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In July 2003, the Bush appointed
New Freedom Commission on Mental Health (NFC) recommended screening all children
for mental illness and designated TeenScreen as a model program to ensure that
every student receives a mental health check-up before finishing high school.
The NFC also has a preferred drug
program in place modeled after the Texas Medication Algorithm Project (TMAP),
that lists what drugs are to be used on children found to be mentally ill.
The list contains every drug that
people complained about at the FDA hearing, including Paxil, Zoloft, Celexa,
Wellbutron, Zyban, Remeron, Serzone, Effexor, Buspar, Risperdal, Zyprexa,
Seroqual, Geodone, Depakote, Adderall, and Prozac.
There is little if any evidence
that these drugs work on children but nevertheless, an estimated 10 million
children in the US are now taking these
mind-altering drugs even though they have documented side-effects including
suicidal ideation, mania, psychosis, and future drug dependence.
According to a May 2003 report in
the New York Times, national sales of anti-psychotics reached $6.4 billion in
2002, making them the fourth highest-selling class of drugs which proves the
drug companies are already making a killing by drugging our kids.
Experts Against Screening
Dr Jane Orient is an internist and
executive director of the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons. She
offered a few words to the wise in United Press International's "Outside View"
on December 16,
2004.
In regard to TeenScreen, Orient
says parents ought to be asking some very serious questions before the
government experts interview the first child such as:
What are the credentials of the
screeners? What are the criteria for possible abnormality? What is the
scientific validation? Will you be allowed to get a second opinion? Can you see
the record and enter corrections if indicated? Will the record at any point be
destroyed, or will the stigma of a diagnosis such as "personality disorder"
follow the child throughout life?
What will happen if your child
fails the screen? What sort of treatment will be given? Who will supervise it?
What if you don't approve of it?
Do drug companies expect to have a
large number of new consumers of their psychoactive drugs? Who might profit from
the program (perhaps discoverable by asking who lobbied for it)? Bingo, right
question Dr. Who stands to profit?
In 2003, Medico Health Solutions,
reports that the use of behavioral drugs for children topped all other types of
drugs at 17% of total spending. In the year 2003, the market research firm, IMS
Health, calculated worldwide sales of antidepressants at $19.5 billion, up 10%
from the year 2002.
Phyllis Schlafly, author of "No
Child Left Unmedicated," raises several valid questions. What are the rights of
youth and parents to refuse or opt out of such screening? Will they face threats
of removal from school, if they refuse privacy-invading interrogations or
medications? How will a child remove a stigmatizing label from his records?
Psychiatrist Peter Breggin, a
court-qualified medical expert, and author of books, Talking Back to Prozac and
The Anti-Depressant Fact Book, warns about the life-long damage a label of
mentally illness can cause.
"There is nothing worse that you
can do to a human being in America today than give them a mental illness kind of
label and tell them they need drugs and these children are 3,4,5,6,7,8,9
years-old being treated in this manner," Breggin reports, "I then see them
coming to me as adults saying I'd like to be a doctor but how can I when I have
crossed wires in my head," he warns.
In a report, Allen Jones, former
investigator Penn Office of Inspector General Bureau of Special Investigations,
points out that there has been a 500% increase in children being prescribed
drugs during the past 6 years.
Jones says the NFC call for
mandatory screening of all students, with follow-up treatment as required,
translates into putting more kids on mind-altering and potentially lethal drugs.
"TeenScreen is purely and simply a
marketing scam to sell psychotropic drugs," according anti-child drugging
advocate, Ken Kramer, "When they use "even if we save one life" as an argument
to arouse emotions in parents that truly care, they are lying," he warns.
Bush Promotes Dangerous Drugs
The truth is, with full support
from Bush, the pharmaceutical industry is using TeenScreen as a vehicle to push
dangerous drugs on children who in the eyes of many experts are already being
overmedicated.
Despite that the fact that SSRI
antidepressants are banned for use with children in the UK and despite the FDA
“black box” warning label now required on all SSRIs that the drugs increase
suicidal thinking and behavior in kids, the NFC not only recommends that the
same drugs be prescribed to children, it promotes the very schemes that will
increase the number of kids on these drugs in schools and other public
institutions.
According to a report by the
Florida Statewide Advocacy Council, posted on Ken Kramer's website
records@psychsearch.net, an investigation in Florida found
that of 1,180 kids in foster care, 652 were on one or more psychotropic drugs.
In Texas, Dr
John Breeding, an Austin
psychologist, has seen cases where some foster children were placed on as many
as 17 drugs and says drugs are being used as chemical restraints in
Texas. He
wants all SSRIs and neuroleptic drugs banned from use on children “The SSRIs are
extremely harmful and addictive; and can cause or exacerbate suicidal or
homicidal tendencies; withdrawal is painful and dangerous,” Breeding warns.
