Don't Do Drugs! Here take this.

Wednesday, November 23, 2016

Kids Diagnosed with Autism More Likely to Get Psychotropic Drugs

In a recently published study reviewing medication prescription in the Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, Madden and her colleagues report that children diagnosed with an Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) are much more likely to be prescribed a psychotropic medication compared to their peers who do not have this diagnosis.
More >> Kids Diagnosed with Autism More Likely to Get Psychotropic Drugs

Wednesday, September 28, 2016

ADHD Meds Won’t Necessarily Help Your Kid’s Grades

Giving stimulants to kids with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) may not help them complete homework or get better grades, a small study suggests.

More >> ADHD Meds Won’t Necessarily Help Your Kid’s Grades

Monday, August 22, 2016

FDA APPROVES OXYCONTIN USE FOR CHILDREN AS YOUNG AS 11

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) last week approved the narcotic painkiller OxyContin for pediatric use. The regulatory agency reported the drug is safe for children as young as 11 who are experiencing chronic pain that cannot be treated successfully with other medications. OxyContin is an extended-release version of oxycodone.

More >> FDA APPROVES OXYCONTIN USE FOR CHILDREN AS YOUNG AS 11

Wednesday, August 17, 2016

Study links Acetaminophen during pregnancy to ADHD in kids

A shocking new study says a pain killer that half of all pregnant women in the United States take causes ADD and ADHD in children.

More >> Study links Acetaminophen during pregnancy to ADHD in kids

Sunday, July 31, 2016

'No jab, no pay': thousands immunise children to avoid family payment cuts

The federal government’s ‘no jab, no pay’ policy has prompted thousands of parents who had previously refused to immunise their babies to get them vaccinated.


More >> 'No jab, no pay': thousands immunise children to avoid family payment cuts

Thursday, July 14, 2016

Psychiatric drugs: Normalizing our kids

Many families have to face the difficult decisions involved in giving prescription drugs to their kids.

More >> Psychiatric drugs: Normalizing our kids

Friday, July 1, 2016

'Children who cannot keep quiet are being told they have brains so defective they require psychoactive drugs'

Non-academic children are likely to grow up thinking of themselves as failures or, increasingly, as sufferers from mental disorders, says the author of a new satirical novel about the ADHD epidemic

More >> 'Children who cannot keep quiet are being told they have brains so defective they require psychoactive drugs'

Wednesday, June 29, 2016

How we're misunderstanding medicated kids

The stereotypical medicated kid in America is wealthy and spoiled and retains a psychiatrist to guarantee him extra time on tests or to help process the emotional fallout of being neglected by high-powered working parents. In this formulation, rich kids have psychological problems, and poor kids have real problems. But the stereotype isn't accurate; the correlation is, in fact, the opposite. Children in poor families are significantly more likely to be diagnosed with emotional and behavioral problems and to be prescribed medication. Our national understanding of youth and mental health starts with an important mistake.

More >> How we're misunderstanding medicated kids

Tuesday, June 28, 2016

This new ADHD medication for kids comes in a fruity package.

Adzenys XR-ODT, an extended-release amphetamine, was released in May and is aimed at children 6 years and older with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder. More than 11 percent of kids ages 4 to 17 have ADHD, and 75 percent of those children take medication, the CDC reports.

More >> Why this ADHD drug for kids is so controversial

Monday, June 27, 2016

Anti-psychotic medication for children could have lasting effects, research suggests

Researchers have found evidence that medicating children with behaviour problems could have an impact on levels of depression, anxiety and hyperactivity later in life.

More >> Anti-psychotic medication for children could have lasting effects, research suggests

Wednesday, June 22, 2016

Antipsychotic Guidelines for Kids Still Largely Unheeded

Antipsychotic prescribing rates for children in foster care and for other Medicaid-insured children have leveled off following a period of rapid growth in the early and mid 2000s. However, guideline-recommended practices are frequently still not followed, new research shows.

More >> Antipsychotic Guidelines for Kids Still Largely Unheeded

Wednesday, June 15, 2016

Antidepressive treatment during pregnancy can affect newborn brain activity

A new Finnish study shows that fetal exposure to commonly used SRI drugs may affect brain activity in newborns. The researchers suggest that the effects of drugs on fetal brain function should be assessed more carefully. Furthermore, indications for preventive medication should be critically evaluated, and non-pharmacological interventions should be the first-line treatment for depression and anxiety during pregnancy.

