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No Child Left Undrugged
By John W. Whitehead
June 9, 2008
According to autopsy reports, 4-year-old Rebecca Riley
died from an overdose of psychiatric drugs. At age 2,
Rebecca was diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity
disorder (ADHD). At 3, she was diagnosed with bipolar
disorder, also known as manic depression. By the time she
died on Dec. 13, 2006, little Rebecca was taking Clonidine,
as well as the anti-convulsant Depakote and the
anti-psychotic Seroquel.
What were some of the symptoms that prompted such
treatment plans? As her mother described it, Rebecca was
“constantly getting into things, running around, not
being able to settle down.”
Rebecca’s diagnosis was not a medical aberration. Her
10-year-old brother and 4-year-old sister were already
being treated for manic depression. Indeed, nearly one
million children are reportedly diagnosed as bipolar,
making it more common than autism and diabetes combined.
From 1994 to 2003, the number of children treated for
bipolar disorder increased 40 percent, a jump that many
experts attribute to more doctors aggressively applying
the diagnosis.
An increasing number of medical officials are voicing the
concern that children are being misdiagnosed. Dr. John
McClellan, who runs a children’s psychiatric hospital in
the state of Washington, suggested that the bipolar
diagnosis has become a catch-all for aggressive and
troubled children.
Likewise, child psychiatrist John Holttum believes that
the definition of bipolar disorder is expanding. Whereas
children who were seen as troubled or irritable 10 or 15
years ago might have been treated with counseling,
parental training for their caregivers or other social
interventions, children with similar symptoms today are
being diagnosed as bipolar and treated with medication.
Unfortunately, for many families, therapy is not even an
option. According to Dr. Michael Brody, a child
psychiatrist at the University of Maryland, since
insurance companies often do not support therapy, most
parents opt for medication.
Not surprisingly, the pharmaceutical companies are reaping
the rewards, aided by the medical community and the media.
Bipolar disorder medication is typically three to five
times more expensive than medications prescribed for other
disorders, such as depression or anxiety. As the News
Tribune of Tacoma, Wash., points out, “Furthering
the trend is extensive marketing of atypical
anti-psychotics by the companies that make them, and media
coverage of bipolar disorder as a childhood disease.”
Yet many of the anti-psychotic drugs being prescribed for
children have not been approved by the Food and Drug
Administration for use on them. Of the two that have been
approved for children, Risperdahl and Abilify, they’ve
only been approved for short-term use. Nevertheless, as
the News Tribune points out, because these drugs
have been approved for adults, “doctors are
free to prescribe drugs to anyone and in any way they see
fit once they have been approved for some purpose.”
What this means is that in addition to being misdiagnosed,
there is an increased likelihood that children are also
being overdrugged. Concern about this scenario has
prompted Dr. Jeffrey Thompson, chief medical officer for
the Washington state Medicaid program, to provide more
stringent guidelines to ensure that anti-psychotic drugs
are prescribed to Medicaid children only when truly needed
and at proper dosages.
While Thompson’s actions signal a move in the right
direction, at least for minor-aged Medicaid recipients in
his state, it will do little to help children in private
care and in other states.
When confronted with the numbers of children being
diagnosed with bipolar disorder—about 800,000 in 2003,
and likely much higher now—it is hard to know how to
respond. Could that many young people truly be suffering
from this disorder? It is tempting to lay the blame on an
over-zealous medical community or a greedy pharmaceutical
industry. There is no doubt that they have benefited
financially from the sharp rise in bipolar cases among
young people.
Is it more a case of kids just being kids—noisy,
rambunctious, hyperactive, disorderly? Or is there
something else going on here? Curiously, one study
released in 2007 indicated that among children diagnosed
with bipolar disorder, two-thirds of them were boys.
While there are undeniably cases where children are
actually suffering and are helped by diagnosis and
medication, I have to wonder about the majority. Little is
said in the studies I have read about the impact that
family life and the environment may have on the behavior
of children diagnosed as bipolar, or even ADHD, yet they
can’t be ruled out.
Society as a whole has become irresponsible in its duty to
young people. Obsessed with materialism, we have handed
over our young people to marketing mavens and corporations
eager to make a quick buck. Distracted by entertainment,
we have relinquished our children to television
babysitters, allowing them to become turned on by and
tuned into mindless television programs, video games and
advertising that promote violence and premarital sex,
among other unhealthy behaviors. Children need human touch
and love. All too often, parents give them over to others
for care. They also leave them floating in the non-real
world of virtual reality.
Thus, it is little wonder that so many children are out of
control, disorderly and unable to settle down. But they
shouldn’t be victimized and punished for our neglect.
Nor should they be drugged into compliance. Our children
are screaming for help, but we’re not listening to what
they’re saying. Instead, many parents are just hoping to
shut them up—whether with drugs or entertainment—and
get a little peace and quiet. But that’s not the answer.
A solution will not be found by passing another law.
Rather, it must start at home and in the community. When
the family breaks down, everything breaks down. We need to
start by re-building families. Parents need to be parents
and stop over-scheduling their children. They need to
start spending time with them.
Finally, parents need to say no to drugs for their
children. They need to control what their children watch
and listen to. And they need to take off the headphones,
turn off the cell phones and try communicating with their
children.
WC: 995
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Constitutional attorney and author John W. Whitehead
is founder and president of The Rutherford
Institute. His new book The Change Manifesto
(Sourcebooks) will be out in August 2008. He can be
contacted at johnw@rutherford.org.
Information about The Rutherford Institute is
available at www.rutherford.org
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