Don't Do Drugs! Here take this.

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Mental Illness in Kids: The Surprising Warning Signs

This is my 1000th post to Drugging Children. And with that I post a warning to parents. Don't trust these people with your kids mental health. The really just want to get them into the system, hooked on meds, labeled, make the job of the teachers easier, and guarantee themselves some business.

This is the kind of propaganda they will use to sucker new parents into the scam.


Mental Illness in Kids: The Surprising Warning Signs

Few parents are prepared to recognize symptoms of mental health problems in their child. Do you know what to look for?

Few shrinks are prepared to recognize anything real in kids too. So don't feel bad.

Monday, May 30, 2011

Haunts: Florida has a drug problem

Haunts: Florida has a drug problem

The State of Florida, the so-called Sunshine State, has a drug problem, a drug crisis actually. The State seems hooked on psychotropic drugs for children. And not just any children. The most vulnerable children. Foster children. Children in prison. Children in various forms and modes of `custody’.

Needless Antibiotics Often Doled Out to Asthmatic Kids

Pediatric asthma patients are nearly twice as likely to be prescribed an unnecessary antibiotic, compared with other pediatric patients, during an office or emergency department visit, recent studies revealed.

Needless Antibiotics Often Doled Out to Asthmatic Kids

Are american children to be used in medical experiments to test anthrax vaccine?

The highly controversial and potentially lethal anthrax vaccine may be tested on US children if the federal government gets its way. Although adverse event reports related to the vaccine among adult test subjects have included hospitalization, disability and even death, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) is exploring the possibility of testing the vaccine on children.

Are American children to be used in medical experiments to test anthrax vaccine?

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Children under six on anti-depressants

THE number of children aged six and under being prescribed anti-depressants has soared by almost 50 per cent since the federal government pledged to investigate the issue, new figures show.

Children under six on anti-depressants

Creating juvenile zombies, Florida-style

They’re children of the new Florida ethic. Zombie kids warehoused on the cheap in the state’s juvenile lock-ups. Kept quiet, manageable and addled senseless by great dollops of anti-psychotic drugs.

Creating juvenile zombies, Florida-style

Drugging our kids on anti-depressants

THE number of children aged six and under being prescribed anti-depressants has soared by almost 50 per cent since the federal government pledged to investigate the issue, new figures show.

Drugging our kids on anti-depressants

Saturday, May 28, 2011

$500 Million Obama Administration Program Will Help Kids 'Sit Still' in Kindergarten

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius told CNSNews.com on Wednesday that the administration's new $500 million early learning initiative is designed to deal with children from birth onward to prevent such problems as 5-year olds who "can't sit still" in a kindergarten classroom.

$500 Million Obama Administration Program Will Help Kids 'Sit Still' in Kindergarten

STOP Drugging the Children



Created on May 25, 2011 using FlipShare.

I'm sorry.

Drugging kids for parents' relief called abusive

If the kids become too much to handle, slip 'em a little cold medicine. It's an often-repeated joke -- or advice -- that parents share on the playground or on Twitter and Facebook pages.

Drugging kids for parents' rhttp://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gifelief called abusive

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Drugging the Vulnerable: Atypical Antipsychotics in Children and the Elderly

Drugging the Vulnerable: Atypical Antipsychotics in Children and the Elderly

Pharmaceutical companies have recently paid out the largest legal settlements in U.S. history — including the largest criminal fines ever imposed on corporations — for illegally marketing antipsychotic drugs. The payouts totaled more than $5 billion. But the worst costs of the drugs are being borne by the most vulnerable patients: children and teens in psychiatric hospitals, foster care and juvenile prisons, as well as elderly people in nursing homes. They are medicated for conditions for which the drugs haven't been proven safe or effective — in some cases, with death known as a known possible outcome.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Bill Gates says vaccines can help reduce world population

Bill Gates says vaccines can help reduce world population

This statement by Bill Gates was not made with any hesitation, stuttering or other indication that it might have been a mistake. It appears to have been a deliberate, calculated part of a well developed and coherent presentation.

