Parents,
Educators Fight "Legal" Drugs in Schools
An increasing number of school boards, public officials
and parents are challenging intrusive psychiatric programs
and widespread drugging in schools, and urging a return
to academic solutions as the first priority.
By Cory Brennan
Robert Parks* is a bright, active boy with a mind and will
of his own. But in his early school years, he had trouble
adjusting to a classroom environment. From the day Robert
started school in the San Fernando Valley, his parents received
reports that their son was running around the classroom,
not listening to the teacher and altercating with other
students.
Within a few weeks, a school official called the Parks to
attend an "Individualized Educational Program (IEP)"
meeting about Robert with the school nurse, several mental
health workers, the principal and teacher. As the parents
soon learned, the IEP group had already decided that Robert
needed psychiatric treatment. The Parks, not having experienced
these same alleged behavior problems at home, disagreed.
The
school continued to provide reports on Robert. The parents
investigated, finding logical explanations for their son's
behavior. A boy he hit had a reputation as a bully. Robert
got upset when his desk was moved, but no one had bothered
to inform him they were going to move it, or why. Robert
teased his younger sister. The Parks did not consider these
actions signs of "mental illness," but rather
common childhood behavior they had handled at home with
appropriate communication or discipline. To them the school
was looking for an easy way to control their son. School
officials even suggested putting Robert into "special
education" while admitting he was of at least normal
intelligence and was not having problems with his schoolwork.
When
the Parks family moved to a different district, Robert's
school records, including a psychological profile, followed
him to his new school where officials were imbued with the
idea the boy was mentally ill. Thus labeled, school officials
began pressuring the Parks to put Robert on psychiatric
drugs, while continuing to have psychological evaluations
done on him, at times without the parents' knowledge or
consent.
"They assessed and reassessed him like some kind of
lab rat. The psychological abuse inflicted on him is beyond
belief," Robert's father told Freedom. "For years
he was always anxious to go to school to learn and make
new friends. Now it scares him. He was consistently followed
with a pad and pen."
Deteriorating
State
When the school principal told the Parks he would call social
services if they did not put Robert on a drug, they gave
in and took their son to a psychiatrist. With no medical
examination and after asking the boy several questions from
a book, the psychiatrist, according to Robert's father,
told them their son was "hyper" and prescribed
a stimulant drug frequently given for so-called Attention
Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD).
Once on the drug, Robert experienced drastic effects. "He
lost one forth of his body weight in one month and his sleep
patterns were disrupted," his father said. New, bad
behavior reports on Robert poured in. The psychiatrist's
solution was to increase the drug dosage in spite of the
side effects. The Parks, alarmed at their son's deteriorating
state, chose instead to put a stop to the drugging.
The school's response was to suspend Robert, and to give
the parents their only options: continue the psychiatric
"treatment" or take Robert to a special school
located in another town altogether. The Parks decided to
do neither and instead began to home school their son. He
has been receiving an education ever since without incident,
free of the psychological and psychiatric scrutiny, assessments
and drugs that plagued his limited school years.
"The efforts of various psychologists and psychiatrists
combined with the school to deprive my son of the education
he deserves," Robert's father said. "They forced
him out of the school and spread vicious rumors around this
small town in an effort to keep him out of school, church
and other community functions."
"My son has hurt no one, caused no damage to anything
and is generally a happy camper who reads two grade levels
beyond his own," he said. "I fear the next 'diagnosis'
will be 'acute depression.' Nothing could be further from
the truth - that is, until they get done with him."
Meanwhile
Robert does not have the right to be educated in public
school unless his parents agree to allow the administration
of powerful drugs - drugs which, by observation and experience,
were harmful to their son. The Parks can't help but wonder
why the public schools are in the business of diagnosing
children, or why school officials feel that drugs are the
only way to control students.
An
isolated instance? Unfortunately not. Approximately six
million children in the United States are classified as
"hyperactive", "attention deficit" or
having other behavioral or learning "illnesses"
for which they are being drugged. The Citizens Commission
on Human Rights, a watchdog organization founded by the
Church of Scientology in 1969 to investigate and expose
psychiatric abuse, has received thousands of reports of
abuse and harm of children through the psychiatric system.
Many of these children first found their way into the mental
health system at their public school.
An
increasing number of school boards and public officials
across the United States are challenging the intrusive involvement
of psychiatry in the schools, and urging a return to academic
solutions as the first priority for school problems faced
by youth.
Schools
as Mental Health Centers
One question that looms in many school districts is what
the parent's role, versus the school's role, should be in
determining medical or mental health treatment for children.
