Kids on ADHD drugs: A dangerous path to addiction
By Evelyn Pringle
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Apr 7, 2006, 22:27
Experts say the
stimulant drugs prescribed for the treatment of ADHD are not only dangerous,
they are highly addictive. And although no drug has been approved for the
treatment of autism, drugs are routinely prescribed off-label to treat autistic
children.
According to the
National Center for Health Statistics, over the period of five years between
1997 and 2002, the number of children between the age of 3 to 17, diagnosed
with ADHD went from 3.3 million to 4.4 million.
In direct
correlation, the number of children prescribed ADHD drugs also rose steadily.
In fact, spending on these types of medications for children is now higher than
spending on antibiotics and asthma drugs. In February 2006, the FDA revealed
that between 1999 and 2003, 78 million prescriptions for ADHD drugs were
written for children between the ages of 1 to 18. Terry Davis, a member of an
FDA advisory committee, has said prescriptions for ADHD drugs filled annually
have a value of $3.1 billion.
According to Dr.
Peter Breggin, author of "Talking Back To Ritalin, �parents and teachers
and even doctors have been badly misled by drug company marketing practices.�
He warns, �Drug companies have targeted children as a big market likely to
boost profits and children are suffering as a result."
What critics say is
most alarming: very young children are being placed on drugs. A study published
in the Journal of the American Medical Association in 2000 provides some
insight into this trend. The study found that 57 percent of 223 Michigan
Medicaid patients younger than 4, diagnosed with ADHD, received at least one
psychotropic drug during a 15-month period in 1995 to 1996.
Additionally, the
study found that in the Medicaid population in Midwestern states, there was a
threefold increase in the prescribing of stimulant drugs between 1991 and 1995
for children between the ages of 2 and four.
More recent
statistics show a 369 percent increase in spending on ADHD drugs for children
under 5. From 2000 to 2003, the rise in the use of attention deficit drugs by
children under 5 contributed to an overall 23 percent increase for all
children, according to an analysis by the nation's largest prescription benefit
manager, Medco Health Solutions.
The debate over the
drugging of children in this country has been raging for years. Schools have
been accused of promoting the use of drugs to control normal but active
children. At a September 26, 2002, House Reform Committee hearing on the
�Overmedication of Hyperactive Children,� Chairman Dan Burton (R-IN), asked
pediatrician Dr. Mary Ann Block, "What have you found that the schools do
specifically to encourage the use of medications for attention and behavior?"
Dr. Block said,
"Parents that come to me report consistently that the teachers and the
principals and even the school nurses pressure them to go to a physician and
get their child labeled and drugged."
"Some
schools," she said, "are giving lectures to parents, inviting parents
to come hear talks about diagnosing and drugging their children for ADHD."
Congressman Burton
pointed out what he considered to be inadequate and unscientific methods of
diagnosing ADHD: "When you take your child to a doctor, instead of blood
tests and a thorough medical evaluation, you have a conversation with a doctor
about the school's checklist. And you leave a few minutes later with a
prescription for your young child for a psychotropic drug."
"Did the
doctor test your child for a thyroid disorder? Did your doctor test your child
for a heavy metal toxicity? Did you doctor talk to you about your child's
allergies?
"Did your
doctor even mention nutrition or possible food sensitivity? Did your doctor ask
if your child's IQ had been tested and if he was gifted? Probably not," he
said.
Sandra Lucas
testifies at FDA advisory committee hearings on behalf of the Citizens
Commission on Human Rights, a psychiatric watchdog group. She produced a copy
of a January 20, 2005, pamphlet used at a training seminar for teachers
composed by Susan Barton, who billed herself as the "Founder of Bright
Solutions for Dyslexia," located in San Jose, California.
Under Medication
for ADD, Ms Barton states, "Medication is the most often an essential
component to effective treatment for the ADD child."
"As I've said
many times now," she told the teachers, "ADD is a neurobiological
disorder and needs to be treated as such."
Ms Barton also says
that without medication, other interventions are ineffective, and claims:
"This medication does not cause illegal drug use or addiction."