More >> Antidepressive treatment during pregnancy can affect newborn brain activity

Tuesday, June 14, 2016

What It's Like to Go on Antidepressants Before Puberty

When I was in elementary school, my two best friends were diagnosed with depression and given psychiatric drugs. They were both eight years old. At the time, I was weirdly jealous; I felt like they got more treats than me and the teachers gave them special attention. At one stage, I even made my mom take me to the doctor's, just to check that I wasn't depressed too.

More >> What It's Like to Go on Antidepressants Before Puberty

Monday, June 13, 2016

What to expect when your child is restrained at school

In a previous article, I called for a reduction in the use of seclusion and restraint in public schools by focusing on positive behavior interventions. In circumstances when restraint is used, parents need to be aware of the information they should expect to receive from their child’s school. I will address seclusion in a future article.

More >> What to expect when your child is restrained at school

Sunday, June 12, 2016

Foster kids get antipsychotics at ‘new normal’ rate

Although fewer children in foster care and on Medicaid are getting prescriptions for antipsychotic medicines than during the early and mid-2000s, challenges remain.

More >> Foster kids get antipsychotics at ‘new normal’ rate

Thursday, June 9, 2016

Most Antidepressants Don't Work for Kids, Study Finds

Most antidepressants don't work for children or teenagers with major depression and some may be unsafe, researchers reported Wednesday.

More >> Most Antidepressants Don't Work for Kids, Study Finds

Wednesday, June 8, 2016

Use of psych drugs in poor kids has leveled off

The good news is that the surge in use of antipsychotic medicines in poor kids peaked in 2008. The peak came a year later for those with private insurance.

More >> Use of psych drugs in poor kids has leveled off

Sunday, June 5, 2016

This Common ADHD Medication Could Pose Heart Risks for Some Kids

Ritalin, a popular drug for treating attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), might increase the risk of an abnormal heart rhythm shortly after a young person starts taking it, a new study suggests.

More >> This Common ADHD Medication Could Pose Heart Risks for Some Kids

Thursday, June 2, 2016

Antipsychotic drug use linked to autism risk

The side effects of antipsychotics can be quite problematic and researchers have found that the proportion of adolescents with autism or intellectual disability has increased among youths treated with these medications.

More >> Antipsychotic drug use linked to autism risk

Monday, May 30, 2016

Does Your Child Have ‘ADHD’? It Might Depend On Your Doctor

A study published in the journal Pediatrics reveals large differences from one pediatrician to the next when it comes to diagnosing and prescribing drugs for ‘ADHD.’ The researchers found that the percentage of children being diagnosed with ‘ADHD’ varied from as high as 16% of patients at some offices to as little as 1% of patients at others. The data also revealed significant but lower variability in the pediatric diagnosis of anxiety and depression.

More >> Does Your Child Have ‘ADHD’? It Might Depend On Your Doctor

Wednesday, May 25, 2016

Here’s why states want to make it tough to skip childhood vaccines

When Jennifer Stella’s two children were babies, she made sure they got all the usual vaccines. But when one started having seizures and the other developed eczema after they’d gotten immunizations, the Vermont woman decided her kids would no longer get shots required to attend school.

More >> Here’s why states want to make it tough to skip childhood vaccines

Thursday, May 19, 2016

A Broken System: Rhode Island Mental Health Treatment for Children

Until last spring, his fits were mostly contained within his home. A hole in the hallway wall proves it. But one fair day last April, his aggression went public.

More >> A Broken System: Rhode Island Mental Health Treatment for Children

Monday, May 16, 2016

Care for children with mental health problems is woeful, say GPs

Family doctors have condemned NHS care for children with mental health problems as woefully inadequate and warned that vulnerable young people are coming to harm during waits of up to a year for specialist help.

More >> Care for children with mental health problems is woeful, say GPs

Thursday, May 12, 2016

Stop drugging ADHD kids — and start teaching them to use their gifts

This year, Americans will spend more than $8 billion on members of the stimulant family, in a desperate attempt to keep squirmy school kids with ADHD glued to their chairs — or sometimes, even their kindergarten rugs.

