Review of Postmarketing Safety Data," presented at the FDA's March 22, 2006, Pediatric Advisory Committee meeting bears witness to Healy's explanation by stating in part: “The most important finding of this review is that signs and symptoms of psychosis or mania, particularly hallucinations, can occur in some patients with no identifiable risk factors, at usual doses of any of the drugs currently used to treat ADHD.”

Between January 2000, and June 30, 2005, the FDA identified nearly 1,000 cases of psychosis or mania linked to the drugs in its own database and those from the drug makers themselves.

The antipsychotics are just as dangerous as the SSRI antidepressants, Healy says. "Long before the antidepressants were linked with akathisia, the antipsychotics were universally recognized as causing this problem," he explains in the Lane interview. "It was also universally accepted that the akathisia they induce risked precipitating the patient into suicidality or violence."

"They also cause a physical dependence," Healy states. "Zyprexa is among the drugs most likely to cause people to become physically dependent on it."

"In addition," he points out, "these drugs are known to cause a range of neurological syndromes, diabetes, cardiovascular problems, and other problems."

"It's hard to understand how blind clinicians can get to problems like these, especially in youngsters who grow obese and become diabetic right before their eyes," Healy tells Lane.

As for what he calls the "medicalization of childhood," in the radio interview, Healy points out that "children always have been unhappy, they always have been nervous, but that's actually part and parcel of being a child."

"You have to go through these things," he said. "This is how we learn to cope with the problems of life."

Children can best be helped in the safest way, he says, "if they're just seen and if they actually have the opportunity to talk about their problems, and if they get basic and sensible input about how to perhaps help them cope with these problems."

Healy said it's important to remember that severe mental illness is rare in children and that most children with a mental health problem do not need medication. Children are being picked up and put on pills "who really don't need to be on these pills and who are going to be injured by them," he warned.

"I think possibly 10 to 15 years up the road," he told Shields, "we're going to be looking at a generation of children who will have been seriously injured by the treatments that they appear ever-increasingly likely to be put on now."

But the administration of multiple drugs at once complicates the situation so that it may be impossible to determine which drugs are most responsible for the adverse reactions children experience, according to Dr Breggin.

"Because so many doctors and so many drug companies will share the blame for mistreating these children, they will be unable to seek redress against individual perpetrators through the courts when they grow up," he explains.


Evelyn Pringle is an investigative journalist focused on exposing corruption in government and corporate America.

(This report is one of a series of articles focused on the rising rates of psychiatric drugging in the US and is sponsored by the International Center for the Study of Psychiatry and Psychology)


http://www.counterpunch.org/pringle04212010.html

Previous article:
An American Phenomenon
The Psychiatric Drugging of Infants and Toddlers

http://www.counterpunch.org/pringle04202010.html
 
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When I attended primary school in the 60s, they didn't give drugs to kids. However, there was one teacher that had a reputation for occasionally spanking some misbehaving student with his "board of education".
 
I'd say the prescribers are more to blame than the pharmaceutical companies. Not that that removes culpability from the latter. :\
 
I disagree

Trying meds could well be a chance to avoid trauma you're gonna struggle with loads later in life. Torture either way. Health consequences or feeling-shit consequences.
 
^ Trying meds = avoiding trauma?
Hard to follow this logic.
If anything, it sounds like repression of reality to me.
Is there something good about such a thing?
Maybe as adults, there could be a few special situations where it might be useful, temporarily, but certainly not for kids, especially so many kids for so many years.
 
the larger the population becomes, the more personalities arise of course, but there is more to control, or lose control of.

you lose the personal touch, and feel of a product when it becomes mass produced, all routes of production are changed too be more streamline, predictable, under strict management, more effective and/or economical.

its the same, 1-3 grade you are given a label, so you are known how to be taught, communicated with, or disciplined - sadly most people stay restricted to those labels and take them on as identities. im sure every teacher with 30+ 5-8 y/o's wish they would sit and be quiet, but maintaining every ones attention can be impossible, especially with disruptive students.

now schools want less teachers, or for teachers to buy supplies, but have these large amounts of students, become restricted on $$ further, so take a hand from Pepsi, their products and advertisement rights.

oh man

i have schizoeffective which is accompanied by a depressive, or Bi Polar diagnosis as well, i was never given lithium until my last round of psychosis, and god it changed my life in a good good way... i was always given random anti psychotics/depressants and ritillan through out school...

ends ramble.
 
Psychiatry and medications are not evil and to think so is akin to Scientology.

If someone has ADHD, depression/anxiety, or is bipolar and they find medications that work for them more power to them.

You guys know that ADD/ADHD do really exist right?

I'm not saying that tons of people have ADD/ADHD but the medications actually do help children, teenagers, and adults.

Does anyone here actually have ADD/ADHD or know anyone who does that doesn't take meds?

I know people who have ADHD and when they're not on meds they are all over the place and even they say how without meds they are very confused.
 
