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Drugging our Children
November 3, 2006
Seek to delight, that they may mend mankind. And, while they captivate, inform the mind.
-William Cowper

In a powerful editorial, "Why Are We Drugging Our Children?" in the September 27, 2006 issue of Education Week (edweek.org) Julian Weissglass raises serious concerns with our society's increasing use of drugs with children.  A recent study found that the use of antipsychotic drugs to treat children and adolescents increased by more than five times from 1993 to 2002.  Weissglass believes that much of the increase in prescriptions of psychiatric drugs is because children’s behavior and emotions are difficult for adults to handle.  This is impossible to prove, but if even one child is prescribed drugs because of adults’ discomfort with his or her behavior, it is a grave injustice.

Children have the right to be themselves as they grow up, to be loved and supported, and to have their emotions attended to by caring adults.  If they are acting in ways that are inconvenient or difficult for adults to handle, then it would be wise to give the adults emotional support, so that they can constructively handle the young people’s behavior, rather than resort to drugging them.

When such large numbers of children have to be drugged to cope in school, we should consider changing schools, so that they are better places for young people.  We could well begin by asking what kind of school will assist young people to have full, meaningful lives, rather than measuring the success of schools by students’ performance on standardized tests.

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Comments (16)

Displaying 5 of 16 Comments   [ View all ]
B. ayers · January 24, 2007
cvins
Glendale, CA, United States


Does anyone have experience with or recommended sites to learn about neurofeedback (EED) and ADD or learning deficincies?

SMdemello · November 21, 2006
United States


Amen to this. Who is this person? They should be heading the department of education or the teachers union.

Mac McGuire · November 08, 2006
Chelsea, AL, United States


I am sick and tired of people harping on the school systems and standardized testing. The problem is the parenting and quite honestly the child care industry has not helped. There is clearly a huge need for parent training. There is not one legitimate study that correlates spanking with violent behavior. There is a difference between a spanking and abuse. I have worked with abused and neglected children for over 15 years. The parents of today's society are both lazy and afraid of disciplining their children. They are afraid that their child will not like them. They are afraid that they will be reported to DHR if the child pitches a fit in Walmart and they don't respond by trying to get down on the child's level and giving them choices. The choice is stop pitching a fit or get a spanking. Children start learning prior to birth. They know when the parent is nervous or unsure and start minipulating their environment very shortly after their birth through crying. An inappropriate response to crying starts the child and parent down the wrong path and eventually to the conclusion of the parent that drugs are the only means to control the monster that is created by the parent and society.

elizabeth thomas · November 05, 2006
San Diego
San Diego, CA, United States


I've been in the Child Development field for 10 years and I do believe that if a child is properly diagnosed by the appropriate medical doctors and child development professionals, and then together conclude with out a doubt that the child needs medical intervention then the issue is being handled properly. However, you do see some parents out there who do want a quick fix regardless of whether or not their child has been diagnosed properly. For example, my step daughter is only 2 years old and lives with her biological mother in Arizona. During one of our visitations with the child and biological mother, the biological mother to us said, "I believe its highly possible that my daughter has ADD just like my brother does." This is a mother who is on the highest dose of antidepressents making this statement to us. She floored us with this comment and raised even more concerns for this childs future. Living with a constantly medicated parent, what chance does this child have in being able to grow up with a normal childhood. Being a Child Development professional I only observed a normal 2 year old showing typical 2 year old behaviors. My question to everyone out there is, "What do we do about the parents who are highly medicated, and they are making their children go on medications just because they can't handle their own child when they are medicated or just because it is the normal thing to do because the extended family is also medicated, so therefore the child needs to go on medication?"

rose · November 05, 2006
United States


I am a special ed teacher and have observed many special needs children and I really don't think that a child enjoys rolling around on the floor or having an uncontrollable tantrum or engaging in head banging, face smacking or biting. We need to help the children.



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