Dr Ann Blake Tracy is the Director
of the International Coalition for Drug Awareness, holds a doctorate in
biological psychology, and is a specialist in the adverse reactions to SSRI
medications. Tracy claims
the whole hypothesis of SSRIs is "backwards." She says the drugs increase
serotonin while decreasing the metabolism of serotonin, especially in the 7 to
10% of the population that studies have shown don't have the proper enzyme to
metabolize SSRIs in the first place, according to the Aug 22, 2004 Desert
Morning News.
Dr Tracy can recite hundreds of
horror stories involving violence by people taking the same drugs that
TeenScreen is marketing to more children.
She told the Morning News about,
“the professor on Prozac who bit her mother to death; the Stanford graduate on
Paxil who stabbed herself in the kitchen while her parents slept; the mother who
bludgeoned her son and then drank a can of Drano; and the 12-year-old girl who
strangled herself with a bungee cord she attached to a plant hanger on the
wall."
"Most of these drugs are not
approved for children, but it doesn't stop doctors from prescribing them,"
Tracy points
out.
Turning People Into Psychotic
Murderers
Besides causing suicide, enough
evidence now exists to prove that psychotropic drugs have played a major role in
the senseless acts of violence by school-age children in this country in recent
years.
Dr Breggin, is against the use of
psychotropic drugs in children, and has testified in civil and criminal cases
numerous times about the link between SSRIs and suicide and other acts of
violence.
On April
15, 2001, 16-year-old Cory Baadsgaard took
a rifle to his High School in Washington State and
held 23 classmates and a teacher hostage. Cory sat in jail for 14 months before
finally being released based on expert testimony by psychiatrists that his
behavior was an adverse reaction to the drugs he was prescribed.
Cory has no memory of his actions
at the school that day. 21 days before the event, he had been taken off Paxil
and prescribed a high dose of the drug Effexor.
Cory's father Jay told Insight
News, "They always talk about how the kids who do these things are the ones who
get picked on by the jocks and stuff, but Cory was a jock. He was on the varsity
basketball team, played football and golf, and was very popular in school.
Jay wants the media to warn people
about the dangers of putting kids on these drugs, "If Cory had been on PCP the
media would say 'Oh, he needs drug rehabilitation,' but because these were
prescribed medications they say 'Oh, it can't be that,' but now we know it can
be," he said.
"The morning that Cory went to
school and did what he did, my wife and I just knew that it had to be something
with the drugs," Jay reports. One of Cory's friends described the incident to
Jay, "Cory was yelling and then he just stopped, looked down and saw the gun in
his hand and woke up," he said.
Cory recently made an unlikely new
friend in Colorado, when
he met Columbine High School
shooting victim, Mark Taylor, who is suing the manufacturer of the
antidepressant that Eric Harris was on when he opened fire at Columbine.
Kelly Patricia OMeara interviewed
Mark Taylor, and recounted his description of the shooting incident in a report
for Insight on Sept 2, 2002.
Taylor told Kelly, "I was sitting
on a hill outside the school eating lunch with my best friend when Eric Harris
came over and started shooting me," Taylor recalled, "I was shot between seven
and 13 times. No one really knows the exact number because there were so many
bullet tracks. Most of the bullets just went right through me. After I was shot
I just lay there, playing dead, and could see others being shot,"
Taylor
recalled.
It has never been revealed if
Dylan Klebold was on any legal drugs at the time of the shootings, but an
autopsy revealed that Harris was on the psychotropic drug Luvox, a selective
serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI).
Taylor's
attitude toward the teen who nearly killed him is surprising. He told O Meara,
"I'm suing Solvay because I believe that Eric Harris did what he did because of
this drug."
Taylor's suit
claims the drug made Harris manic and psychotic and as a consultant in the suit,
Dr Tracy agrees. "All you have to do is read the Luvox package insert to see
that Eric's actions were due to an adverse reaction to this drug," she told
Insight News, "Show me a drug anywhere that has listed mania and psychosis as
frequent adverse reactions. That is what the insert says for Luvox. There is no
doubt in my mind that Luvox caused Eric Harris to commit these acts," she
explained.
Gary Null & Associates of
New York is
filming a documentary called “The Drugging of Our Children,” that will feature
interviews with both Cory Baadsgaard and Mark Taylor, and will chronicle the
long history of tragic events that have resulted from the use of these drugs on
children.
A little known fact is that a few
days before the Columbine tragedy, Eric Harris had been rejected by the Marine
Corps specifically because he was taking the drug Luvox.
In 2001, 18-year-old Jason
Hoffman, shot five students and teachers at a California High School, while
on the drugs Celexa and Effexor, and he too was rejected by the Navy one day
before he went on his rampage, according to the San Diego Union-Tribune.