Little people, lots of pills: Experts debate medicating kids

Americans have been led to believe -- by their doctors, by advertisers and by the pharmaceutical industry -- that there is a pill to cure just about anything that ails them. This week, the networks of CNN go deep into the politics and the pills.

Little people, lots of pills: Experts debate medicating kids

Zoloft Birth Defect Lawsuits

Use of the SSRI antidepressant Zoloft during pregnancy has been linked to an increased risk of serious and potentially life-threatening health problems for babies, including a risk of heart defects, persistent pulmonary hypertension in newborns (PPHN), lung defects, abdominal defects, cranial defects and other malformations.

Zoloft Birth Defect Lawsuits

Some Dentists Reluctant to Treat Kids on Medicaid: Study

Undercover research in Illinois reveals that dentists are far more willing to provide emergency care to children with private insurance than to kids with public insurance such as Medicaid.

Some Dentists Reluctant to Treat Kids on Medicaid: Study

Dosed in juvie jail: Drug firms pay state-hired doctors

In Florida's juvenile jails, psychiatrists entrusted with diagnosing and prescribing drugs for wayward children have taken huge speaker fees from drug makers - companies that profit handsomely when doctors put kids on antipsychotic pills.

Dosed in juvie jail: Drug firms pay state-hired doctors

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Friday, May 20, 2011

Scientists uncover basis for drug resistance in common childhood cancer

Scientists uncover basis for drug resistance in common childhood cancer

US scientists say they have worked out why acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) - the most common form of childhood cancer - can come back after treatment.

Is it ADHD or just inattention?’

Is it ADHD or just inattention?’

Dr. Marcia Eckerd will explain how to differentiate between attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and rambunctious child's play, or a child who just doesn't like to pay attention, during a “Speak Up for Kids” talk on Wednesday, May 25, from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at the Black Rock Branch Library, 2705 Fairfield Ave., Bridgeport.

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Dr. Oz Show - The Four Things Drug Companies Don't Want You to Know



How much do you think they were paid to sign off on this?

Study Finds No Risk of Death from Ritalin, Adderall, Other ADHD Drugs

The findings of a new study failed to find any correlation between the potential side effects of Ritalin, Adderall and other Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) medications and an increased risk of death in children.

Unborn babies given diabetes drug to prevent obesity

A trial to give obese pregnant women a diabetes drug to tackle obesity rates has been branded ‘disturbing’ by weight loss organizations.

Unborn babies given diabetes drug to prevent obesity

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Children of deployed service members have increased rates of psychiatric hospitalization

Many studies have looked at the mental health impact on members of the U.S. armed forces deployed in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan as well as the impact on their spouses. But little formal research has been directed at how children of deployed service members fare.

Children of deployed service members have increased rates of psychiatric hospitalization

Is ADHD a Fictional Disease?

Some psychiatrists argue that ADHD is little more than a marketing gimmick. But they're the ones making the money anyway.

Is ADHD a Fictional Disease?

Prescriptions written ‘under pressure’

Ed Madden, BL, looks at a recent hearing in which a Fitness to Practise Panel in the UK considered the case of a doctor who used a hospital prescription pad to prescribe for two people who were not his patients and whom he did not examine.

Prescriptions written ‘under pressure’

Making child meds easier to understand



When you give your child medicine, are you sure you're giving the right dose? Doctors say many parents aren't and the consequences can be tragic. Now, the government is trying to make it easier to understand certain medicine labels.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Are we drugging kids into stupidity?

ADHD Psychobabble.

Are we drugging kids into stupidity?

Scientists now confirm Thom Hartmann's theory on ADHD - A "Hunter in a Farmer's World." Aria Pearson with New Scientist Magazine says, "ADHD symptoms, like rapidly shifting focus and quick movements, are actually survival traits that were selected for during our migration out of Africa." Time to reconsider how we treat ADHD kids in our schools.

