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THE
DANGERS OF STIMULANT DRUGS GIVEN TO CHILDREN
Testimony Before the Subcommittee
on Oversight and Investigations Committee on Education and the
Workforce Peter R. Breggin, M.D., Director, International Center
for the Study of Psychiatry and Psychology
I appear today as Director of the
International Center for the Study of Psychiatry and Psychology
(ICSPP), and also on my own behalf as a practicing psychiatrist
and a parent.
Parents throughout the country
are being pressured and coerced by schools to give psychiatric
drugs to their children. Teachers, school psychologists, and administrators
commonly make dire threats about their inability to teach children
without medicating them. They sometimes suggest that only medication
can stave off a bleak future of delinquency and occupational failure.
They even call child protective services to investigate parents
for child neglect and they sometimes testify against parents in
court. Often the schools recommend particular physicians who favor
the use of stimulant drugs to control behavior.These stimulant
drugs include methylphenidate (Ritalin, Concerta, and Metadate)
or forms of amphetamine (Dexedrine and Adderall).
My purpose today is to provide
to this committee, parents, teachers, counselors and other concerned
adults a scientific basis for rejecting the use of stimulants
for the treatment of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
or for the control of behavior in the classroom or home.
I. ESCALATING RATES OF STIMULANT
PRESCRIPTION Stimulant drugs, including methylphenidate and amphetamine,
were first approved for the control of behavior in children during
the mid-1950s. Since then, there have been periodic attempts to
promote their usage, and periodic public reactions against the
practice. In fact, the first Congressional hearings critical of
stimulant medication were held in the early 1970s when an estimated
100,000-200,000 children were receiving these drugs. Since the
early 1990s, North America has turned to psychoactive drugs in
unprecedented numbers for the control of children. In November
1999, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) warned about
a record six-fold increase in Ritalin production between 1990
and 1995.
In 1995, the International Narcotics
Control Board (INCB), an agency of the World Health Organization,
deplored that "10 to 12 percent of all boys between the ages 6
and 14 in the United States have been diagnosed as having ADD
and are being treated with methylphenidate [Ritalin]." In March
1997, the board declared, "The therapeutic use of methylphenidate
is now under scrutiny by the American medical community; the INCB
welcomes this." The United States uses approximately 90% of the
world's Ritalin. The number of children on these drugs has continued
to escalate.
A recent study in Virginia indicated
that up to 20% of white boys in the fifth grade were receiving
stimulant drugs during the day from school officials. Another
study from North Carolina showed that 10% of children were receiving
stimulant drugs at home or in school. The rates for boys were
not disclosed but probably exceeded 15%. With 53 million children
enrolled in school, probably more than 5 million are taking stimulant
drugs.
A recent report in the Journal
of the American Medical Association by Zito and her colleagues
has demonstrated a three-fold increase in the prescription of
stimulants to 2-4 year old toddlers.
II. LEGAL ACTIONS Most recently,
four major civil suits have been brought against Novartis, the
manufacturer of Ritalin, for fraud in the over-promotion of ADHD
and Ritalin. The suits also charge Novartis with conspiring with
the American Psychiatric Association and with CHADD, a parents'
group that receives money from the pharmaceutical industry and
lobbies on their behalf. Two of the suits are national class action
suits, one is a California class action and one is a California
business fraud action. The attorneys involved, including Richard
Scruggs, Donald Hildre, and C. Andrew Waters have experience and
resources generated in suits involving tobacco and asbestos. That
they have joined forces to take on Novartis, the American Psychiatric
Association, and CHADD indicates a growing wave of dissatisfaction
with drugging millions of children. The suits and the contents
of the complaints are based on information first published in
my book, Talking Back to Ritalin (1998), and I am a medical expert
in these cases.
III. THE DANGERS OF STIMULANT MEDICATION
Stimulant medications are far more dangerous than most practitioners
and published experts seem to realize. I summarized many of these
effects in my scientific presentation on the mechanism of action
and adverse effects of stimulant drugs to the November 1998 NIH
Consensus Development Conference on the Diagnosis and Treatment
of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, and then published
more detailed analyses in several scientific sources.
It is important to note that the
Drug Enforcement Administration, and all other drug enforcement
agencies worldwide, classify methylphenidate (Ritalin) and amphetamine
(Dexedrine and Adderall) in the same Schedule II category as methamphetamine,
cocaine, and the most potent opiates and barbiturates. Schedule
II includes only those drugs with the very highest potential for
addiction and abuse. Animals and humans cross-addict to methylphenidate,
amphetamine and cocaine. These drugs affect the same three neurotransmitter
systems and the same parts of the brain.
It should have been no surprise
when Nadine Lambert presented data at the Consensus Development
Conference indicating that prescribed stimulant use in childhood
predisposes the individual to cocaine abuse in young adulthood.
Furthermore, their addiction and abuse potential is based on the
capacity of these drugs to drastically and permanently change
brain chemistry. Studies of amphetamine show that short-term clinical
doses produce brain cell death.
Similar studies of methylphenidate
show long-lasting and sometimes permanent changes in the biochemistry
of the brain. All stimulants impair growth not only by suppressing
appetite but also by disrupting growth hormone production. This
poses a threat to every organ of the body, including the brain,
during the child's growth. The disruption of neurotransmitter
systems adds to this threat. These drugs also endanger the cardiovascular
system and commonly produce many adverse mental effects, including
depression. Too often stimulants become gateway drugs to illicit
drugs.