More >> Stop drugging ADHD kids — and start teaching them to use their gifts

Monday, May 9, 2016

CCHR to Protest the Electroshocking of Children in Atlanta at the American Psychiatric Convention

In response to the American Psychiatric Associations calling on the FDA to allow the electroshocking of children who don't respond to "treatment" (drugs), CCHR is holding a protest at the annual American Psychiatric Association convention in downtown Atlanta, Georgia on Saturday, May 14, 2016. Anyone interested in joining the protest can sign up on the Facebook event page. The protestors will meet up at 10:30 am at the north end of Woodruff Park to start the march.

More >> CCHR to Protest the Electroshocking of Children in Atlanta at the American Psychiatric Convention

Wednesday, May 4, 2016

CCHR Working to Restore Parental Rights and Prevent Abuse of the Baker Act

The mental health law in Florida, commonly known as the Baker Act, allows children to be involuntarily committed from school and sent for psychiatric evaluation. This is supposed to happen if it is believed the child has a mental illness and could be a serious threat to themselves or others.

More >> CCHR Working to Restore Parental Rights and Prevent Abuse of the Baker Act

5 things every parent needs to know about ADHD

A new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention looks at the best way to treat young children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, also known as ADHD. The new studies provide strong evidence that not only is behavior therapy effective and it works without the side effects of medication —it's the better first step.

More >> 5 things every parent needs to know about ADHD

Studies find drugs prescribed inappropriately

In unrelated studies released Tuesday, the agency found that nearly a third of antibiotics were prescribed needlessly, potentially feeding resistance to those drugs, and that very young children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder who should have been referred first for behavioral therapy might have instead been placed on medication, with unknown long-term consequences.


More >> Studies find drugs prescribed inappropriately

Monday, May 2, 2016

Egan: Mom battles to give daughter medical cannabis, fends off police, CAS

Motivated by love and desperation, an area mother is fighting an uphill battle to treat her daughter’s chronic illness with a special cannabis oil.

More >> Egan: Mom battles to give daughter medical cannabis, fends off police, CAS

Saturday, April 30, 2016

Government allegedly takes autistic Perth boy from family after medication fight

A long battle over medical care for a young Perth boy with autism has allegedly resulted in the government removing him and his sister from the foster mother who has cared for them for seven years.

More >> Government allegedly takes autistic Perth boy from family after medication fight

Stop giving bullied children anti-depressants, warns Government adviser

Britain’s child mental health crisis is far worse than most people realise and we risk "medicalising childhood" through botched attempts to address the problem, the Government’s mental health champion for schools has said.

More >> Stop giving bullied children anti-depressants, warns Government adviser

Thursday, April 28, 2016

Kids With ADHD Do Better With Therapy First, Study Finds

When their son Christian got tossed out of kindergarten because of his impulsivity and hyperactivity, Laura and Adolfo Siclari knew they needed to do something.

More >> Kids With ADHD Do Better With Therapy First, Study Finds

Sunday, April 24, 2016

Why are children being prescribed more psychiatric and serious medications than ever before?

New studies suggest more children than ever are being prescribed psychiatric drugs and other serious medications.

More >> Why are children being prescribed more psychiatric and serious medications than ever before?

Concern over 'extremely dangerous' untrained therapists putting vulnerable clients at risk

Counsellors have expressed “huge concern” that untrained therapists are breaking professional boundaries, putting vulnerable clients at risk and could even induce a nervous breakdown.

More >> Concern over 'extremely dangerous' untrained therapists putting vulnerable clients at risk

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

Family Court orders chemotherapy to be administered to a 6 year old against parents’ wishes

This case illustrates how the Family Court will take the best interests of a child into account in making its decisions. This is the case even when both parents are united in their wishes for their child.

More >> Family Court orders chemotherapy to be administered to a 6 year old against parents’ wishes

Drugging Our Kids: Foster care bill targets excessive prescribing of psychiatric drugs

The voices of foster youth and their advocates overcame the powerful physicians lobby in the Capitol on Monday, as a bill to identify and investigate California doctors who overprescribe psychiatric drugs to traumatized foster children won a key Senate vote.

