AMERICA'S OVERMEDICATED CHILDREN
By Vera Sharav
YOUTH and MEDICINES in June 1-3, 2005
KILEN: Consumers Institute for Medicines and Health
SWEDEN
"Forgotten Children" is an investigative report by Carole Keeton
Strayhorn,[1] the Texas Comptroller
(2004) who uncovered evidence that 60% of children in the Texas foster
care system are being drugged with powerful psychotropic drugs, most of
which have not been tested in or approved for use by children. The Food
and Drug Administration (FDA) acknowledges that many of these drugs have
serious adverse side effects, both physical and psychological. The Comptroller
said she was alarmed that in her review of a single month (November 2003),
two powerful antipsychotic drugs -- Risperdal and Zyprexa -- made up half
of the drugs prescribed to foster children in Texas. These two drugs have
been approved only for adults for the treatment of psychosis - primarily
schizophrenia - yet, she found that children as young as four, were receiving
these powerful, mind-altering drugs.
The number of American children under 19 years of age who are prescribed
psychotropic drugs is staggering - the use of these drugs eclipses all
other categories for this age group. Between 2000 and 2003, the use of
these drugs among teenagers increased threefold, and the number of children
treated for "severe behavioral conditions" related to conduct disorder
and autism jumped more than 60%.[2]
The FDA estimates 11 million antidepressant prescriptions were written
in 2003 for under 19 year olds--a 27% increase in 3 years. Drugs used
primarily to treat attention deficit/ hyperactivity (ADHD), which remains
a controversial "condition," increased the most. In 5 to 9 year old children
the use of drugs increased 85%, and in preschoolers usage was up 49%.[3]
Physicians prescribe mind-altering drugs even as they know that for this
age group the developing brain is undergoing extraordinary changes. They
acknowledge: "we have very little information about the long-term impact
of treatment with these drugs early in development."[4]
The unprecedented number of children being diagnosed with psychiatric
conditions, then prescribed psychotropic drugs can be traced to the collaborative
efforts of the drug industry and its paid collaborators: professional
associations of psychiatrists, leading psychiatrists at prestigious universities,
and government health care agencies that are financially dependent on
drug companies. Beginning in the 1990s a series of federally sponsored
"mental health" initiatives promoted the idea that children's mental health
was in crisis,[5] that they were suffering
from undiagnosed depression, and that early treatment is essential to
prevent suicide. These influential collaborators flooded the channels
of communication with misinformation, persuading doctors and parents that
children's mental health was a major problem and that "safe and effective"
remedies were at hand.
Hundreds of news stories including dozens of peer reviewed journal articles
repeated the message: the new antidepressants, Prozac and its cousins--sertraline
(Zoloft), seroxat (Paxil) - were described as "safe and effective" "magic
bullets." Unlike the old imprecise, sedating antidepressants, these drugs,
we were told, are "selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors" (SSRIs) -
the implication being that they act with precision on the serotonin receptors.
Parents were misled to believe that SSRIs were "safe and effective and
well tolerated in children,"[6] when
they had shown no benefit greater than placebo, while producing severe
adverse effects in children. A mental health epidemic was created (critics
believe) to provide an expanded market for new drugs. Even infants and
toddlers are prescribed Prozac with the blessing of the medical / psychiatric
establishment. In 1998, an FDA contracted survey found that 3,000 Prozac
prescriptions had been written for infants.[7]
Of note: Before Prozac antidepressants had been used only for severely
depressed, hospitalized patients who were at high risk of suicide. The
advent of Prozac changed all that - anyone expressing a sign of unhappiness,
anxiety, or moodiness from the ebb and flow of life, was diagnosed as
suffering from depression. When tested in controlled trials, the new generation
antidepressants have failed to demonstrate a benefit either for severely
depressed hospitalized patients or for troubled children. The business
success of Prozac is attributable to creative aggressive marketing. However,
the new antidepressants - SSRIs and SNRIs (selective serotonin norepinephrine
reuptake inhibitors)--pose significant life-threatening risks of harm
which, for almost two decades, had been concealed from the public. The
most serious documented harm links SSRIs /SNRIs to increased risk of suicide
and violence in youth.