The question desperately calls for more public debate and
research. Yet many public schools in California are on the
fast track to act not only as partners with local mental
health centers, but as mental health providers themselves
by placing such centers directly on the school campus. Additionally,
video tapes, assessment tests and brochures are sent to
schools in increasing volume to "train" teachers
and administrators how to "recognize mental illness"
in their students. "Incredibly, this trend over the
past few decades to move schools out of the learning business
into the mental health an behavior modifications business
has gained momentum in recent years," said Cassandra
Aeruback, spokesperson for the Citizens Commission on Human
Rights in Los Angeles. "Now the problem has reached
a point that many people have woken up and want to try to
undo the damage. Some progress is finally being made toward
that end."
One
of the concerns involves several bills recently presented
for consideration in the California legislature requesting
hundreds of millions in funding for school mental health
clinics, mental health training for teachers, and other
related mental health services in the schools.
Yet according to allegations in a class action lawsuit filed
by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) against the
State of California last year, public schools in the state
do not have the funding necessary to provide the "bare
necessities" to a large number of poor and minority
students. The lawsuit describes schools with classrooms
where ceilings are falling and rats abound, where students
have no textbooks and no usable bathrooms. To compound the
state of affairs, a Rand study published in 2000 found that
California students between 1990 and 1996 posted the lowest
scores in the nation compared to their socio-economic counterparts.
In
Los Angles County alone, however, at least six schools have
mental heath centers on campus and plans are in the works
for more. Other public schools "partner" with
local mental health centers. In some cases, this means that
privately owned mental health centers send representatives
to the school to actively solicit for prospective patients.
These private mental health facilities are assured government
funds to service children from a particular school district,
creating a clear financial interest in getting as many children
as possible referred to them.
Diagnostic
Fraud
At the root of this troubling trend is the premise for the
"ADHD" diagnosis - one with no provable scientific
foundation. Referrals of students to psychiatric treatment
are based on a loose set of diagnostic criteria called fraudulent
by a growing number of child experts.
Diagnoses of ADHD and other childhood mental health labels,
including "math disorders" and the catch-all "conduct
disorders," continue to skyrocket with younger and
younger children being drugged for "treatment."
In fact, a study in the Journal of the American Medical
Association in February of 2000 reported a 200 to 300 percent
increase in antidepressants and stimulants given to children
age 3 and under. The ADHD diagnosis is under increasing
scrutiny, particularly following a national conference in
1998 which resulted in the consensus that "ADHD"
is bereft of any scientific evidence and not valid as a
diagnosis. As stated in the Report of the National Institutes
of Health's Consensus Conference on ADHD. "We do not
have an independent valid test for ADHD, and there are no
data to indicate that ADHD is due to brain malfunction.
Further research to establish the validity of the disorder
continues to be a problem."
Dr. William Carey, who addressed the consensus conference,
stated, "What is now most often described as ADHD in
the United States appears to be a set of normal behavioral
variations
"
Nothing
has evolved since to lend scientific credibility to "ADHD",
and despite the lack of evidence validating it - or other
mental disorders diagnosed in children - schools have been
inundated for years with information about how to "recognize
ADHD" and are encouraged to refer children for treatment.
Documented
Dangers
As a result of such propaganda, stimulant prescriptions
for American children to "treat" ADHD have increased
several hundred percent in the last decade. Now, concern
about the fraudulent "ADHD" diagnoses and drugging
is catching up - including studies that not only discredit
any efficacy of stimulant drug "treatment" but
report distressing facts about their physiological effects.
That evidence includes a report in the August 22-29, 2001
issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association
on research conducted by Nora Volkow, M.D. Researchers,
according to Dr. Volkow, "were surprised as hell to
find evidence that [Ritalin] is more potent than cocaine.
We didn't expect this
The data clearly shows that
the notion that Ritalin is a weak stimulant is completely
incorrect." Researchers acknowledged that the long-term
effects of chemical changes in the brain caused by methylphenidate
(the chemical name of Ritalin) are unknown, although the
drug has been used on children for several decades.
Indicators have existed for some time that stimulant use
causes brains shrinkage, yet "Until now, possible effects
of [stimulant treatment] on brain development
have
not been investigated systematically" read a report
in Doctors for Disaster Preparedness Newsletter of September
2001. A study released from the University of Buffalo in
New York in November 2001 said research "suggests that
[Ritalin] has the potential for causing long-lasting changes
in brain cell structure and function." Reports also
exist of psychotic symptoms, heart failure and stoke related
to stimulant use in children.
