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Welcome to Call to Decision
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US
House Democrats Work to Mentally Screen
Babies & Toddlers
Nanny State Bills Expand Government Control
Over Families
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July
17, 2008
Two bills which recently passed
the U.S. House Education and Labor
Committee and are headed for floor
debate clearly illustrate the
insatiable appetite that the radicals
in charge of Congress have for control
over the hearts and minds of our
nation's youngest children.
HR 3289, the Providing Resources
Early for Kids Act of 2008 (PRE-K
Act), puts the federal government in
charge of what children will learn in
preschool programs. HR 2343, the Education
Begins at Home Act, sets up
invasive home visiting programs.
These bills put the government in
control as both parent and educator
for children from birth to age 5.
Both focus on poor families who have
the least wherewithal to resist this
government intrusion, but they also
extend to military families. The
home visiting bill calls for
developmental screening, which
includes mental screening, and the
Pre-K Act promotes mental screening of
all the children and their families in
these programs. And of course,
parental consent, choice, and control
are never mentioned for any aspect of
these bills.
The Pre-K Act and its focus on the
mental screening of young children is
ironic from at least two standpoints.
First, despite claims of its
proponents, early childhood programs
are not effective and several
studies have shown evidence of
academic and or emotional harm.
For instance, illiteracy rates have
actually increased in New Jersey where
preschool for poor children was court
ordered. And, data from several
national studies and surveys performed
by the federal government have shown
very significant increases in defiant,
disobedient, and aggressive behavior,
as well as impaired social skills in
children who are attend preschool and
child care compared to children raised
at home.
So, it appears that rather than
improving academic and social skills,
preschool programs are actually creating
the problems they purport to be fixing.
These programs don't help children, but
instead create permanent employment for
mental health professionals and
increased profits for the pharmaceutical
industry for the myriad harmful and
ineffective psychotropic drugs that are
being prescribed to children at
alarmingly younger ages.
Now, as is happening in Minnesota and
states around the nation, these
subjective screening results are going
into children's records, falsely
labeling them as academically, socially,
or mentally defective even before they
begin their academic careers. This has
the potential of affecting
college, military service and employment
and expanding the rolls of the
overburdened special education system
and government control in the schools.
The second irony is that while Congress
is promoting increased mental screening
of young children, at least one member
of New Freedom Commission, the group
that first started publicly promoting
the unscientific and dangerous idea of
mentally screening young children, is
having second thoughts. Dr. Daniel
Fisher stated in a
letter to the Boston Globe dated 10/3/07:
However,
screening Medicaid-covered children for
mental illness is not the answer. In
fact, this approach has been rejected by
Congress. A superficial screening by
overworked pediatricians would likely
result in many false positives with
devastating consequences for the
children and their families. These
quick-fix screening tests invariably end
up with quick fixes of kids by labeling
them and placing them on medication,
without a comprehensive psychosocial
evaluation and assistance to the
children and their interpersonal
environment. As a psychiatrist who has
evaluated children in schools, I know
that myriad factors can cause what
appear to be symptoms of mental illness.
Dr.
Fisher is totally correct about the high
number of false positives in mental
screening tests. One commonly used
screening instrument has a 73% false
positive rating, meaning that for every 27
children supposedly correctly identified
as having an emotional problem on this
screening test that follow admittedly
"subjective" criteria that are
"value judgments based on
culture" according to the Surgeon
General, 73 other families are falsely
told that something is wrong with their
child and referred for further evaluation
and treatment which more and more commonly
involves ineffective and sometimes
lethally dangerous drugs.
It is too bad that members of the new
Freedom Commission are not seeing the
dangers and problems of home visiting
programs they promoted in their report and
that are laid out in the Education Begins
at Home Act. National studies in
1999, 2004, and 2005 showed that home
visiting programs did nothing to decrease
child abuse rates.
The
1999 study had services costing up to
$47,000 per family in 1999 dollars and
doing nothing to improve the cognitive
development of the children. Studies
of the model home visiting program touted
in the New Freedom Commission report, the
Nurse Family Partnership, while showing
some improvement in maternal behavior
towards their babies, actually showed no
improvement in any of the following
parameters:
-
"Children's
behavior problems" or
"emotional regulation"
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"Maternal-child
interaction"
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"Children's
mental development"
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"Maternal
educational achievement or
employment"
In
addition, concerns have been raised about
all of the following:
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Consent
for medical record review of the
families
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Data
collection
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Consent
for participation and potential
coercion with loss of their children
or loss of services
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Poor
training of the visitors
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Unscientific
or biased information presented to
families
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The
duplicitous role of the home visitor
as both a helper and a mandated
child abuse reporter
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Loss
of fourth amendment protections.
For
a detailed discussion of the many problems
with home visiting programs, please see Dr.
Karen Effrem's written testimony
to Congress about this bill.
Finally, this bill also gives grants to
"train" (i.e. indoctrinate) new
parents in the hospital with the
government's view of proper parenting.
These includes getting babies into
government early childhood programs as
soon as possible. The attitudes, values,
and beliefs of the children can then be
shaped by the government's view of issues
such as feminism, gender and gender
identity, multiculturalism,
environmentalism and careers and as
discussed above, may actually lead to
emotional and academic problems.
Parents, even low-income parents, and
certainly not our military families, do
not need the government to visit their
homes to tell them how to raise their
children or to tell them what their
children should be taught before entering
kindergarten. Government should
limit itself to promoting two parent
families which is the greatest, most
effective mental health and social program
available. Taxing families less would
allow families to afford to have one
parent at home to raise the children.
Increasing the domestic supplies of oil
would keep food and fuel affordable for
families.
HR
3289 and HR 2343 are two examples among
many as to why congressional approval
ratings have dropped to single digits in
the last two years.
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About the author:
Dr. Karen Effrem, is a pediatrician,
researcher, and conference speaker. Dr.
Effrem's medical degree is from Johns
Hopkins University and her pediatric
training from the University of Minnesota.
She has provided testimony for Congress,
as well as in-depth analysis of numerous
pieces of major federal education, health,
and early childhood legislation for
congressional staff and many
organizations. Dr. Effrem serves on the
boards of four national organizations:
EdWatch, the Alliance for Human Research
Protection, ICSPP, and the National
Physicians Center.
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