^ Trying meds = avoiding trauma?
Hard to follow this logic.
If anything, it sounds like repression of reality to me.
Is there something good about such a thing?
Maybe as adults, there could be a few special situations where it might be useful, temporarily, but certainly not for kids, especially so many kids for so many years.

Behaving in ways that are not appropriate, which usually will accompany mental disorders, can very well end in chaos and leave scratches inside of you. Why not give ADHD sufferers a stimulants so they can focus on the studying? Those heavily affected will never do homework and is that a good thing? They might fuck all their opportunities in life up, which one will heavily regret later on. How about those suffering from manic episodes? Thanks to these I'd often end up in trouble doing something really dumb like arguing with "da big boyz gang" or letting myself loose on people... with lots of violence. I had to be scared, heavily anxious, going to school every day for 2 years and I could hardly concentrate on anything being overtaken by fear.

There are so many more reasons from personal experiences I support meds for kids.
 
Behaving in ways that are not appropriate, which usually will accompany mental disorders, can very well end in chaos and leave scratches inside of you. Why not give ADHD sufferers a stimulants so they can focus on the studying? Those heavily affected will never do homework and is that a good thing? They might fuck all their opportunities in life up, which one will heavily regret later on. How about those suffering from manic episodes? Thanks to these I'd often end up in trouble doing something really dumb like arguing with "da big boyz gang" or letting myself loose on people... with lots of violence. I had to be scared, heavily anxious, going to school every day for 2 years and I could hardly concentrate on anything being overtaken by fear.

There are so many more reasons from personal experiences I support meds for kids.

I know a kid that I grew up with that is either manic or bipolar, and before meds in elementary and jr. HS he'd physically scream at people in class and physically fight both students and teachers during class.

It would happen out of nowhere and we're talking about when everyone was sitting there quietly he'd get like this.

After getting on meds and the right ones that never happened at all when he was in HS and he went on to be a successful person and works as an engineer.
 
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you want to hear some shit... alright, my real mom, got pregnant with me at the age of 12.
Her birthday is april 17th and mine is april 19th, i was born, 2 days after she had turned 13.

I was put up for adoption by her overtly religious grandmother, and thus i was living with an adoptive family.... When i was 5 years old, on my 5th birthday my adoptive parents told me i was adopted... you have to understand that... i think that is the age when the ego is developed... i didn't know how to rationalize the fact that i had a real mother out there, and that they weren't my real parents. when i think really hard about it... i realize that none of this was ever brought up in therapy but i certainly did have a doctor who was eager to diagnose me as ADD... i was on Methylphenidate or Concerta from the time i was 5 years... a a few months old, until i was 15 and started to suffer from emotional outbursts, night terrors, and well severe addiction to my pills... i was then put on Zyprexa//Olanzapine and Lithium, as well as Lamotrigene, and many other pills for ... about ... a year or so.. then i just straight up tried to kill myself, apparently the outburst that i had in the hospital was enough for my parents to have kicked me out of my house, and thus i had to fend for myself on the street in london ontario for awhile, i eventually got a social worker, got a job, got a place to live, and grew......

but that right there is the almighty power of pharmecutical drugs being forced upon kids at an early age, it is fundamentally important... to talk to your children, and to probably not make them aware of the fact that you aren't theirs... repetitiously.. when things become tense... it did nothing for me except destroy my ego and make me a very confused strange, but some what insightful human being......

i'm still trying... i havn't given up yet :D
 
^^that sounds extremely tough. big up to you for making it this far. love and peace.

My mom is a social worker for very young children. Many of the kids she works with have been referred to her by child protective services or because they have been kicked out of so many schools. On their staff is a psychiatrist that sometimes prescribes drugs. My mom assures me that drugs are only given to children who are so completely out of control that they are hurting both themselves and others. It is an absolute last line of action and is always coupled with heavy cognitive behavioral therapy. Just some food for thought. There are large contingencies of mental health workers who are extremely reluctant to put kids on psychotropic medication.
 
i just think that fundamentally, considering my adoptive parents have money and they went to the most expensive psychiatrist in the city, with, whats wrong with him, he doesn't love us anymore, he's not affectionate with us anymore. He lives in his own world.
We adopted him, he's not ours anymore, all of these key things being said, made me think that if i just took the pill everything would be okay again...

BOY was it ever fucking okay again, i was the coolest kid at my Public school Period. i was every ones friend, i had amazing grades and my parents really loved me.

10 years fly by, and suddenly i find myself unable to sleep, sneaking extra pills. having manic episodes on friends and family... thus the psychiatric route deepened. I was forced into the world of mood stablizors. Funny thing was my parents demanded that my ADD pills stay in tact... and in fact i was taking up to 56mg as prescribed by my doctor daily...
They even said, he's useless with out them, he's like a zombie, and i have ultra strong memories of just being there on rispiradol. completely zonked out with not a thought going on inside of my head or a word to say in my refusal to try to find some way to work with the two...

eventually mood stablizors and ADD pills made me have hallucinations, and my parents noted i seemed to be in a stupor, and i was very non cognitive with them.
i was taking Rispiradol ADD pills Zyprexa and Lamotrigene.
Then i also said i was depressed. so wellbutrin got thrown in there...