Dangers also include cancer. According to Samuel Epstein,
M.D., emeritus professor of environmental medicine at the
University of Illinois School of Public Health in Chicago,
the American Society of Pediatrics "ignores clear evidence
of Ritalin's cancer risks of which parents, teachers and
school nurses, besides most pediatricians and psychiatrists,
will remain uninformed and unaware." Dr. Epstein, according
to an October 2001 report of the Cancer Prevention Coalition,
is especially concerned because of the "escalating
incidence of childhood cancer, by some 35% over the last
few decades."
Psychiatric
drugs, regardless, are in increasing use on children. Many
of the reasons for prescribing them - such as shyness, dieting,
daydreaming, or adolescent discontent, were considered a
part of the normal process of growing up in past generations,
subject to discipline and communication. Yet parents find
themselves under increasing pressure to medicate Johnny
for problems ranging from difficulties with math to trouble
with girls.
National
Trend
Part of the trend most troubling parents is that school
teachers and administrators are making the diagnoses.
When Yolanda Guzman's first grade teacher in Los Angeles
told her parents she needed to be on Ritalin for behavior
problems, the girl's doctor disagreed. Due to the insistence
of the teacher, the doctor relented and prescribed the drug
for Yolanda, though refused to renew the prescription, saying
the girl did not have ADHD. When the family moved to Rosamond,
Yolanda's mental health records followed her, and the Guzmans
were sent to College Community Services where a social worker
reportedly told them if they did not keep Yolanda on stimulants,
all three of their children would be taken away from them.
Fearing the threat, Mrs. Guzman took Yolanda to a doctor
in Los Angeles, who refused to prescribe stimulants. When
Yolanda had an asthma attack, another doctor told the Guzmans
that their daughter could not be on stimulants as they would
react badly with her asthma medication. Yet the Guzmans
say the director of College Health continued to insist Yolanda
be on a stimulant. The Guzmans continue their battle to
keep their daughter off drugs.
Similar battles are being fought all across the nation.
When
some of Danny Grant's teachers at his Sacramento school
were unhappy with his behavior and study habits, school
officials said he had ADHD and pressured the parents to
get him on a stimulant drug. Though they had reservations,
the Grants dutifully took their son to a doctor who prescribed
Ritalin. The doctor told them Danny would experience no
bad reactions and the drug was not addictive. But Danny
almost immediately had severe physical and emotional reactions,
including vomiting, uncontrollable crying, and inability
to eat or sleep. Alarmed, the parents took him off the drug,
not telling the school so they would not be pressured to
put home back on.
Michael and Jill Carroll of Albany, New York told officials
at their son's school they were going to take their son
off Ritalin because he was having side effects that concerned
them, including eating only one meal per day and sleeping
only a few hours per night - loss of appetite and insomnia
being common side effects of stimulants. The school's response
was to report them to child protective services, which promptly
placed them on a statewide list of alleged child abusers.
The Carrolls risked having their child taken away from them
if they stopped the drug.
The
examples go on and on - hundreds of similar cases have been
reported to chapters of the Citizens Commission on Human
Rights throughout the United States, as well as to child
and family advocacy groups. According to the reports of
parents and education workers, the instances of such pressure
and abuse number at least in the tens of thousands.
Encouraging
Signs
The implications of schools and social services conspiring
to force parents to drug a child or risk having that child
be refused an education - or even taken away from them altogether
- are alarming authorities nationwide.
And there are some encouraging signs that this alarm is
turning into action. Since 1999 school boards and legislators
in eight states have passed resolutions or laws demanding
schools return to proven academic methods for dealing with
learning problems. Connecticut, in a unanimous legislative
vote in July 2001, was the first state to make it unlawful
for any school teachers or counselors to recommend psychiatric
drugs for any child.
Education
officials, teachers, doctors and parents are also increasingly
recognizing the wide range of other causes that can underlie
behavior and learning problems for children. These causes
include food allergies; insufficient or poor nutrition -
such as consuming too much sugar or unnutritious fast foods;
chemicals in the environment such as pesticides; or high
levels of lead, mercury or other substances toxic to humans.
Many schools are showing dramatic results with the academic
approach alone. One such school is Bennett-Kew Elementary
School in Inglewood, where reading performance was raised
from the 3rd to the 50th percentile in California. They
have used phonics instruction and other proven educational
methods to teach children, with the belief that no child,
regardless of his circumstances or socio-economic background,
is impossible to teach. Though 78 percent of the students
in the school were classified as low income, Bennett-Kew
Elementary has been one of the highest performers in Los
Angeles County for the past 20 years.
Some schools are doing something right.
A
growing number of parents and educators are asking whether
we shouldn't stop the drugging, and instead find out what
successful schools are doing - and implement their proven
solutions across the boards.