Prescribing physicians in Europe and the US were kept in the dark about
the serious risks until paroxetine (Paxil) was exposed by the BBC (2003).
The drug was shown to cause severe withdrawal symptoms - a sign of drug
dependency - and it triggered violent outbursts and suicide. The UK medicines
authority (MHRA)[8] was first to issue
a public warning about the dangers of Paxil in June 2003, and to ban the
use of SSRIs / SNRIs in children, save Prozac. In March 2004, the US FDA[9]
followed, issuing extensive bold warnings about the increased risk of
suicidal behavior in both children and adults who take an antidepressant
- for any condition "psychiatric or non-psychiatric." In October 2004,[10]
the FDA issued black box warnings about the twofold increased risks of
suicidal behavior in youth taking any antidepressant, including Prozac.
The European Medicines Agency (EMA) [11]
is the last regulatory agency to catch up. In April (2005), the EMA's
scientific committee (CMHU) issued a press release recommending warnings
on the labels of all the new SSRI / SNRI antidepressants to reflect the
evidence: "SSRIs/SNRIs should not be used in the treatment of children
and adolescents unless specifically authorised. Suicide-related behaviours
(suicide attempt and suicidal thoughts), and hostility (predominantly
aggression, oppositional behaviour and anger) were more frequently observed
in clinical trials among children and adolescents treated with antidepressants
compared to those treated with placebo." The EMA added Strattera (atomoxetine)
to the list of drugs prescribed for children, noting its "lack of efficacy
in depression." Strattera is approved only for the treatment of ADHD for
adults and children: but it poses increased risks which constitute the
very symptoms that constitute a diagnosis of ADHD: "hostility, aggression,
oppositional behavior, and anger."
Antipsychotics are the most powerful, most toxic psychotropic drugs
that have neither been tested in, nor approved for use by children, yet
they are the second most widely prescribed drugs for children. Although
the scientific evidence for their effectiveness is tenuous, nevertheless,
these powerful drugs are widely prescribed primarily for off-label uses.
Antipsychotics were approved for the treatment of psychosis in adults,
primarily for schizophrenia and short-term use for bipolar disorder. These
drugs induce severe, potentially fatal adverse effects and now carry FDA
required warnings that they impair judgment, thinking, and motor skills.
Since 2003 the labels carry black box warnings about potentially fatal
diabetes mellitus, especially in youth. They also carry risks of prolonged
heart QT interval, cardiac arrhythmia and stroke. Antipsychotics are the
fourth highest selling class of prescribed drugs in the US-- sales in
2002 reached $6.4 billion.2 The greatest spending increase for the treatment
of children diagnosed with behavior problems, is due to skyrocketing use
of the most expensive drugs to treat ADHD, conduct disorder, autism, and
affective disorders such as depression.
These drugs are known to induce severe, potentially fatal adverse effects
and now carry FDA required warnings about the risks of cardiac arrhythmias,
impaired judgment, thinking, and motor skills. Since 2003 the labels carry
black box warnings about potentially fatal diabetes mellitus, especially
in youth. Concerns are being raised about why young people who are not
psychotic are being prescribed these powerful drugs for unapproved uses
without evidence of their safety.
Investigations across the US corroborate the abusive use of psychotropic
drugs:
- The Massachusetts Behavioral Health Partnership[12]
reported that almost two thirds of children in state care were treated
for behavioral disorders in 2003.
- An analysis of the medical records of 300,000 children aged 2 through
18 who were enrolled in the Tennessee Medicaid healthcare program
for the poor and uninsured found that the use of antipsychotics for
children nearly doubled in six years. Nearly one in every 100 adolescents
covered under the Tennessee program was being prescribed antipsychotics
in 2001. The increases were most dramatic among children aged 6 to
12 (a 93% rise) and those aged 13 to 18 (a 116% increase). The use
of antipsychotics among preschool children increased 61%[13].
- An investigative series in Columbus Ohio[14]
found that 40,000 children aged 6-18 who were covered by Medicaid
were prescribed psychotropic drugs: 31% of those children were in
foster care, and 22% were in juvenile detention. Medicaid spent $65.5
million for drugs used primarily as "chemical restraints." Among these:
- Chelsey Kennedy, 15, says she "slept for four days and was in
a drug-induced fog for a week" after being subdued with three
shots of a powerful drug at a Dayton treatment center. Now she's
at a Columbus center, but her mother worries about the number
of medications she takes daily - 14, of which 11 are psychotropic
drugs, compared with two when she went into treatment two years
ago.