More >> Drugging Our Kids: Foster care bill targets excessive prescribing of psychiatric drugs

Friday, April 1, 2016

CCHR Educates Over 7,000 Families on How to Protect Their Children from Involuntary Commitment in Florida

Participating in dozens of family orientated events, CCHR is on a crusade to stop the involuntary commitment of children in Florida without parental consent or knowledge.

More >> CCHR Educates Over 7,000 Families on How to Protect Their Children from Involuntary Commitment in Florida

Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Parents of autistic kids frustrated by lack of residential treatment options

The Steffens can’t go on a family outing to a park. Or stay with out-of-town relatives. Or, if 11-year-old Andrew is along, even stop by the grocery.

More >> Parents of autistic kids frustrated by lack of residential treatment options

ADHD Drugs:Helpful or Destructive?

There is some confusion as to why stimulant drugs have a calming effect on children. Therefore, it was postulated that children with ADHD have some sort of deficiency that stimulants fill. This is a false notion, as the effects of ADHD drugs are the same in all people, whether they have ADHD or not. When scientists experimented on lab animals, by giving them stimulants, they observed a universal adverse response. This reaction, which we will elaborate on below, occurs in humans to the same degree.

More >> ADHD Drugs:Helpful or Destructive?

Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Keith Conners, Father of ADHD, Regrets Its Current Misuse

Keith Conners can rightly be called the “Father of ADHD”. He was there at the birth of the disorder and probably knows more about it than anyone else on the planet.

More >> Keith Conners, Father of ADHD, Regrets Its Current Misuse

Families with children suffering from mental illness should not fight alone

In February, the Duchess of Cambridge made news headlines around the globe when she publicly announced support for an initiative to reduce the stigma around children suffering from mental illness. I’d like to thank her for bringing heightened awareness to this critical issue.

More >> Families with children suffering from mental illness should not fight alone

Friday, March 25, 2016

Troubled Kids' Psychiatric Care Often Delayed by Insurance Rules

Children with severe psychiatric problems often have lengthy waits before they're transferred from a hospital emergency department to a psychiatric hospital due to insurance companies' "prior authorization" requirements, a small study suggests.

More >> Troubled Kids' Psychiatric Care Often Delayed by Insurance Rules

Thursday, March 24, 2016

'Unfit' mother's religious objections can't keep children from being vaccinated, court rules

Despite a mother's religious objections, a Kent County judge acted properly in ordering her children to undergo vaccinations after finding her an "unfit" mother, a state court of appeals panel said.

More >> 'Unfit' mother's religious objections can't keep children from being vaccinated, court rules

Friday, March 18, 2016

Maine Voices: Bill to treat ‘drug-addicted babies’ based on harmful misconceptions

Maine Sen. Angus King’s “Cradle Act” is an example of the many harmful misconceptions about maternal opiate addiction.

More >> Maine Voices: Bill to treat ‘drug-addicted babies’ based on harmful misconceptions

Court rules four children must have vaccines after mother objects

A family court judge has ruled that four children must be immunised after their Muslim mother refused consent because she said vaccines contained pork gelatine.


More >> Court rules four children must have vaccines after mother objects

Tuesday, March 15, 2016

Young girl at the center of hospital pot use battle dies Loading

A young girl at the center of a battle to allow hospital patients the right to use smokeless forms of medical marijuana, has died.

More >> Young girl at the center of hospital pot use battle dies




Kids with August birthdays are more likely to get an ADHD diagnosis. Here’s why.

One of the most contentious debates in child development in the United States is what's leading to the sharp rise in cases of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). More than one in 10 children ages 4 to 17 are estimated to have the diagnosis, and scientists are looking at the role things such as genetics, environmental exposures and low birth weight might play.


More >> Kids with August birthdays are more likely to get an ADHD diagnosis. Here’s why.


Thousands at risk of unfairly losing welfare benefits because of "no jab no pay"

Thousands of Australians are at risk of having their welfare payments unfairly slashed because of inaccuracies in Australia's immunisation register, which is being used to process the Turnbull government's new "no jab, no pay" rules, health care workers say.

More >> Thousands at risk of unfairly losing welfare benefits because of "no jab no pay"

Saturday, March 12, 2016

Youngest Kids In Class At Higher Risk Of ADHD Diagnosis

By the time they're in elementary school, some kids prove to be more troublesome than others. They can't sit still or they're not socializing or they can't focus enough to complete tasks that the other kids are handling well. Sounds like ADHD. But it might be that they're just a little young for their grade.