Dr. Fred Baughman,
author of "The ADHD Fraud -- How Psychiatry Makes Patients of Normal
Children," and one of the nation's leading experts on the issue,
vehemently disagrees. He calls the medical practice of ADHD a fraud --
"one in which the FDA was fully complicit."
"ADHD doesn't
exist -- it is not a physical abnormality," he explains, "and as such
bears no risk of causing physical injury or death as does every drug used in its
treatment."
In testimony on
behalf of the International Center for the Study of Psychiatry and Psychology,
at the March 22 and 23, 2006, FDA advisory committee hearings on the dangers of
ADHD drugs, Dr. Baughman asked the panel of experts to "give us the
reference, cite to the article, giving proof that ADHD is a disease."
He also asked the
committee to give the reference, or cite the literature, that describes the
test that provides objective evidence that children diagnosed with ADHD have a
disease.
The silence in the
hearing room was deafening. According to Dr. Baughman, no one answered his
questions because there is no study, test, or scientific literature to back up
the assertion that ADHD is a disease.
"ADHD is not a
disease," Dr. Baughman says. "This being the case," he
maintains, "giving such drugs for ADHD is not 'help' or 'treatment.'"
He makes the point
"that all practice of medicine begins with diagnosis."
"Informed
consent," Dr. Baughman explained, "demands not just a description of
the drugs or surgery to be used but of the condition they are to be used on --
its prognosis and how that natural course/prognosis is likely to be altered by
the treatments to be applied."
At the March 2006,
FDA advisory committee hearings, it was noted that no other countries are
drugging children with stimulants. In fact, psychiatrist, Dr. Grace Jackson,
who also testified at the hearing, explains in her book, "Rethinking
Psychiatric Drugs," how in 1996 and 1997, the World Health Organization issued
press releases about the rise in the use of the stimulant Ritalin in this
country, "noting that the United States was responsible for 90 percent of
the drug's production and consumption."
At the time, the
International Narcotics Control Board identified a number of concerns about
America's use of the drug, including the dangers of: "inappropriate
diagnosis of ADHD; widely divergent prescribing patterns; off-label prescribing
to children under six; and excessive duration of treatment," Dr. Jackson
reports.
A report by the FDA
released in February 2006, said that between 1999 and 2003, there were 25
deaths in persons using ADHD drugs, including the deaths of 19 children. The
FDA also reported receiving more than 50 cases of cardiovascular problems,
including stoke, heart attack, hypertension, palpitations and arrhythmia.
Because only
between 1 and 10 percent of adverse events are ever reported to the FDA, the
above numbers represent an extreme understatement of actual cases of harm,
critics point out.
According to the
Drug Abuse Warning Network, there were only 271 Ritalin-related emergency room
visits in 1990, but there were 1,478 Ritalin-related emergency visits recorded
in 2001.
In 1999, the
National Institute of Drug Abuse, found some 165 Ritalin-related poison calls
in Detroit and 419 cases in Texas. Of the nearly 600 calls, only 114 cases
involved intentional misuse or abuse.
Dr. Breggin
maintains that ADHD drugs actually bring on the symptoms they are supposed to
treat such as hyperactivity, impulsivity and inattention, which can lead to a
vicious cycle of incorrect and dangerous dosage increases, he warns.
In addition, Dr.
Breggin says, stimulants can cause �agitation and irritability, anger,
hostility, disinhibition, hypomania and mania.�
A recent review of
data by the FDA seems to verify Dr. Breggins assertions. The FDA found that
children on ADHD drugs had an increased risk of psychosis, a mental disorder
characterized by the inability to distinguish between real and imaginary
events. The most important finding, the FDA said, was that signs of psychosis
or mania, particularly hallucinations, occurred in patients with no risk
factors at the usual doses of any of the drugs used to treat ADHD.
The FDA found a
"substantial portion of the psychosis-related cases were reported to occur
in children 10 years or less," an age group which does not typically
suffer from psychosis, the FDA said.
From January 2000
through June 30, 2005, the FDA identified nearly 1,000 reports of psychosis or
mania possibly linked to the drugs, including Ritalin, Adderall, Concerta, and
Strattera.