- A 10-year-old boy was chemically restrained 69 times over 80
days. Doctors prescribed up to six drugs at a time - no one has
ever determined which pills worked for what symptoms or disorders.
- A 12-year-old girl was injected six times over nine months with
high doses of Thorazine, a powerful sedative that can knock kids
out and cause painful muscle spasms and twitches. She also was
physically restrained 31 times by as many as three men, despite
a history of being physically and sexually abused.
- A Texas mother reported that starting at age five her son
was variously diagnosed as suffering from ADHD, bipolar disorder,
schizophrenia, or sociopathy - diagnosis depended on the doctor in
charge. The boy was put on powerful psychotropic drugs which, she
says, made him hear voices, and resulted in troubles in school, with
the law, and repeated hospitalizations. When he was put on Zyprexa
"he put on a tremendous amount of weight, 85 pounds to be exact."[15]
Since being weaned off the drugs, she reported that her son is much
improved.
- A five month investigation by the Tampa Florida Tribune[16]
shows how misprescribing psychiatric drugs can precipitate life-threatening
tragedies. For example, 9- year old Lee who had been diagnosed with
bipolar disorder descended into suicidal violence after she had been
haphazardly prescribed a combination of four powerful drugs - two
antidepressants and two antipsychotics. She developed an obsessive
fear of germs, for which the psychiatrist suggested an antidepressant
(Paxil). Within weeks, Lee's mother noticed a surge in her aggression.
She told the doctor, but he said it was an acceptable side effect
and she would be fine. Well, she was not fine: "Emergency workers
cornered her behind the office and tied her to a gurney. She screamed
and thrashed the whole way to the Community Hospital emergency room
and screamed throughout the afternoon as nurses tried to sedate her.
They finally succeeded by giving her a shot of Thorazine."
How can such abuse possibly be therapeutic for any 9 year old child?
/li>
- A series in the California Sacramento Bee[17]
described what happened to 12-year old Zach during a period of 18
months. Zach was diagnosed with anxiety, depression and ADHD: he was
first prescribed Ritalin, then Prozac, then paroxetine (Paxil) which
made him manic. Then, he was back to Prozac plus the antipsychotic,
Zyprexa, which made him gain 40 lbs within 5 months. He was then prescribed
quitiapine (Seroquel), the dose was raised but his psychiatrist said
he is "disappointed" because Zach is still irritable, so he's considering
the newest antipsychotic, ziprasidone (Geodon). The drug label carries
bold warnings about rapid heart beats and cardiac arrest: "sudden
unexplained deaths have been reported in patients taking ziprasidone
at recommended doses."
- A Dallas Fort Worth investigation[18]
found that in one month (November 2003), some doctors were writing
as many as 486 prescriptions for psychotropic drugs for children in
foster care. One psychiatrist explained to the reporter in an e-mail:
"I am often pressured by providers to aggressively medicate children
in an attempt to control their behavior."
Dr. Ellen Bassuk, professor at Harvard University who examined children's
medical records said: "It's scandalous that medications are used
to subdue kids for the convenience of overworked and underpaid staff or
as punishment for bad behavior."[14] The Texas comptroller agrees: she
believes the drugs are prescribed for children in order to make them "more
docile." And, she deplores that "doctors and drug companies are pushing
them to make a buck." And a neuropsychologist from Florida who examined
the Texas records[19] said that by
numbing children with psychotropic drugs:
"We're taking away their future." By blunting their emotion, we take
away children's ability to relate to people, to trust, love, to care for
others or to put themselves in another person's shoes to see how it feels.
To make matters even worse, the US government has begun to implement
a mental health screening policy recommended by the President's New Freedom
Commission on Mental Health[20] (NFC).
According to the BMJ,[21] President
Bush instructed more than 25 federal agencies to develop an implementation
plan to screen America's 52 million school children and 6 million school
personnel - for hidden mental illness. The rationale behind this mind-boggling
initiative is, in part, evidence of America's abiding faith in science
and technology to provide solutions for complex human and societal problems.