More >> Youngest Kids In Class At Higher Risk Of ADHD Diagnosis

Thursday, March 10, 2016

ADHD is vastly overdiagnosed and many children are just immature, say scientists

Many children are needlessly prescribed drugs to combat ADHD when they are just immature, a study suggests

More >> ADHD is vastly overdiagnosed and many children are just immature, say scientists


What’s causing ADHD to skyrocket in kids?

In 2003, 7.8% of 4- to 17-year-olds in the US were were diagnosed with ADHD, according to the National Survey of Children’s Health. By 2011, that figure had reached 11% of students, with 20% of high-school boys diagnosed with the condition.

More >> What’s causing ADHD to skyrocket in kids?

Sunday, March 6, 2016

“New Mexico Law Prohibits Forced Psychiatric Drugging of Children”

Bill 53 has officially become law in New Mexico House Bill, ensuring that a parent’s decision not to administer psychiatric drugs to a child is not grounds for a child being removed from parental custody.

More >> “New Mexico Law Prohibits Forced Psychiatric Drugging of Children”

Friday, March 4, 2016

Drugging Children to Keep Them Quiet

Two mothers mentioned getting perscriptions from doctors to medicate children during a plane trip. Presumably to keep them calm and sedated. This honestly bothers me profoundly! I try not to give my child chemical medications at all, just as I try to avoid taking them myself.

More >> Drugging Children to Keep Them Quiet

Thursday, March 3, 2016

ADHD Meds Tied to Lower Bone Density in Kids

Children on medications for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) may have lower bone density than their peers, a new U.S. study suggests.

More >> ADHD Meds Tied to Lower Bone Density in Kids

Parents ask lawmakers for pediatric medical marijuana

Joy O’Meara, of Trumbull, can’t keep track of the times she’s made emergency calls for her 7-year-old son, Jamison, but she won’t forget the moments when she held his seemingly lifeless body and began CPR.

More >> Parents ask lawmakers for pediatric medical marijuana

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Pills for your kid's ADHD? Try this instead

You likely first heard about attention-deficit disorder, or ADD, in the early 1980s when the condition came onto the popular radar under that label, and parents and teachers scrambled to learn about treatment.

More >> Pills for your kid's ADHD? Try this instead

Saturday, February 27, 2016

South Dakota partners with Big Pharma to prey on Native Americans in genocidal campaign to increase revenues

The use of culturally-biased guidelines in determining mental health status allows the agency to circumvent Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) rules, designed to keep these children from ending up in non-native foster homes, while generating millions of dollars for the pharmaceutical industry.

More >> South Dakota partners with Big Pharma to prey on Native Americans in genocidal campaign to increase revenues

Wednesday, February 24, 2016

Too many Pa. foster children are on psychiatric meds

Following a report last summer that large numbers of Pennsylvania children on Medicaid, especially those in foster care, are taking psychiatric medications, state officials Tuesday announced steps to address the problem.

More >> Too many Pa. foster children are on psychiatric meds 

House panel OKs bill aimed at increasing child immunizations in Utah

The third time was the charm for a bill that requires parents to learn about preventable illnesses before exempting their children from immunizations.

More >> House panel OKs bill aimed at increasing child immunizations in Utah

Saturday, February 20, 2016

Early behavior therapy better than medication in treating children with ADHD

In the United States, medication is the first line of treatment for 90 percent of children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). However, Florida International University (FIU) researchers have determined behavioral therapy—when used first—is more effective in treating children with ADHD than medication. It is also more cost-effective.


More >> Early behavior therapy better than medication in treating children with ADHD

Tuesday, February 16, 2016

Bill would prevent child vaccination opt-outs for personal reasons

Wisconsin parents would no longer be able to cite “personal conviction” for a reason to exempt their children from required vaccinations under a new bill currently being circulated at the Capitol.

More >> Bill would prevent child vaccination opt-outs for personal reasons

Saturday, February 13, 2016

Parents credit antibiotic for autistic child's 'monumental' improvements

A five-year-old boy with autism who has never really communicated, has suddenly started answering back when asked a question, is making better eye contact and is happier, according to his excited parents who link these “monumental” changes to an unexpected source.