As noted, the use of prescription
stimulants predisposes children to cocaine and nicotine abuse
in young adulthood. Stimulants even more often become gateway
drugs to additional psychiatric medications. Stimulant-induced
over-stimulation, for example, is often treated with addictive
or dangerous sedatives, while stimulant-induced depression is
often treated with dangerous, unapproved antidepressants. As the
child's emotional control breaks down due to medication effects,
mood stabilizers may be added. Eventually, these children end
up on four or five psychiatric drugs at once and a diagnosis of
bipolar disorder by the age of eight or ten.
IV. THE EDUCATOINAL EFFECTS OF
DIAGNOSING CHILDREN WITH ADHD It is important for the Education
Committee to understand that the ADD/ADHD diagnosis was developed
specifically for the purpose of justifying the use of drugs to
subdue the behaviors of children in the classroom. The content
of the diagnosis in the 1994 Diagnostic and Statistical Manual
of Mental Disorders of the American Psychiatric Association shows
that it is specifically aimed at suppressing unwanted behaviors
in the classroom.
The diagnosis is divided into three
types: hyperactivity, impulsivity, and inattention. Under hyperactivity,
the first two (and most powerful) criteria are "often fidgets
with hands or feet or squirms in seat" and "often leaves seat
in classroom or in other situations in which remaining seated
is expected." Clearly, these two "symptoms" are nothing more nor
less than the behaviors most likely to cause disruptions in a
large, structured classroom. Under impulsivity, the first criteria
is "often blurts out answers before questions have been completed"
and under inattention, the first criteria is "often fails to give
close attention to details or makes careless mistakes in schoolwork,
work, or other activities."
Once again, the diagnosis itself,
formulated over several decades, leaves no question concerning
its purpose: to redefine disruptive classroom behavior into a
disease. The ultimate aim is to justify the use of medication
to suppress or control the behaviors. Advocates of ADHD and stimulant
drugs have claimed that ADHD is associated with changes in the
brain. In fact, both the NIH Consensus Development Conference
(1998) and the American Academy of Pediatrics (2000) report on
ADHD have confirmed that there is no known biological basis for
ADHD. Any brain abnormalities in these children are almost certainly
caused by prior exposure to psychiatric medication.
V. HOW THE MEDICATIONS WORK- Hundreds
of animal studies and human clinical trials leave no doubt about
how the medication works. First, the drugs suppress all spontaneous
behavior. In healthy chimpanzees and other animals, this can be
measured with precision as a reduction in all spontaneous or self-generated
activities. In animals and in humans, this is manifested in a
reduction in the following behaviors:
(1) exploration and curiosity;
(2) socializing, and
(3) playing.
Second, the drugs increase obsessive-compulsive
behaviors, including very limited, overly focused activities.
VI. WHAT IS REALLY HAPPENING Children
become diagnosed with ADHD when they are in conflict with the
expectations or demands of parents and/or teachers. The ADHD diagnosis
is simply a list of the behaviors that most commonly cause conflict
or disturbance in classrooms, especially those that require a
high degree of conformity.
By diagnosing the child with ADHD,
blame for the conflict is placed on the child. Instead of examining
the context of the child's life, why the child is restless or
disobedient in the classroom or home, the problem is attributed
to the child's faulty brain. Both the classroom and the family
are exempt from criticism or from the need to improve, and instead
the child is made the source of the problem. The medicating of
the child then becomes a coercive response to conflict in which
the weakest member of the conflict, the child, is drugged into
a more compliant or submissive state. The production of drug-induced
obsessive-compulsive disorder in the child especially fits the
needs for compliance in regard to otherwise boring or distressing
schoolwork.
VII. CONCLUSIONS AND OBSERVATIONS
Many observers have concluded that our schools and our families
are failing to meet the needs of our children in a variety of
ways. Focusing on schools, many teachers feel stressed by classroom
conditions and ill-prepared to deal with emotional problems in
the children. The classroom themselves are often too large, there
are too few teaching assistants and volunteers to help out, and
the instructional materials are often outdated and boring in comparison
to the modern technologies that appeal to children. By diagnosing
and drugging our children, we shift blame for the problem from
our social institutions and ourselves as adults to the relatively
powerless children in our care.
We harm our children by failing
to identify and to meet their real educational needs for better
prepared teachers, more teacher- and child-friendly classrooms,
more inspiring curriculum, and more engaging classroom technologies.
At the same time, when we diagnosis and drug our children, we
avoid facing critical issues about educational reform. In effect,
we drug the children who are signaling the need for reform, and
force all children into conformity with our bureaucratic systems.
Finally, when we diagnose and drug our children, we disempower
ourselves as adults. While we may gain momentary relief from guilt
by imagining that the fault lies in the brains of our children,
ultimately we undermine our ability to make the necessary adult
interventions that our children need. We literally become bystanders
in the lives of our children.
It is time to reclaim our children
from this false and suppressive medical approach. I applaud those
parents who have the courage to refuse to give stimulants to their
children and who, instead, attempt to identify and to meet their
genuine needs in the school, home, and community.
SCIENTIFIC SOURCES This report
draws on hundreds of published scientific studies.
THERE IS NO MEDICAL ADVICE HERE!
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