In no other democratic country has the government adopted a policy to
screen the entire population - children first - for presumed, undetected,
mental illness.
The methodology used to screen for mental and behavioral problems remains
rooted in the flawed methods used by the discredited eugenics movement
which sought to screen for mental "defectives." Eugenics and psychiatry
suffer from a common philosophical fallacy that undermines the validity
of their theories and their prescriptions. Both are rooted in "faith-based"
ideological assumptions that mental and behavior problems are biologically
determined, and can, therefore, be resolved through biological interventions.
However, the diagnosis of mental illness lacks scientific validity -
it relies entirely on the subjective assessment by mental health professionals
and normative check lists. This flaw was acknowledged by the US Surgeon
General report:[22] "mental health
is not easy to define�.what it means to be mentally healthy is subject
to many different interpretations that are rooted in value judgments that
may vary across cultures." Another shortcoming: mental health professionals
have an interest in expanding the patient roster to guarantee their employment.
Therefore, screening will most likely inflate the number of American children
(and adults) labeled with a mental illness.
The New Freedom Commission Report praised two mental health programs:
TeenScreen and TMAP. TeenScreen is a questionnaire devised by psychiatrists
at Columbia University "to ensure that every teen in the US has access
to free mental health check-up." TeenScreen is already operating in more
than 100 schools in 34 states and as the executive director told a congressional
committee: "In 2003, we were able to screen approximately 14,200 teens...;
among those students, we were able to identify approximately 3,500 youth
with mental health problems and link them with treatment. This year, we
believe we will be able to identify close to 10,000 teens in need, a 300
percent increase over last year." Unfortunately this is not science fiction:
this is a policy driven by commercial interests.
TMAP (Texas Medication Algorithm Project) is an industry sponsored
set of flow charts designed to guide mental health providers' selection
of psychotropic drugs-- "Psychiatry for Dummies." TMAP was launched in
1995, when Bush was governor of Texas. TMAP recommends the most expensive
drugs as first line treatment - these are the SSRI and SSNRI antidepressants
and antipsychotics. At least twelve states have adopted the TMAP model:
Texas and Ohio were among the first. State mental health officials across
the US see nothing wrong with prescribing drugs irresponsibly, thereby
violating medicine's first principle--"do no harm" - to increase profits.
Of note, Ohio's executive director of the Department of Mental Health,
Michael Hogan, who has played a major role in promoting the use of psychotropic
drugs, was chairman of the New Freedom Commission. He said that although:
"It's true children are more likely to get medication than counseling
or other behavioral therapy, at the end of the day, meds re quite safe
and effective."14 Hogan says the biggest danger facing children is depression.
Screening for mental illness serves no medical purpose - it is but the
first step toward expanded use of drugs. Given its large margin of error,
screening for mental illness is of dubious value for individuals, but
that same margin of error is of great value for the drug industry. An
evaluation by the authoritative US Preventive Services Task Force[23]
concluded that the mental health screening instruments have not been validated,
and there is no evidence to demonstrate that screening reduces suicide.
The escalating expenditure for psychotropic drugs since TMAP leaves little
doubt as to its value for the drug industry. The impact of TMAP[24]
is already evident in the skyrocketing increased prescriptions for antipsychotics
which are being prescribed widely for unapproved, off-label uses, mostly
to control conduct and behavior, including ADHD. US spending for drugs
to treat ADHD rose astronomically3: among 5 to 9 year olds spending rose
174%, and for preschool children spending rose by 369%. These extraordinary
spending increases reflect the increased use of the most expensive drugs
to treat newly minted behavioral problems in children who are increasingly
diagnosed with ADHD and bipolar disorder (a.k.a. manic-depression).
Indeed, the Wall Street Journal[25]
reported last week: "The number of children diagnosed as bipolar rose
26% from 2002 to 2004, to 19,776 cases," noting that until recently, children
under 18 were very rarely diagnosed with bipolar disorder. Yet, today,
children as young as four are being diagnosed with bipolar. The Journal
also notes that: "increased use of antipsychotic medicines, such as Seroquel
and Risperdal, was a big driver of pediatric drug costs last year." Indeed,
overall spending on psychotropic drugs for children increased by 77%,
and increased by 142% for "severe conduct disorder."