More >> Parents credit antibiotic for autistic child's 'monumental' improvements



Wednesday, February 10, 2016

With more parents choosing not to vaccinate, Utah on brink of losing 'herd immunity'

Noah Chesler was excited to go back to school.

Not many 9-year-olds are. But Noah had been gone for nearly two years — after a bone marrow transplant left his immune system too weak to fight the onslaught of infections lurking around every classroom.

More >> With more parents choosing not to vaccinate, Utah on brink of losing 'herd immunity'

ADHD Symptoms Less Likely To Fade When Parents Criticize Their Kids

New research out of the American Psychological Association links persistent attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) to having critical parents, suggesting that parental behavior can have a significant impact on the mental disorder. In many cases, ADHD fades away towards the end of adolescence, and may completely disappear in adulthood. Among those whose symptoms persist as they age, harsh and critical parents may play a role, the research suggests.


More >> ADHD Symptoms Less Likely To Fade When Parents Criticize Their Kids


ADHD in kids: What many parents and teachers don’t understand but need to know

There seems to be a never-ending stream of research reports about attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD — the most commonly diagnosed neuro-behavioral disorder in U.S. children — and how it affects young people.

More >> ADHD in kids: What many parents and teachers don’t understand but need to know


Thursday, February 4, 2016

Christie: No apologies to family who left N.J. for sick child's medical marijuana

Christie: No apologies to family who left N.J. for sick child's medical marijuana

Gov. Chris Christie on Wednesday defended the state's strict medical marijuana program and shrugged off a suggestion that a Scotch Plains family had no choice but to relocate to Colorado so their ailing daughter could have easier access to edible cannabis products.

Sunday, January 31, 2016

Traumatized Kids Who Were Drugged Offer Lessons for Mental Health Care

Extensive use of psychiatric medication for children in foster care offers a striking example of childism,  or societal prejudice against children.  A powerful five part film “Drugging Our Kids”   by Dai Sugano and Karen De Sa documents this issue in a thorough and dramatic way, using interviews with young adults who were in the foster care system, some from as early as 2 years of age. They were  labeled with every psychiatric diagnosis under the sun, when really what they were suffering from was trauma and loss. After experiencing physical, sexual and emotional abuse, they were on multiple psychiatric medications for many years. With the help of a range of individuals who saw through the haze of drug effects to who they really were, those interviewed for the documentary were able to get off all medications.   In a segment entitled “Treatment for a Broken Heart is Not Another Medication,” child psychiatrist David Arendondo says, “The first line treatment not another medication. It is to understand, to listen to the child, to ask, ‘what’s going on, why are you sad in this way?’”

More >> Traumatized Kids Who Were Drugged Offer Lessons for Mental Health Care

Friday, January 29, 2016

Mom Breaks Law to Treat Sick Toddler With Cannabis Oil

Single mom Sarah Ellett knows she’s breaking the law every day when she gives her chronically ill daughter Remie, 3, two tiny drops of cannabis oil. She’s determined to continue, as the treatment has brought her child a quality of life that’s not only tolerable but also often joyful. But now child caseworkers have gotten involved, and Ellett is scared.

More >> Mom Breaks Law to Treat Sick Toddler With Cannabis Oil

Wednesday, January 20, 2016

Does Prescribing Anti-psychotic Drugs to Infants, Toddlers and Young Children Meet the Definition of Reckless Endangerment?

When physicians (or medical paraprofessionals) prescribe psychiatric drugs to children without the parent or legal guardian’s fully informed consent, the prescribers could reasonably be charged with reckless endangerment and/or child endangerment because such drugs commonly cause a multitude of well-known adverse effects, including the following short list: worsening depression, worsening anxiety, sleep disturbances, suicidality, homicidality, mania, psychoses, heart problems, growth disturbances, malnutrition, cognitive disabilities, dementia, microbiome disorders, stroke, diabetes, serious withdrawal effects, death, sudden death, etc. We physicians (not only psychiatrists) normally only spend a small amount of our scarce time warning about a few of the dozens of potential adverse effects when we recommend drug treatment – and apparently most American courts uphold this questionable action when the rare malpractice case manages to be heard in the legal system.


