National Education Association
National Education Association

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

A New Drug Controversy

I'm working on a feature for NEA Today about a drug problem in schools. Not pot, but drugs prescribed for students diagnosed with bipolar disease.

The problem is that diagnosing bipolar disease may be much harder in children than in adults, and some of these drugs can have serious side-effects.

Frontline aired a strong documentary on this topic, and the New Yorker ran an article with a similar warning message.

The New York Times reported last year that these drugs, called "atypical antipsychotics," are being prescribed to half a million children in the United States. The Times analyzed records in Minnesota, which the Times says is the only state to require that drug companies publicly report payments to doctors. They found that psychiatrists who took the most money from drug companies also tended to prescribe the drugs more.

Of course, that's not proof that the money led them to prescribe more drugs. The payments are generally for speaking at doctors' seminars, and the companies could simply be choosing those who already prescribe their drugs to do the speaking -- that's the explanation given by a drug company representative in the article. (This explanation is not very comforting, though, since nobody's paying doctors who don't prescribe these drugs to speak about why they don't.)

The strangest thing about this Times story is some comments from psychiatrists -- experts in hidden and unconscious motives -- who deny that money could influence them.

But I'm not looking to make my article a polemic. I'm sure there are arguments on the other side and I'd like to hear them. (I swear, nobody's paying me on either side.)

If any readers have experience with kids taking these drugs, good or bad, I would appreciate hearing from you!
--Alain Jehlen (ajehlen@nea.org)

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1 Comments:

At October 5, 2008 3:59 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

I read your article in the NEA Today magazine and I have a suggestion for maybe at least some of the students acting up in school. I am a Teacher's Assistant and have been for 30 years. I also have an allergic son who is now 33 yrs old and has grown out of his allergies. However, as a young child, he would get hyper and uncontrolable and then would have a down period. At times I wondered if he autism or something. Then I found out about Dr.David Morris in LaCross, WI. He is an allergist that treats with sublingual drops.
He tested my son for foods and found out that he was allergic to sugar, food coloring, wheat, milk, rye, etc. When he gave a few drops of the offending to my son, he would react immediately by getting out of control, then, one drop to counteract brought him back to normal. He prescribed drops which we gave him sublingually daily. As he got better, the drops got weaker and eventually he didn't have to take them at all. The fact that this treatment transformed his behavior was astonishing. My parents and I and later my youngest son took the drops for allergies also. My parents' dentist confided in them that their son was out of bounds and they could do nothing to help him and my folks sent them to Allergy Assoc., also. They reported the same results. If you were to contact Dr. Morris I think you may be able to change the lives of some students by reporting on this. You can reache him at:Allergy Associates of La Crosse, Ltd. Just google him.

 

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