Screening will do much to expand the number of patients relegated to
mental health providers and to increase profit margins for drug manufacturers.
In the last two years, 107,000 children in Texas have been prescribed
psychotropic drugs at a cost of $167 million. The experience of 15-year
old Aliah Gleason, encapsulates the abuse a child is likely to be subjected
to after being screened and (often as not) misdiagnosed as having a mental
disorder. Her story is reported in Mother Jones. [26]
MEDICATING ALIAH (excerpt)
In the early part of seventh grade, Aliah was a B and C student who
got in trouble "for running my mouth." School officials considered
Aliah disruptive, deemed her to have an "oppositional disorder," and
placed her in a special education track. Her parents viewed her as
a spirited child who was bright but had a tendency to argue and clown.
Then one day, psychologists from the University of Texas (UT) visited
the school to conduct a mental health screening for sixth- and seventh-grade
girls, and Aliah's life took a dramatic turn.
A few weeks later, the Gleasons got a "Dear parents" form letter
from the head of the screening program. "You will be glad to know
your daughter did not report experiencing a significant level of distress,"
it said. Not long after, they got a very different phone call from
a UT psychologist, who told them Aliah had scored high on a suicide
rating and needed further evaluation. The Gleasons reluctantly agreed
to have Aliah see a UT consulting psychiatrist. She concluded that
Aliah was suicidal but did not hospitalize her, referring her instead
to an emergency clinic for further evaluation. Six weeks later, in
January 2004, a child-protection worker went to Aliah's school, interviewed
her, then summoned her father to the school and told him to take Aliah
to Austin State Hospital, a state mental facility. He refused, and
after a heated conversation, Aliah was placed in emergency custody
and a police officer drove her to the hospital.
The Gleasons would not be allowed to see or even speak to their
daughter for the next five months. Aliah would spend a total of nine
months in a state psychiatric hospital and residential treatment facilities.
While in the hospital, she was placed in restraints more than 26 times
and medicated-against her will and without her parents' consent-with
at least 12 different psychiatric drugs, many of them simultaneously.
On her second day at the state hospital, Aliah says she was told
to take a pill to "help my mood swings." She refused and hid under
her bed. She says staff members pulled her out by her legs, then told
her if she took her medication, she'd be able to go home sooner. She
took it. On another occasion, she "cheeked" a pill and later tossed
it into the garbage. She says that after staff members found it, five
of them came to her room, one holding a needle. "I started struggling,
and they held my head down and shot me in the butt," she says. "Then
they left and I lay in my bed crying."
What, if anything, was wrong with Aliah remains cloudy. Court documents
and medical records indicate that she would say she was suicidal or
that her father beat her, and then she would recant. (Her attorney
attributes such statements to the high dosages of psychotropic drugs
she was forcibly put on.) Her clinical diagnosis was just as changeable.
During two months at Austin State Hospital, Aliah was diagnosed with
"depressive disorder not otherwise specified," "mood disorder not
otherwise specified with psychotic features," and "major depression
with psychotic features."
In addition to the antidepressants Zoloft, Celexa, Lexapro,
and Desyrel, as well as Ativan, an antianxiety drug, Aliah was given
two newer drugs known as "atypical antipsychotics"--Geodon and Abilify--plus
an older antipsychotic, Haldol. She was also given the anticonvulsants
Trileptal and Depakote-though she was not suffering from a seizure disorder-and
Cogentin, an anti-Parkinson's drug also used to control the side effects
of antipsychotic drugs. At the time of her transfer to a residential
facility, she was on five different medications, and once there, she
was put on still another atypical-Risperdal.
At times Aliah "was on five different medications, putting her
on the extreme end of a growing practice known as polypharmacy that worries
many doctors." Dr. Joseph Woolston, a Yale University professor and
chief of child psychiatry at Yale said: "If you or I were on that regimen
we would have a lot of trouble attending to work or school. We don't have
any idea what that combination of medications does to a developing child.
