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Ritalin Gone Wrong

slimvictor

Bluelight Crew
Joined
Dec 29, 2008
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6,483
THREE million children in this country take drugs for problems in focusing. Toward the end of last year, many of their parents were deeply alarmed because there was a shortage of drugs like Ritalin and Adderall that they considered absolutely essential to their children’s functioning.

But are these drugs really helping children? Should we really keep expanding the number of prescriptions filled?

In 30 years there has been a twentyfold increase in the consumption of drugs for attention-deficit disorder.

As a psychologist who has been studying the development of troubled children for more than 40 years, I believe we should be asking why we rely so heavily on these drugs.

Attention-deficit drugs increase concentration in the short term, which is why they work so well for college students cramming for exams. But when given to children over long periods of time, they neither improve school achievement nor reduce behavior problems. The drugs can also have serious side effects, including stunting growth.

Sadly, few physicians and parents seem to be aware of what we have been learning about the lack of effectiveness of these drugs.

What gets publicized are short-term results and studies on brain differences among children. Indeed, there are a number of incontrovertible facts that seem at first glance to support medication. It is because of this partial foundation in reality that the problem with the current approach to treating children has been so difficult to see.

Back in the 1960s I, like most psychologists, believed that children with difficulty concentrating were suffering from a brain problem of genetic or otherwise inborn origin. Just as Type I diabetics need insulin to correct problems with their inborn biochemistry, these children were believed to require attention-deficit drugs to correct theirs. It turns out, however, that there is little to no evidence to support this theory.

In 1973, I reviewed the literature on drug treatment of children for The New England Journal of Medicine. Dozens of well-controlled studies showed that these drugs immediately improved children’s performance on repetitive tasks requiring concentration and diligence. I had conducted one of these studies myself. Teachers and parents also reported improved behavior in almost every short-term study. This spurred an increase in drug treatment and led many to conclude that the “brain deficit” hypothesis had been confirmed.

But questions continued to be raised, especially concerning the drugs’ mechanism of action and the durability of effects. Ritalin and Adderall, a combination of dextroamphetamine and amphetamine, are stimulants. So why do they appear to calm children down? Some experts argued that because the brains of children with attention problems were different, the drugs had a mysterious paradoxical effect on them.

However, there really was no paradox. Versions of these drugs had been given to World War II radar operators to help them stay awake and focus on boring, repetitive tasks. And when we reviewed the literature on attention-deficit drugs again in 1990 we found that all children, whether they had attention problems or not, responded to stimulant drugs the same way. Moreover, while the drugs helped children settle down in class, they actually increased activity in the playground. Stimulants generally have the same effects for all children and adults. They enhance the ability to concentrate, especially on tasks that are not inherently interesting or when one is fatigued or bored, but they don’t improve broader learning abilities.

And just as in the many dieters who have used and abandoned similar drugs to lose weight, the effects of stimulants on children with attention problems fade after prolonged use. Some experts have argued that children with A.D.D. wouldn’t develop such tolerance because their brains were somehow different. But in fact, the loss of appetite and sleeplessness in children first prescribed attention-deficit drugs do fade, and, as we now know, so do the effects on behavior. They apparently develop a tolerance to the drug, and thus its efficacy disappears. Many parents who take their children off the drugs find that behavior worsens, which most likely confirms their belief that the drugs work. But the behavior worsens because the children’s bodies have become adapted to the drug. Adults may have similar reactions if they suddenly cut back on coffee, or stop smoking.

cont at
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/29/opinion/sunday/childrens-add-drugs-dont-work-long-term.html
 
Anybody with half a brain (ie not most of America) could have told you most of this from common sense. You idiots can keep your kids tweaked out on amphetamines while mine become educated.

Also,
Ritalin and Adderall, a combination of dextroamphetamine and amphetamine

Can't believe that blunder made it into the article.
 
What blunder? Adderall is half dextro, half racemic amp. It's not totally clear but I assume they're not saying ritalin is also amp.
 
What blunder? Adderall is half dextro, half racemic amp. It's not totally clear but I assume they're not saying ritalin is also amp.

The way it's written, grammatically, means that both Ritalin and Adderall are amphetamines. Really, I thought college level reading/writing comprehension would be required of an editor of the NY Times..
 
^ I would say that it is ambiguous. The "a combination of dextro and amp" part could apply to just Adderall, or to both Adderal and Ritalin. Spoken (English) language allows us to specify through intonation, but written language lacks a clear way to make that distinction.

Of course, I wish that the writer had thought about this.
It would have been clearer to say "Ritalin, as well as Adderall, which is a combo of..."
So I have sympathy for your criticism.
 
^ Sounds terrible. I am sorry to hear that.
But, in a way, maybe that is a form of lazy parenting as well.
It is really much easier to simply beat your kids whenever you want control than to worry about encouraging them when you aren't good at encouraging, and to deal with subtleties, and to allow children to be themselves, and try to get control in some other less black and white way.
I don't know if I am saying this clearly, but I hope you can understand.
 
But, in a way, maybe that is a form of lazy parenting as well.
It is really much easier to simply beat your kids whenever you want control than to worry about encouraging them when you aren't good at encouraging, and to deal with subtleties, and to allow children to be themselves, and try to get control in some other less black and white way.
I don't know if I am saying this clearly, but I hope you can understand.

It maybe isn't as simple as that. Corporal disciplination of offspring is perhaps hundreds of millions of years old. In contrast, modern behavioral modification achieved wide dissemination in what, the 1990s? It has to be given another few decades in order to fully incorporate itself into human culture.
 
Better than daily ass kickings, which is what I got.

Screw that! I got the ass kickings and would take it over amphetamine use every day of the week no questions asked. Especially as a child with a developing mind. Imagine a kid getting desoxyn? That IS methamphetamine... Terrible, terrible stuff. Population control at its best...
 
i dont understand why they always give the good drugs to those who done want them?
You don't understand what it's like to be made to have a drug that you don't want. I'm not sure why, but it just destroys any recreational value, it makes you think "Why would peopl even abuse this?"

I'm not sure if it's just me, but when I get prescribes things, that's what it makes me feel like.
 
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