In a letter to his mother, Hoffman
said, "I want people to know that what happened was not the real me, I was just
angry, maybe my medication. It was a fluke of the moment. The person was not the
true Jason Hoffman," he wrote.
On Oct 29,
2001, Jason Hoffman killed himself by
hanging from a vent screen in his jail cell, the Tribune reported.
Kip Kinkel was 15 on
May 21, 1998, when
he murdered his parents, and then went to Thurston High School in
Springfield,
OR where he shot and
killed 2 students and injured 22 more. Kinkel was on Ritalin and Prozac at the
time of the killings even though Prozac was not approved for pediatric use.
Seven years after the senseless
killings by Kinkel, on December 18,
2003, Eli Lilly sent letters to
British healthcare providers, warning that Prozac was not recommended for any
use in children.
14 year-old Elizabeth Bush was on
antidepressants when she took a gun to school and wounded another student in
Williamsport,
PA in 2001.
12-year-old Christopher Pittman
was on Zoloft when he shot his grandparents and set their house on fire, and
says his violence was caused by the drug he was. Before Zoloft, he had been on
Paxil.
According to court records, the
doctor who prescribed the drug to Christopher mentioned no problems in his
medical notes. A few days before the murders, the doctor wrote: "Lots of energy.
No plans to harm self. Not flying off the handle."
Christopher now sits in prison.
His father, Joe Pittman, testified
about the effects of the drugs on his son at the FDA Hearing and read a letter
Christopher wrote that described how he felt when he committed the murders,
"Through the whole thing, it was like watching your favorite TV show," he wrote,
"You know what is going to happen but you can't do anything to stop it."
Dr Tracy explains how this
happens. SSRIs suppress "the REM state or dream state [of sleep] ... These drugs
allow a person to be awake but at any time they can slip into the REM state.
This is why people often discuss how they couldn't tell the difference between
the dream and reality. These drugs are horribly damaging to the entire system,"
she warns.
Even the people closest to Jeff
Weise are at a loss to say what led to the deadly killing spree by Weise in
Minnesota, where the 16-year-old shot his grandfather, his companion, and then
went to the high school and shot 5 students, a teacher and a security guard
before killing himself. According to school employee, Gayle Downwind, Weise was
on Prozac at the time of the shootings.
Dr Tracy has consulted on many
cases where children engaged in violent behavior including a 15-year-old boy on
Zoloft who shot and killed a woman and is serving life in prison; a 17-year-old
boy on Paxil for three months who jumped off an overpass into the path of a
trailer truck; a 14-year-old girl prescribed Paxil to deal with the suicide of
her father (who was on Paxil before killing himself) drank Drano in a suicide
attempt; and a 16-year-old boy on Paxil who stabbed a woman over 60 times, drove
his car into a cement abutment in a failed suicide attempt, and is now serving
life in prison.
"In each of these cases,"
Tracy told
Insight News, "individuals close to them were shocked at the violent and
destructive behavior because it was so out of character for them."
Courts Starting to Get It
Drug companies are finally
starting to be held responsible for violent behavior associated with these
drugs. A jury in Cheyenne,
Wyoming
recently determined that Paxil, "can cause some individuals to commit suicide
and/or homicide." The jury decided Paxil caused Donald Schell to shoot his wife,
daughter and granddaughter before killing himself after being on the drug only
two days.
The jury allocated 80% of the
fault on Paxil drug maker GlaxoSmithKline and awarded the surviving family
members $8 million in damages.
On June 18,
2003, GlaxSmithKline issued a warning
to British physicians against the use of Paxil in children, acknowledging
failure of clinical trials "to demonstrate efficacy in major depressive
disorders and doubling the rate of reported adverse events - including suicidal
thoughts and suicide attempts - compared to placebo."
In Bismarck,
ND, 10 days after Ryan
Ehlis began taking Adderall, he shot and killed his 5-week-old baby and then
turned the gun on himself. He survived and was tried for the murder but was
acquitted after the Judge agreed with psychiatrists who testified that the
murder resulted solely from a psychotic state caused by the drug.
In February 2005, Canadian
regulators ordered Adderall off the market after the drug was linked to 20
sudden deaths and a dozen strokes. Of the 20 deaths, 14 were children.
There has been a lot written about
the increase in teen violence and school shootings but no one has identified a
common denominator in the lives of these kids with one exception, the drugs. If
we allow the Bush-backed marketing schemes to succeed in recruiting more kids as
customers for these dangerous drugs, according to Tracy, we had
better prepare for more of the same.
"We've got a nightmare on our
hands with these drugs, an absolute nightmare," she warns, "We've got kids on
these drugs that are ticking time bombs in every school in America."
"When all of this is over and we
count up the dead, we're going to be in shock," she adds.
Miamisburg OH
(Evelyn Pringle is an
investigative journalist focused on exposing government corruption)
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