It may have a number of long-term side effects." He also suspects "that
the drugs may have been used as much to control the angry reactions of
a girl who was hospitalized against her will as to treat any mental and
emotional problems."
Aliah was a victim of mental health screening. Screening for mental
illness serves no medical or societal purpose - screening will, however,
do much to increase the profit margins for drug manufacturers and the
mental health provider industry. A label of mental illness all too often
signifies loss of autonomous decision-making authority for parents who
may be reluctant to give permission for their children to be treated with
psychotropic drugs.
A dark side of screening is the stigma that accompanies those labeled
as having a mental disorder. Being so classified all too often signifies
loss of autonomy and decision-making authority. Parents who are reluctant
to give permission for their children to be treated with psychotropic
drugs - such as Aliah Gleason's parents - face state agents who impose
their authority over parental objections. American psychiatry is treading
down the same slippery slope that the eugenics movement did in its heyday.
Psychiatry, like eugenics, is armed with an arsenal of unproven bio-genetic
theories and assumptions about human behavior. Eugenicists blamed heredity
for bad behavior: psychiatrists blame unproven faulty brain chemistry.
Eugenics imposed radical interventions against the will of the individuals
targeted - so does psychiatry.
Eugenicists and psychiatrists have done incalculable harm because their
"treatments" were sanctioned by a government seal providing the illusion
of legitimacy. In the US, state Eugenics boards approved the involuntary
sterilization of 72,600 people who had been classified (often arbitrarily)
as "mental defectives."[27] Psychiatry
uses state agents to coerce parents to force children to ingest drugs
that disrupt normal brain function.
Questions:
Who will bear responsibility for the harms that may follow from mental
health screening when children are wrongly labeled as having a mental
illness, and on that basis will be prescribed mind-altering drugs that
cause them harm?
Who will compensate children who will be deprived of a normal childhood?
REFERENCES:
[1] Strayhorn, CK. Forgotten children,
Texas Comptroller, April 2004. http://www.window.state.tx.us/forgottenchildren/execsumm/
[2] Freudenheim M. Behavior Drugs
Lead in Sales for Children, New York Times, May 17, 2004. http://www.nytimes.com/2004/05/17/business/17drug.html?ex=1085815432&ei=1&en=72cd66cf54ffd8d4
[3] Medco Health Solutions, Inc.
2004 Drug Trend Symposium. Study Reveals Pediatric Spending Spike on Drugs
to Treat Behavioral Problems, May 17, 2004. http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/040517/nym080_1.html
[4] Coyle, J. (2000). Psychoactive
drug use in very young children. Editorial. Journal of the American Medical
Association, 283. Retrieved February 23, 2000 from http://jama.ama-assn.org/issues/v283n8/ffull/jed90109.html
[5] See: Sharav, VHS. Children in
clinical research: A conflict of moral values. American Journal of Bioethics.
(2003) 3(1): InFocus online at: http://s97929468.onlinehome.us/journal/pdf/3_1_IF_w12_Sharav.pdf;
U.S. Surgeon General Report. Conference on children's mental health: A
National Action Agenda. January 3, 2001. Online (accessed Oct 2, 2004)
at: http%3A%2F%2Fwww.surgeongeneral.gov%2Ftopics%2Fcmh%2Fdefault.htm
[6] Wagner KD, Ambrosini P, Rynn
M, et al: Efficacy of sertraline int eh treatment of children and adolescents
with Major Depressive Disorder. JAMA 2003; 290(8):1033-1041. See also:
Emslie GJ, Rush AJ, Weinberg WA, et al (1997b). A double-blind, randomized,
placebo-controlled trial of fluoxetine in children and adolescents with
depression. Arch Gen Psychiatry 54:1031-7; Keller, MB, Ryan ND, Stober
M, et al.: Efficacy of paroxetine in the treatment of adolescent major
depression: a randomized, controlled trial. J AM Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry
2001; 40(7):762-772.
[7] Grinfeld, M. 1998. Psychoactive
medications and kids: New initiatives launched. Psychiatric Times. Vol
14 (3) March: p. 69.
