Thomas: Is Your Doctor a Serial Killer?

What you are about to read, is one of many articles published on this site since the year 2000, regarding the misuse of prescription drugs to “control” supposed “out of control” children. The category, “A Spoonful of Sugar,” relates more to the dietary habits, which seem to have a greater affect on these children.

As a former assistant Scout-Master of a Boy Scout Troop, which seemed to draw more of its fair share of “ADD/ADHD” diagnosed children – the common denominator in their homes, was bowls of sugar – candy – cookies, cakes and pies. Every kind of dessert imaginable, but poor overall dietary habits, many of which, were mirrored on our frequent Troop camping trips. “Don’t forget the Chitos and the M&M’s!

And the Doctors? Well, they seem to dispense this stuff as if it were candy! (Ed.)

N.Y. court orders use of medicine
Some public schools are accusing parents of child abuse when they balk at giving their kids drugs such as Ritalin, and as judges begin to agree, some parents are medicating their children for fear of having them hauled away.

It’s an emerging twist in the growing debate about diagnosing and medicating children with attention deficit disorder (ADD) and attention deficit and hyperactivity disorder (ADHD): An Albany, N.Y., couple put their 7-year-old son back on Ritalin after a family court ruled that they must continue medicating him for ADD.

Child protective services visited another New York couple to check out anonymous allegations of “medical neglect” after they took their son off Ritalin and other drugs because of side effects, the couple said.

“This is relatively new, but it’s happening,” says Maryland psychiatrist Peter Breggin, who is aware of similar cases in Boston. Often, he says, divorced parents disagree on medicating kids, and judges recently have ruled in favor of the parent who wants to medicate. The Albany case is the first pitting educators against parents that progressed to a judge’s ruling.

“This is going to be happening more and more,” says psychologist Peter Jensen, who is on the board of Children and Adults With Attention Deficit Disorder, a parents group that advocates combining drug and behavior treatments.

As many as 3.8 million schoolchildren are diagnosed with ADD/ADHD, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics.

At least 2 million take Ritalin, a stimulant, for symptoms such as inattentiveness, impulsivity and sometimes hyperactivity.

Many others are treated with different drugs
Research shows that medication improves the abilities of ADHD children. “It’s becoming increasingly clear that this is a powerful treatment that can be lifesaving for some children,” Jensen says. “The risk for severe ADHD going untreated is not trivial.” But should parents be forced to put their children on drugs?

The long-term effects of children taking stimulants have not been studied. And psychology professor William Frankenberger, who has studied ADD/ADHD at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire for more than 20 years, says it’s “disturbing to take a decision like that out of parents’ hands.”

Written by Karen Thomas for USA TODAY, and published on DrKelley.net, September 27, 2000. (Ed. – October 4, 2023)

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