Monday, May 16, 2011

ADHD Becoming More Prevalent Among Adults

ADHD has traditionally been considered a childhood disorder, but over the last two decades, researchers have found that the disorder often persists into adulthood. According to the Los Angeles Times, psychiatrists are in the process of rewriting the "Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders" (DSM) textbook and have submitted a proposal to the American Psychiatric Association that could make it easier to identify older teens and adults with the disorder. Prevalence rates are expected to increase as a result. Currently, the DSM describes ADHD as a disorder of children. According to Dr. Steven Cuffe of the University of Florida, the proposed changes to the DSM will describe what ADHD looks like in older teens and adults, the Times reports. Children with ADHD exhibit such symptoms as failing to complete schoolwork and being disruptive in the classroom. Symptoms in adults with ADHD can include trouble meeting deadlines at work and interrupting someone who’s speaking. According to Cuffe, hyperactivity exhibited in children is usually reflected as restless feelings in adults who have ADHD, although problems with attention tend to persist into adulthood. The number of adults expected to be diagnosed after the proposed changes go into effect is not yet known, but it’s likely that number will go up. A few years ago, ADHD was said to affect an estimated three to five percent of children. That figure is now up to six to eight percent.

ADHD Becoming More Prevalent Among Adults

Study: ADHD meds don't boost severe heart risks

Children and teens who take medications for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder are no more likely to die from severe heart problems than those who do not take the medications, new research has found.

Study: ADHD meds don't boost severe heart risks

Saturday, May 14, 2011

How To Brainwash A Nation



This amazing interview was done back in 1985 with a former KGB agent who was trained in subversion techniques. He explains the 4 basic steps to socially engineering entire generations into thinking and behaving the way those in power want them to. It's shocking because our nation has been transformed in the exact same way, and followed the exact same steps.

Please join the campaign to end this insanity at The Kick Them All Out Project http://www.KickThemAllOut.com

Friday, May 13, 2011

FDA weighs new dose info for kids' pain relievers

Federal health officials are considering adding dosing instructions for children younger than 2 years old to Children's Tylenol and similar products, a change favored by drugmakers and many doctors.

FDA weighs new dose info for kids' pain relievers

Thursday, May 12, 2011

Maryland medical board upholds autism doctor's suspension

Maryland medical board upholds autism doctor's suspension

A geneticist who has used the hormone-suppressing drug Lupron to treat children with autism failed Wednesday to persuade the Maryland Board of Physicians to lift its summary suspension of his medical license.

Wyoming cutting free vaccines for insured children

Wyoming is cutting the types of vaccinations, including flu shots, available for free to children who have health insurance.

Wyoming cutting free vaccines for insured children

Drug Combo May Help Treat Kids With ADHD

So they say...

Drug Combo May Help Treat Kids With ADHD

Combining an extended-release version of the blood pressure pill clonidine with a stimulant may benefit children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) who are not getting adequate relief from stimulants alone, according to a new study.

FDA Panel Discusses Ethics of Pediatric Drug Trials

A panel of pediatricians and pediatric ethicists met Wednesday to discuss the ethically complicated issue of testing new drugs in children.

FDA Panel Discusses Ethics of Pediatric Drug Trials

Author Robert Whitaker questions the benefits of antipsychotic medications

Author Robert Whitaker questions the benefits of antipsychotic medications

Journalist and author Robert Whitaker used to think it was unethical for doctors to take schizophrenia patients off their medication. Having cofounded a publishing company in the 1990s that reported on clinical trials, he likened the removal of antipsychotic drugs to taking a diabetic off insulin. And that’s how he covered this issue in a Pulitzer Prize–nominated series of freelance articles for the Boston Globe in 1998.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Rowing parents 'harm' children's sleep

Rowing parents 'harm' children's sleep

Parents who argue are more likely to have babies with troubled sleeping patterns, research suggests.


Bickering Couples Disrupt Infants' Sleep Patterns And Affect Child Development - New Study

Babies given anti-obesity drugs in the womb

Babies given anti-obesity drugs in the womb

Babies to be given diet drug in the womb to stop them being born overweight in trial described as ‘disturbing’ by weight loss groups.

