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EdAction
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Printer Version
November 10, 2004


Current Info on Mental Health
Screening

1. Lame Duck Session & Mental Health Screening
2. Letters in Washington Times: Head of New Freedom Commission &
    Dr. Karen Effrem
3. Order Information on Mental Health Screening Briefing Book

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1. Lame Duck Session & Mental Health Screening

The Congressional Lame Duck Session will convene on November 16th, and a number of issues will be addressed in a very short period of time. ("Lame Duck Session" is a session after an election, but before the new Congress is in place.) EdAction sent out an alert on Mental Health Screening on October 21st.  This is a reminder that the alert is still in operation. Make your contacts to your Members of Congress now. If you want to do something about this huge potential loss of freedom, and prevent the drugging of you and your children with admittedly ineffective and dangerous medications, click here.

Everything you need is there for you.  If you understand the issue from alerts sent out by EdWatch, simply read the letter on that link and provide the requested information. Your letter will automatically be forwarded on to your US Senators and Representative.  If you need more information, just click on the "Learn More About This Issue" button below the introduction on that website.

Also, to be more effective, follow up your e-alert with a fax and/or telephone call. Use this link to get contact information about your members of Congress. When you type in your zip code, the names, fax numbers, and telephone numbers of your two Senators and House member come up for you. Use them.

EdAction is grateful to Michael Ostrolenk, our new Director of Government Affairs, and Citizens for Health for their assistance with that action alert.
 
Disclaimer:  EdAction thanks Citizens for Health for their support in the fight against mental health screening, and for the use of this action alert to contact Congress on this important issue.  The views and programs endorsed by Citizens for Health on their website are not necessarily those of EdAction.  If you are not interested in receiving health information from Citizens for Health at this time, please be sure to uncheck the box that offers it that is just beneath the contact information you provide.

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2.  Letters in Washington Times: Head of New Freedom Commission & Dr. Karen Effrem

Long-term study needed

Sunday's Forum article on mental-health screening ("Bush's Brave New World," Commentary) misstates the findings of the president's New Freedom Commission on Mental Health, which I chaired. The commission did not call for mandatory universal mental-health screening for all children. I am at a loss to explain why this misrepresentation persists, since it is at odds with the plain language of our report to the president.

Recognizing the need to balance suicide-prevention and access to medical care with the rights and responsibilities of parents, and being aware of the devastating impact of youth suicide, the commission proposed broad screening only in settings where many children are known to have untreated behavioral problems. Beyond this, the commission promoted programs that provide voluntary screening only with parental consent.

I also want to be clear that the commission did not recommend mandatory medication treatment for children and teens. To the contrary, we cited the complexities of treatment and the need for greater knowledge about the long-term effects of psychotropic medications (especially for children). We recommended that the federal government study the long-term effects of psychotropic medications more carefully (again, especially for children) and also that the Food and Drug Administration provide better information on medications. These recommendations, I am proud to add, preceded similar recommendations from the FDA by more than one year.

    MICHAEL F. HOGAN
    Director
    Ohio Department of Mental Health
    Columbus

Go slow on mental health screening
Michael F. Hogan's letter ("Long-term study needed," Oct. 21) accuses Sheldon Richman of misstatements and "misrepresentations" in his Oct. 17 forum ("Bush's Brave New World"). I contend that the misrepresentations are not coming from Mr. Richman, but from Mr. Hogan.

Despite Mr. Hogan's protestations to the contrary, the New Freedom Commission (NFC) clearly wants universal mental health screening, recommending "screening for mental disorders ... across the life span."

Mr. Hogan himself admits that he wants universal screening but that there are problems with it. Psychiatric Times noted, "Hogan himself has strong feelings about the need for much more thorough screening of children. But he acknowledged that 'science and public opinion' have not advanced to the point where universal mental health screening is acceptable."

There is much agreement that screening is scientifically unsupportable. The authors of psychiatry's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual call mental health diagnostic criteria "subjective" and "social constructions."

The NFC treatment recommendations include lauding the Texas Medication Algorithm Project that is used in other states and pushed by Mr. Hogan in Ohio.

This is despite the fact that members of TMAP were heavily influenced by the pharmaceutical industry to recommend drugs like the Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRI) antidepressants. SSRI's are more expensive, not effective in children in 19 of 22 studies, and have severe side effects, including suicidal thoughts and attempts. The suicidality combined with lack of effectiveness caused the Food and Drug Administration to finally require this month its strongest drug warnings, although such data has long been available. While laudable that the NFC calls for study of the long-term effects of psychotropic drugs, nowhere does it mention any of these other problems.

Both Mr. Hogan and the NFC are rightly concerned about suicide. However, suicide is never once mentioned as a possible side effect of the drugs recommended.

The report also fails to mention the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force study showing that screening is useless in preventing suicide.

Mr. Hogan is right that the commission never calls for mandatory treatment. However, neither he nor the report acknowledge or condemn the numerous instances of coercion across the nation.

These incidents where parents have been threatened and charged with child abuse for refusing medication have inspired more than 20 state legislatures and the Congress to introduce or pass measures to prohibit coercion.

Mr. Hogan's support of voluntary programs and parental consent rings hollow, as well. The phrase "parental consent" appears once and the word "voluntary" appears not at all in the NFC report. But if he truly is in favor of voluntary parental consent, then he should soundly endorse Texas Republican Rep. Ron Paul's bill, the Let Parents Raise their Kid's Act, HR 5236.

Given the very real problems of already existing coercion, subjective criteria, dangerous and ineffective medication, and the failure of screening to prevent suicide, none of which are covered in the NFC report, Congress would be wise to withhold the $44 million requested for state grants to implement the NFC recommendations.

Whatever good may come from the other recommendations is completely overshadowed by the loss of freedom and damage that would come from labeling and drugging potentially millions of children based on these unsupportable screening and treatment programs.


    DR. KAREN R. EFFREM
    EdWatch Board of Directors
    Alliance for Human Research Protection Board of Directors
    International Center for the Study of Psychiatry and Psychology Board of Directors
    Plymouth, Minnesota.


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3. Order Information on Mental Health Screening Briefing Book

Your case for discussing these issues can be made stronger if you purchase the Briefing Book now available from EdWatch that contains hard copies of nine articles by Dr. Karen Effrem, Dr. Dennis Cuddy, Penny Pullen of Illinois, and Karen Hayes of Illinois.  A CD-rom contains all of those articles, plus a Power Point presentation with evidence to bolster your case, and excerpts of a radio debate between Dr. Effrem and a member of the New Freedom Commission. 

To order the "Universal Health Screening" Briefing Book

  • from our shopping cart ,

  • with credit card by telephone (952-361-4931), or

  • by mail, send $20 with a request for the "Universal Health Screening" packet, check made to EdWatch. Send to:

EdWatch
105 Peavey Road, Suite 116
Chaska, MN 55318
 
 

 

 

 

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