More >> Does Prescribing Anti-psychotic Drugs to Infants, Toddlers and Young Children Meet the Definition of Reckless Endangerment?

Saturday, January 16, 2016

Pediatrician Mike Ginsberg's Facebook Vaccine Rant

On 2 February 2015, the Facebook page The Skeptics' Guide to the Universe published a picture of a Facebook comment attributed to a doctor identifying himself as Mike Ginsberg. The comment was offered during a then-current outbreak of measles that had been traced back to the Disney theme parks in California which had intensified an ongoing debate over vaccinations and the effects of a decline in vaccination rates:

More >> Pediatrician Mike Ginsberg's Facebook Vaccine Rant

Thursday, January 14, 2016

Author tells Kansas senators psychiatric overdiagnosis damaging Americans

The Senate’s health committee toured the dizzying world of psychiatric diagnosis Wednesday under guidance of a former Duke University professor revolting against exaggeration of mental health disorders and the prescribing of too much medicine for those conditions.


More >> Author tells Kansas senators psychiatric overdiagnosis damaging Americans



Kids with ADHD more likely to be in bike crashes: study

Children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder exhibit “impulsivity” and attention issues that put them at risk when crossing streets on their bikes, according to a study from the University of Iowa.

More >> Kids with ADHD more likely to be in bike crashes: study

Children ‘most worried’ as they finish primary school, research finds

According to an article in the British Journal of Health Psychology, mothers reported that their children are at their most worried age 10 – when they will be coming to the end of primary school.

More >> Children ‘most worried’ as they finish primary school, research finds

Tuesday, January 12, 2016

A Child's Right to Be Vaccinated

Hi. My name is Paul Offit. I'm talking to you today from the Vaccine Education Center here at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.

More >> A Child's Right to Be Vaccinated

Friday, January 8, 2016

Psychotic Symptoms in Children on Stimulants. What are the Implications for the Clinician?

Stimulant medications have been previously reported as the cause of adverse psychiatric symptoms in children, including mania and psychosis. 1 New work by MacKenzie et al. in this month’s Pediatrics ( 10.1542/peds.2015-2486) provides new insight into a subpopulation apparently at very high risk for this concerning side effect. Children diagnosed with ADHD and treated with stimulants, whose parent or parents have major depressive disorder, bipolar disorder or schizophrenia, have a significantly greater risk of psychotic symptoms than their peers.

More >> Psychotic Symptoms in Children on Stimulants. What are the Implications for the Clinician?

Tuesday, January 5, 2016

6 Questions to Ask Yourself Before Putting Your Kid on ADHD Medication

American kids are now much more likely to be diagnosed and treated for ADHD than kids in any other country. For example, a teenager in the United States is now nearly 14 times more likely to be on medication for ADHD than a teenager in the United Kingdom. In my book The Collapse of Parenting, I explore some of the reasons why. One is that in the U.S., medication has become the first resort for almost any child who is struggling in school. Outside of North America, medication is usually a last resort. That’s especially of concern because of research showing that these medications for ADHD may affect the developing brain in significant ways.

More >> 6 Questions to Ask Yourself Before Putting Your Kid on ADHD Medication



Sunday, January 3, 2016

How Children Bickering Inspired a Business

Laurie Canata was at her wits’ end. While she was there, she found an idea for a business.

More >> How Children Bickering Inspired a Business



Social Services Minister Christian Porter slaps down anti-vaccination campaigners

SOCIAL Services Minister Christian Porter has slapped down anti-vaxxers claiming to have found a loophole in the tough “no jab, no pay” laws.

More >> Social Services Minister Christian Porter slaps down anti-vaccination campaigners

Spotlight on ‘Drugging Our Kids’ pays off

It’s often wishful thinking that shining a light on something that’s wrong will be enough to make it stop.  t sometimes, if the problem is bad enough and the evidence is clearly presented, it actually happens.

Saturday, January 2, 2016

Kids from big families may be less likely to succeed

A study by researchers Chinhui Juhn and C. Andrew Zuppann of the University of Houston, along with Yona Rubinstein of the London School of Economics, suggests that the more children a family has, the less likely those children will have a good life.

More >> Kids from big families may be less likely to succeed