Parents sue over medical subsidies for special-needs kids

Parents sue over medical subsidies for special-needs kids

A group of Michigan parents sued the state Tuesday in federal court, saying the Department of Human Services failed to payadequate medical subsidies for special-needs children.

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Tylenol and other products to simplify children’s medication

Tylenol and other products to simplify children’s medication

In the past moms have had to decide which Tylenol product was right for their child: Were they small enough to be given the concentrated infant’s drops? Were they old enough to have the children’s formula that was not concentrated?

Monday, May 9, 2011

S. Korean Study Suggests Autism Rate May Be Much Higher

An estimated one in 38 South Korean children -- or 2.6 percent -- has an autism spectrum disorder, a new study says -- figures that experts believe could be similar in the United States.

S. Korean Study Suggests Autism Rate May Be Much Higher

Overweight Pregnant Women Being Given Trial Drug to Prevent Obese Babies

National Health Service in England is conducting a controversial new trial in which overweight pregnant women are being given a drug that aims to reduce the risk of childhood obesity in their unborn babies.

Overweight Pregnant Women Being Given Trial Drug to Prevent Obese Babies

Generic Adderall XR Shortage Leaves ADHD Patients Scrambling

A nationwide shortage of the generic form of Adderall XR, a drug used for attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in children and adults, has sent many patients scrambling from pharmacy to pharmacy to find it and left others wondering what they'll do if their pharmacies run out.

Generic Adderall XR Shortage Leaves ADHD Patients Scrambling

Sunday, May 8, 2011

How New Are The New Diagnoses for Child Bipolar Disorder?

Ellen Leibenluft, M.D. is an important exception to Upton Sinclair's maxim, "It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on his not understanding it." As the Chief of the Section on Bipolar Spectrum Disorders at NIMH, she might be understood as having a vested interest in promoting the existence and study of bipolar disorder in children and adolescents. Instead, she has been a vigorous advocate for several major studies expected to lead to results that would significantly diminish the use of the bipolar disorder diagnosis in childhood. She provided the impetus for recent follow up studies in which chronically aggressive, irritable children were followed over time. Chronic severe anger and irritability in children and adolescents are the most frequent sources of the misdiagnosis of bipolar disorder in children and adolescents.

How New Are The New Diagnoses for Child Bipolar Disorder?

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Viagra to be used for children

Viagra to be used for children

The European commission has approved treating children Viagra for a rare, deadly lung condition.

Friday, May 6, 2011

State looks to remove autism panelist with links to suspended doctor

A day after Dr. Mark Geier's medical license was suspended in Maryland over allegations of putting children with autism at risk, state officials were seeking to remove his son from a state commission that advises the governor on the disorder.

State looks to remove autism panelist with links to suspended doctor

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Drugmakers to End Infant Formulas of Products With Acetaminophen

The makers of cold and fever medications that contain the painkiller acetaminophen said Wednesday night that they will discontinue infant-drops versions of the products to avoid confusion that might lead to overdoses, the Associated Press reported.

Drugmakers to End Infant Formulas of Products With Acetaminophen

No More Infant Dose of Over-the-Counter Acetaminophen

FDA issues new rules to make children's drugs safer

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration wants to make it a little harder for the medicine to go down. Over-the-counter children's medicine, that is, such as cough syrups, pain relievers, and cold remedies. It's released new guidelines saying such remedies should include a device that helps minimize the risk of overdose.

FDA issues new rules to make children's drugs safer

Another Prescription Drug Abuse Problem: The Overmedication of Foster Kids

Recently the Obama administration announced that it is taking action to address the growing problem of prescription drug abuse. Of course this is good news, and more must be done to raise awareness of this issue and crack down on those who abuse the system. It reminded me of another problem related to prescription drug use: the inappropriate use of psychotropic drugs for children in foster care.

