15 March 2004
Issue 85
10 Reasons to Be Concerned About Psychiatry in Our Schools
by John Breeding, Ph.D.
http://www.freedommag.org/english/vol36i1/page12.htm
Our schools are in bad shape - all too often transforming self-directed, highly motivated learners
into apathetic, other-dependent young people who hate school. The result: increasing illiteracy,
low academic standards and performance, and emotional and behavioral problems.
Something dark and dangerous is at work, creating this in our schools - something behind what
comes to mind for most parents who, watching the evening news, see only the surface evils of
sexual predation, gang violence or hoodlums selling illicit drugs in the corner of the schoolyard.
The underlying danger is biological psychiatry, the conduit for stigmatizing and drugging our
children.
The systematic killing of children's love of learning is calamitous. What follows are 10 reasons
to sound the alarm about psychiatry in schools:
1. An estimated 9 million U.S. schoolchildren take psychiatric drugs today. This number represents
a greater than 700 percent increase in the last decade.
2. Psychiatrists cannot document one positive, long-term effect of these drugs on learning,
academic performance or social behavior.
3. Parents and schools are inundated with incomplete, misleading and false information about
psychiatric diagnoses and psychiatric drugs. The psychiatric diagnoses for which these drugs are
prescribed, including Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), have not been
scientifically validated as real diseases.
4. With psychiatrists at the marketing forefront, 90 percent of the world's methylphenidate*
production is consumed in the United States - mostly by schoolchildren.
5. School personnel pressure parents to have their children evaluated and placed on psychiatric
drugs. Lawmakers must clarify that this is illegal; parents should know that such psychiatric
coercion should be barred from their childrens schools.
6. Psychiatric drugs harm young bodies, including cardiovascular, endocrine, respiratory and
central nervous systems.
7. Psychiatric drugs cause death. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) adverse reaction report
data include 186 methylphenidate-related deaths during the 1990s, mostly cardiovascular-related.
These voluntary FDA reports represent only a fraction (experts estimate between 1 and 10 percent)
of the actual incidents.
8. Psychiatric drugs are consistently linked to violence in the schools. Research shows that
aggressive and injurious behavior toward self or others can result from the drugs, especially the
so-called Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRIs) - while taking them or during
withdrawal.
9. Psychiatric drugs increase the risk of suicide, self-mutilation and other forms of violence.
For such reasons, one widely prescribed antidepressant, paroxetine, has been banned by the state
of Connecticut for prescription to anyone under the age of 18, and the government of the United
Kingdom has banned all but one of the SSRIs for children under 18. Canada and Ireland have
warned doctors not to prescribe paroxetine to children. Additionally, as reported on
July 15, 2003, in the Toronto Star, paroxetine's manufacturer admitted in a statement today that
studies it conducted showed the drug also didn't appear to work in children who were taking it.
In fact, authorities cited harmful outcomes from child use, including self-harm and suicidal
behavior.
10. Resources are wasted on biopsychiatric methods to manipulate behavior, diverting attention
and resources from ways to meet children's genuine educational needs. Proven methods do exist
to help children with learning challenges.
A psychologist for 20 years, John Breeding has been involved in efforts to change mental health
policy through writing, speaking, networking with others and initiating legislative reform.
His recent books include The Wildest Colts Make the Best Horses and True Nature and Great
Misunderstandings.
In recent years, he has focused on helping to change the way psychiatrists and their
supporters in schools and state social service agencies diagnose children with
"Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder" and other supposed maladies. His Web site,
www.wildestcolts.com, has information on
issues related to this article, and his citizens group, "Texans for Safe Education," actively
supports legislation opposing psychiatric drugging of children.
*The generic name for a stimulant widely prescribed to schoolchildren which is chemically similar
to amphetamines and cocaine, and which the Drug Enforcement Administration classifies in the same
category as those tightly controlled substances.
Dr. Breeding was recently presented with an award for his work by the Citizens Commission on
Human Rights at their 34th Anniversary and Human Rights Awards celebrations in Los Angeles on
15th February. You can read more about that here:
Stars Shine for Human Rights
http://www.freedommag.org/english/LA/issue07/page02.htm
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