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Lawmakers Try to Curb Stimulant Coercion in Schools By Todd Zwillich WASHINGTON (Reuters Health) - Lawmakers said Tuesday that they would move forward with a bill to prevent school personnel from requiring students with some behavior problems to take medications as a precondition for attending classes.[Fred A. Baughman Jr., MD: that such a bill is being considered says parents have been and are being robbed of the right to control the emotional and behavioral lives of their children. Nor are these medical problems; such children are medically/physically normal.] Members of House Education and Workforce Committee said that they would take up a measure intended to end coercion in the case of parents with children who have attention deficit disorder and related problems.[Fred A. Baughman Jr., MD: "end coercion." Yes indeed, coercion is taking place and it is on the rise in schools acxross the land] Some parents have claimed that school personnel threatened to remove their child from class unless the child began taking behavior-modifying stimulant drugs like Ritalin.[Fred A. Baughman Jr., MD: For school personnel with no medical training this is a "power trip". "Power corrupts--absolute power corrupts absolutely." This psychiatric drugging of the NORMAL children of America is about money/profit, and about power.] The bill, called the Child Medication Safety Act, requires states to enact policies prohibiting the practice as a condition of receiving federal education dollars. The House passed a more limited version of the bill last week as part of a special education authorization bill. Lawmakers said Tuesday that they would soon push a broader version of the bill to apply to all public schools. Rep. Michael N. Castle, R-Del., an Education subcommittee chair, said that Ritalin and related stimulants like Adderall often help control disruptive behavior in children with attention deficit problems. "Parents, however, should never be forced to decide between getting their child into school and keeping their child off of potentially harmful drugs. Schools should never presume to know the medication needs of a child," he said. Rep. Lynn Woolsey, D-Calif., agreed, saying that parents should have "the final word in deciding if their child should take a drug like Ritalin."[Fred A. Baughman Jr., MD: And any psychiatric drug, for the simple reason that there is no such thing as a psychiatric disease, all children who are deemed troubled, troublesome are medically normal. To call them "diseased" "chemically imbalanced" is a lie--medical malpractice.] Several states, including Connecticut, Minnesota, Illinois, and Virginia, have already passed laws barring schools from demanding that children take anti-hyperactivity medications to attend class. Several parents alleging coercive treatment at the hands of school personnel have testified before Congress in the last year. "Parents are losing their right to choose," said Katherine Bryson, a Republican State Representative from Utah. But one witness testifying at a subcommittee hearing cautioned that the bill was unnecessary and could stifle teachers, who often are the first to identify potential mental problems in children. Psychiatrist Dr. Lance Clawson told the committee that reports of schools unduly influencing parents are anecdotal. "There's not reliable evidence that such a practices regularly occur or that this is a pervasive problem," he said. "Once we start sanctioning schools from bringing up their concerns, we could be creating further barriers" to mental health treatment for children, added Clawson, who testified on behalf of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.[Fred A. Baughman Jr., MD: Clawson and the AACAP should be asked whether or not there is proof that a single psychiatric condition/diagnosis is an actual brain/medical abnormality. In fact, none are...the children are normal, there is no "chemical imbalance" there is no rational, scientific basis for prescribing a "chemical balancer" a psychiatric drug] The Senate has not yet acted on either version of the bill. |