[8] See UK letter to healthcare providers
(June 18, 20030): http://www.ahrp.org/risks/PaxilRisks0603.php;
UK MHRA bans use of SSRI antidepressants in children (December 10, 2003):
http://www.ahrp.org/infomail/03/12/15.php
[9] FDA Advisory warning: Antidepressant
Use in Children, Adolescents and Adults: http://www.fda.gov/cder/drug/antidepressants/default.htm
[10] FDA. Antidepressant 'Black
Box' label warning http://www.fda.gov/cder/drug/antidepressants/SSRIlabelChange.htm
[11] The drugs listed: citalopram,
escitalopram, fluoxetine, fluvoxamine, mianserine, milnacipran, mirtazapine,
paroxetine, reboxetine, sertraline and venlafaxine and atomoxetine.
See: European Medicines Agency. Committee on Medicines for Human Use
(CMHU). European Medicines Agency finalises review of antidepressants
in children and adolescents http://www.emea.eu.int/pdfs/human/press/pr/12891805en.pdf
[12] Vascellaro JE. Prevalence
of drugs for DSS wards questioned, THE BOSTON GLOBE, August 9, 2004. http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2004/08/09/prevalence_of_drugs_for_dss_wards_questioned?mode=PF
[13] Gardner, A. Use of Antipsychotics
Doubles for Low-Income Kids Tennessee study suggests treatment decisions
are behind trend. HealthDay, August 4, 2004. http://www.healthday.com/view.cfm?id=520474
[14] Pyle, P. Drugged into Submission:
Forced medication straitjackets kids. Series. Columbus Dispatch, April
24, 2005, http://www.dispatch.com/reports-story.php?story=dispatch/2005/04/24/20050424-A1-00.html
[15] Hughes, PR. Strayhorn will
probe drug use on children Comptroller asks for medical data on children
in foster care. Houston Chronicle Austin Bureau Nov. 12, 2004.
[16] Peterson, L. Medications Can
Fan Children's Emotional Flames, The Tampa Tribune Apr 8, 2003 http://www.tampatrib.com/MGA7XB3B9ED.html
[17] Dorsey Griffith. Walking a
medical tightrope: With few drugs tested for children, physicians rely
on trial and error. Sacramento Bee, June 24, 2002, Second of three parts.
http://www.sacbee.com/content/news/projects/medication/story/3328394p-4356008c.html
[18] Koffer S. Investigation into
foster care doctor recommended, WFAA, October 4, 2004, http://www.wfaa.com/sharedcontent/dws/wfaa/localnews/news8/stories/wfaa041003_am_fosterdoc.36e7d808.html
[19] Neuropsychologist, Dr. Tony
Appel quoted in: Garrett, R. Drug fraud alleged in foster care, The Dallas
Morning News. November 12, 2004.
[20] President's New Freedom Commission
on Mental Health. Final Report. April 3, 2003. http://www.mentalhealthcommission.gov/reports/reports.htm;
President's New Freedom Initiative for People with Disabilities: The 2004
Progress Report. www.whitehouse.gov/infocus/newfreedom/toc-2004.html
[21] Lenzer J. Bush Plans to screen
whole US population for mental illness. British Medical Journal. June
19, 2004, 328: 1458 http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/328/7454/1458
[22] U.S. Surgeon General Report
on Mental Health. 1999. p.5 http://www.surgeongeneral.gov/library/mentalhealth/pdfs/c1.pdf
[23] U.S. Preventive Services Task
Force. Screening for Suicide Risk: Recommendation and Rationale. May 2004.
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/3rduspstf/suicide/suiciderr.htm
[24] Wilson N. KEYE News Investigates.
Psychiatric drugs (July 23, 2004); Drugs and your tax dollars (September
30, 2004). http://keyetv.com/investigativevideo
[25] Aboud, L. Treating Children
for Bipolar Disorder: Doctors Try Powerful Drugs On Kids as Young as Age
4, Wall Street Journal, May 25, 2005, p. D-1.
[26] Waters, R. Medicating
Aliah, Mother Jones, May/June 2005 http://www.motherjones.com/news/feature/2005/05/medicating_aliah.html
[27] Sharav VH. Screening for Mental
Illness: the Merger of Eugenics and the Drug Industry Presented at the
International Center for Psychiatry & Psychology, October 8, 2004. In
Press. Ethical Human Services & Sciences, 2005. |