Then i tried to kill myself after rocking that wonderful combo for a few months...

You see i believe in psychotherapy with a psychedelic aid to help walk the person through each and every step that got their mind to where they were.

It ended up being that my parents told me i was adopted and i wasn't theirs as a way of punishing me i thought it was normal and i was drugged, they controlled the drugs so thus i fucking loved them. I loved the high, i loved who i was for while it lasted with those drugs.
its ugly i know especially to say that from the ages of 5-15 i was running off a minature meth high.
then from 15 until sometime when i was 16 years old when i tried to kill myself.
I was being forced to take drugs given to me by people who had adopted a child as an Accessory.

My adoptive fathers wife did not want kids. he did he wanted a name to pass on down the line. The frightening fact was. I realize most of my childhood was spent filling out text books for my adoptive mother who resented the fact she had to quit being a nurse in order to raise me, which was another mother fucking issue that got thrown in my face alot...

believe me, i'm not saying this for pity.
I am saying this because it is my story and i hope that it helps some of you out there...
if any of you feel as if you are insanely emotionally lost just realize...
Life is the divine comedy... you need to go through hell to find out what heaven really is all about...
 
prescribing children with a stimulant is a horrible idea. when stimulants are used long term, they eventually change your brain chemistry permanently, especially in children. Many people refuse to see that they are actually addicted to their "medication", but when you feel like udder crap, cant get out of bed because you are to exhausted, and eat constantly, i'm sorry to be the bearer of bad news but thats called amphetamine withdrawal. The most common drug to be prescribed is Adderall, which has THREE different amphetamine salts in it. I know two friends who have both been prescribed Adderall since they were 5. One has permanent mania and psychosis and the other has terrible social problems. My other friend is prescribed 70mg of Vyvance AND 30mg of Adderall and has been on that since a young age. Two out of three of these people have drug problems. Prescribing children at a young age so they can "be normal" is just like telling your child its ok to buy street drugs to cope with problems. Not only that but by middle school most kids with a prescription that can get you high, are selling them. Over the years of use the does gets higher and more damage is caused and people are refusing to see this just because their doctor told them it was the safest route. In my opinion, and my personal experience with an amphetamine addiction, prescribing any child younger then 17 just because they have a bit more energy and have a hard time paying attention, is just fucked up.
 
"No wonder America is so fucked-up if children are forced to take tons of pills!!!"

Other than the parents I don't think anyone is forcing anyone to take anything. The doctor may prescribe the meds but he is not forcing them down the child's mouth. The pharmaceutical companies are not forcing the child to suck down stimulants. Let's face it people the parents are the ones that decide what the kid eats. It's like oh shit junior is morbidly obese lets blame it on the grocery stores and farmers, but it wasn't the parent who was feeding the kid garbage for years. Parents now a days want to blank out and pass on responsibility to other people so if the doctor says so I guess I gotta. The blame lays squarely at the feet of the parents.
 
You guys know that ADD/ADHD do really exist right?

First of all, there isn't a disorder called ADD. The DSM delineates ADHD-hyperactive and ADHD-inattentive.

Secondly: What does that statement mean? Have you ever asked yourself that? When you say "ADHD really exists", what are you saying?

Are you saying that:

all people labeled by psychiatrists as ADHD exhibit similar behaviors?

all people labeled by psychiatrists as ADHD exhibit similar behaviors due to the same underlying neurological mechanism, which is a benign?

all people labeled by psychiatrists as ADHD exhibit similar behaviors due to the same underlying neurological mechanism, which is pathological?

etc...?

Just saying "ADHD does exist" is really sloppy thinking, and its quite perturbing to me that anyone could just lay down a statement as unverifiable as "X does exist" with such confidence. The implications of a statement like that are staggering; it demands greater elaboration.

Certainly there is an entry in the DSM labelled ADHD. But you cannot perform a biopsy on an individual to indicate whether or not they are exhibiting the pathology. Additionally, the consequences of ADHD are a result of outside social influences; if you were stranded on a desert island by yourself, and you forgot to bring your ADHD medication, you would be fine (in fact you'd be better off than you were at home, shoveling amphetamines down your throat every day to "treat your condition"). Clearly, ADHD is not a medical problem. Frankly I feel very embarrassed that there are doctors out there who claim to be scientific professionals while pandering to that kind of crap. This should be an open and shut case for humanity: inattentiveness never has been, and never will be, a disease.

I'm not casting doubt on the necessity of psychiatry in certain situations, but leave normal behaviors alone! Only sick people should be treated, IMO. Disruptive schoolchildren do not qualify as sick people just because they are hyper or can't pay attention, and drugging them isn't "treatment" but torture. Children should be cared for and nurtured, not pathologized and "treated" simply because they are a nuisance to their teacher. 8)
 
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psychonautical thank you for sharing that story, and I really like your quote "Life is the divine comedy... you need to go through hell to find out what heaven really is all about... "
 
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