Most of people who
have investigated the matter seem to agree that heavy metal poisoning is by far
the most likely cause of the epidemic in autism spectrum disorders that erupted
in the 1990s. Studies show that the mercury-based preservative thimerosal that
was used in all childhood vaccines until recently and is the likely culprit.
Beginning in the
late 1980s, the CDC began adding more and more vaccines to the immunization
schedule, but failed to keep track of the toxic levels of mercury that children
would receive as each new shot was added to the list or the amount of mercury
that infants would receive when three-in-one shots were injected.
Nancy and Tim
Hokkanen are the parents of Andy, a 6-year-old boy who was diagnosed with
autism but who is now recovering from mercury poisoning. In June 2002, a
neurologist prescribed Adderal for Andy.
"My son became
psychotic," Nancy said, "for four days by mid-afternoon he had to be
held down in a dark quiet room while he screamed himself limp."
Next the
neurologist prescribed Ritalin, saying, "Usually if one drug doesn't work,
the other one does," Nancy continued.
"My instincts
told me that this was another disaster in the making," she said, "so
I quit seeing that neurologist and began reading studies."
Nancy discovered
the theory of mercury poisoning published by chemistry experts Boyd Haley, PhD,
and Andrew Hall Cutler, PhD, in the study, "Autism: a novel form of
mercury poisoning," which documents about 100 matching symptoms.
In November 2002,
when Andy was 4 and-a-half, tests were done on Andy's hair, blood, urine and
stool samples, and the test results showed mercury toxicity as well as high
levels of copper and other metals, and various nutritional insufficiencies.
Within two weeks of
giving Andy supplements including Vitamin B-6, zinc, manganese and magnesium,
he showed drastic improvements in mood, behavior and abilities, Nancy says.
"We had an
almost-normal Christmas," she reported, "without tantrums and bizarre
behavior."
The Hokkenans
estimate that their insurance company was billed about $100,000 for therapy to
treat autism. "However, we never noticed any drastic improvement until we
began biomedical treatment, which has cost about $2,000," Nancy says.
"Strangely,"
she notes, "our insurance company wouldn't cover the costs of those
medical tests."
Nancy says that
since public health officials realized their error of failing to keep track of
the toxic mercury levels in vaccines in 1999, she views the failure to restrict
the use of mercury in vaccines as a form of fatal entrenchment -- "when an
unhealthy practice or norm is allowed to continue," she explained,
"simply because it has been done that way for so long."
In addition to all
the other side effects associated with ADHD drugs, Dr. David Stein, author of
"Unraveling the ADD/ADHD Fiasco," says stimulant drugs are "near
the top of the heap of potentially addictive drugs."
He says, "We
have no way of knowing which child has a potential risk for becoming addicted
to drugs."
Recent studies have
shown that more and more students are using the drugs illegally. In 2004, a
nationwide University of Michigan study on non-medical use of amphetamines,
found 4.9 percent of 8th graders had used stimulants in the previous year, 8.5
percent of 10th graders had used the drugs, and one in 10 seniors admitted to
non-medical use of amphetamines.
The Partnership for
a Drug Free America released the results of a survey in 2005 that polled more
than 7,300 teenagers and found one in 10 teenagers, or 2.3 million young
people, had tried ADHD drugs without a doctor�s prescription, and that 29
percent of those surveyed said they had close friends who had abused the drugs.
Experts agree that
the widespread prescribing of stimulants will lead many children down the path
to addiction and they warn of the perils that will follow.
"Psychology
and psychiatry have extremely poor track records for treating abuse and
addiction problems," Dr. Stein notes, "and, therefore, the very drugs
they are recommending can trigger a problem from which there may be no
return."
If medical
professionals begin telling children at a very young age that they can change
the way they think, feel, and behave by simply taking a pill, they will
logically continue to take drugs in attempt to mood-alter whenever they have
problems in life.
Evelyn Pringle is a columnist for Independent
Media TV and an investigative journalist focusing on exposing corruption in government.
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