Another Prescription Drug Abuse Problem: The Overmedication of Foster Kids

The Use of Prescription Drugs in Children

“In June 2003, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, following the lead of its British counterpart, issued warnings specifically about Paxil, saying no one under age 18 should be prescribed the drug for major depression because it might increase a child's risk of suicide. […] Mary Anne Rhyne, a GlaxoSmithKline spokeswoman, told The Star-Ledger that the sales force was told not to discuss the safety concerns because Paxil was approved only for use in adults. ‘Our sales reps are prohibited from discussing, sharing or leaving behind off-label information with health-care providers,’ Rhyne told the newspaper. Deviations from officially approved uses are called off-label use. But like many drugs officially approved only for use in a particular group of patients or for a specific disease, doctors sometimes prescribed Paxil for people under age 18. An official with the FDA's Office of Drug Safety told an advisory panel meeting two weeks ago that 8 percent of all antidepressant prescriptions in the first half of this year were for people under 18.” (Paxil warning Suppressed, The Associated Press, September 2004, http://newsobserver.com/business/story/1686138p-7930169c.html)

The Use of Prescription Drugs in Children

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Board: Drug therapy for children with autism was risky

A doctor nationally known for treating autism with a drug sometimes used to chemically castrate sex offenders has been suspended from practicing medicine in his home state of Maryland after state officials determined he is putting children at risk.

Board: Drug therapy for children with autism was risky

Do ADHD Kids Abuse Drugs More Often?

Scientific research studies, with their graphs, tables and numbers, give us a solid kind of feeling. Scientific research somehow feels hard and weighty, while fiction feels soft and fluffy. Lately, however, I've come to think that research studies are not all that different from more explicitly fictional sort of narratives. Like stories, research papers have a beginning, a middle and an end. The author or authors of a research paper construct a story about what the data says. It is widely accepted that many different stories can be constructed from the same data, depending on the author's point of view or what he is predisposed to discover. As Mark Twain famously remarked, "facts are stubborn things, but statistics are more pliable."

Do ADHD Kids Abuse Drugs More Often?

FDA warns about teething drugs for babies

FDA warns about teething drugs for babies

The Food and Drug Administration said children under two should not use products with benzocaine, unless a doctor gives an okay.

15 Ritalin Facts Every Parent Needs to Know

Interesting article that was brought to my attention on www.rncentral.com. “Ritalin has been the prescription drug of choice for ADD and ADHD patients for decades now, and has been considered overall safe for use among those prescribed. However, not all parents, doctors, and professionals agree that Ritalin is perfectly safe or effective. Read on to learn about important Ritalin facts and controversies.

15 Ritalin Facts Every Parent Needs to Know

The Fraudulent Nature Of Psychiatric Labels Exposed By Human Rights Group

Brian Beaumont, who is in charge of Public Affairs for CCHR, sent out a press release on Monday, April 25, 2011 to announce: "The Fraudulent Nature Of Psychiatric Labels Exposed By Human Rights Group"

The Fraudulent Nature Of Psychiatric Labels Exposed By Human Rights Group

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Government Muscle

Government Muscle

Forest Labs is a pharmaceutical company based out of New York City. Among their best-selling products are antidepressants known as Celexa and Lexapro. Two years ago, Forest was sued under the federal False Claims Act for marketing these drugs to both adults and children, even though the government had only approved them for use with adults. The suit alleged that Forest promoted these drugs with a “sock puppet” favorable study pushed to the American Journal of Psychiatry, and engaged in various kickback schemes with doctors.

Overdose Risk for Young Children on Prescription Pain Drugs

Infants and young children who require prescription pain medications may be at risk for overdose because of dosing errors.

Overdose Risk for Young Children on Prescription Pain Drugs

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Young Kids' Prescriptions Not Always on the Mark

For tiniest tots, indicated dosage for narcotics is too high 40 percent of the time, study finds

Young Kids' Prescriptions Not Always on the Mark

Young infants frequently receive overdose amounts of narcotics

Dosage amounts of narcotic drugs dispensed by pharmacies are often incorrect, with the youngest infants receiving at least twice the expected dose 20% of the time, according to findings presented here at the Pediatric Academic Societies' Annual Meeting 2011.

Young infants frequently receive overdose amounts of narcotics