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EdAction
Maple River Education Coalition PAC
105 Peavey Rd, St 116
Chaska, MN
55318
952-361-4931
http://www.EdAction.org
E-mail
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December 13, 2004
Children’s Mental Health in the
108th Congress: The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly
by Karen R. Effrem, MD
EdWatch Board of Directors
Both universal mental health screening and the coercive drugging of
children were hot topics in the after-election “lame duck” session of
Congress, completed just before Thanksgiving. These issues were prominent
in the consideration of both the omnibus budget bill and the
reauthorization of the special education law, the Individuals with
Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). The following is our analysis of these
issues along with implications for the next session of Congress.
THE GOOD: The good news on these issues comes from the
reauthorization of IDEA. Several hundred of you contacted Congress via the
e-action alert about these special education issues and we thank you.
Education and Workforce Committee Chairman John Boehner and the Committee
staff also deserve kudos and thanks for the following:
- The Senate language to fund grants to
screen children “at risk for emotional and behavioral difficulties” was
struck from the final bill. Given all of the other places that mental
health screening is rearing its ugly head and being funded by the
federal government, this is truly good news.
- The House language stating that academic
screening does not constitute a special education evaluation survived in
the final bill. Perhaps now the epidemic of reading problems that
constitute 90% of special education referrals will be dealt with by
teaching systematic phonics before children are mislabeled with a
specific learning disability and unnecessarily placed in the special
education system.
- Parents and special education students
are protected against coercion by the schools to take some of the
psychiatric medications – those on the Controlled Substances list,
meaning drugs like Ritalin, Adderall, and Dexedrine, the potent and
dangerous stimulant drugs used with frightening frequency to treat
children labeled with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder. The
language, authored by Congressman Max Burns and passed by the House as
an amendment to IDEA, also survived the conference committee. This is
an important precedent and a very good step in the right direction.
Contrary to reports by other groups, however, this amendment to IDEA
does NOT cover any of the antidepressant medications that have been the
subject of FDA and congressional hearings, and which are now required to
carry the most serious black box warnings due to their tendency to cause
suicidal thoughts and actions. The amendment also does NOT cover the
antipsychotic medications used to treat the growing epidemic of children
labeled bipolar. Side effects of those drugs include obesity, diabetes
and neurological problems.
THE BAD - Sadly, despite media
coverage by Dr. Laura, G. Gordon Liddy, World Net Daily, News Max, many
talk radio interviews across the country, and thousands of calls and
emails to Congress, grants to fund the New Freedom Commission (NFC)
recommendations, which include universal mental health screening and
treatment with ineffective and dangerous medications, were not stopped.
$20 million was appropriated for state grants to implement the NFC
recommendations. Physician and Congressman Paul’s excellent language that
required parental consent for screening before these programs were funded
was not included. Dr. Paul wrote a letter signed by more than twenty
Members urging the parental consent language. House leadership, including
Speaker Hastert, Majority Leader DeLay, and Appropriations Subcommittee
Chairman Regula accepted the Paul language. All of these House Members
and those that voted for the original amendment in September deserve our
thanks. (See our
update.) Sadly, that language protecting the basic right of parental
consent was dropped in the Senate.
Despite great disappointment at this setback, there were a few silver
linings that this issue has brought. First, the amount funded ($20
million) was less than half of what was requested ($44 million) by
the Senate and the administration. Thanks to the excellent work of
Congressman and physician Ron Paul and his staff, and his Liberty
Committee directed by Kent Snyder and their excellent alerts, media
coverage, many other groups and your dedication and response to our
e-alert, at least 19,000 people contacted Congress to oppose
universal mental health screening, the dangers, and the loss of parental
rights that these programs entail. Thank you.
Finally, please know that your actions are still having an impact.
Congressional staff in the offices of Members who support these
freedom-robbing programs are complaining bitterly about Congressman Paul
and the groups that are standing for liberty to protect their children
from labels and drugs, saying that their national screening programs are
put in jeopardy by our work. We must continue the fight to destroy this
program before it takes full root.
In addition to the $20 million for the New Freedom Commission grants, the
omnibus appropriations bill also provides via HHS “$2 million for grants
to local educational systems or non-profit entities to identify and test
evidence-based practices to treat teenagers suffering from mental,
emotional or behavioral disorders,” which will result in more psychiatric
drugging. It also provides $7 million for “grants and cooperative
agreements to develop early intervention and prevention strategies to
address the growing problem of youth suicide” via the Garrett Lee Smith
suicide prevention law, which will also result in more screening and
drugging of children and adolescents. (See our
July 26th update)
The Department of Education is spending $5 million on “Mental Health
Integration in Schools” that we are still investigating, as well as $1
million for Senator Kennedy’s disastrous early childhood mental health
program called Foundations for Learning. (See our
update.)
THE UGLY - The ugliest parts of this situation are:
- The apparent complete capitulation of
the administration and the Senate leadership to the pharmaceutical
industry and mental health bureaucracy to the point that they cannot
even support the basic right of parental consent. These screening
programs will subjectively label a child with a vague and dubious mental
diagnoses based on political and/ or religious beliefs that will follow
them for the rest of their lives. They will lead to increased drugging
with ineffective and dangerous medications that can cause suicide,
violence, cognitive toxicity, and diabetes.
- That the White House would even consider
former Food and Drug Administration chief Mark McClellan as Secretary of
the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). HHS will administer
the grants to implement the New Freedom Commission recommendations of
universal screening and drugging. The FDA has completely failed in its
mission to protect the public from ineffective and dangerous
medications. The two most recent disasters are the antidepressants in
children and Vioxx in adults. Physicians and the public are completely
unable to make informed decisions about pharmaceuticals, because for
years, the FDA has allowed the industry to cover up evidence of
dangerous side effects. Only positive studies of drug effectiveness have
been published. There is no evidence that the cozy relationship with the
pharmaceutical industry will end with someone from the FDA in charge at
HHS, especially since the pharmaceutical industry is already profiting
enormously from the New Freedom treatment recommendations. McClellan,
and anyone else from the FDA, should be sent packing in disgrace, not
considered for a promotion.
WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE? –
Protecting children from arbitrary labeling
and drugging while maintaining the right of parental consent and the
protection of parents from coercion to drug their children will require
action on three levels – federal, state, and family.
- In Washington DC, EdWatch will work with
other groups to educate Congress and other groups about the dangers of
mental health screening. EdAction will work to pass Dr. Paul’s “Let
Parents Raise their Kids Act” which requires parental consent for these
screening programs. EdWatch will also work to educate Congress and other
groups on the limitations of the Child Medication Safety Act amendment
passed in IDEA. EdAction will, at the same time, work to expand the
stand-alone bill. This stand-alone bill contains the same language as
the IDEA amendment to prevent coercion of parents to drug their children
with medications on the controlled substances list. The stand-alone bill
passed the US House 425-1, but was stalled in the Senate by Senator
Edward Kennedy. The goals for this legislation in the new Congress are
to protect all children in school, not just those in special
education. It would also protect their parents from coercion by schools
to take any psychiatric medication, not just those covered by the
Controlled Substances Act. Finally, we will work to decrease or
eliminate funding for the other mental health screening and labeling
programs in federal law. These screening programs are based on vague and
dubious diagnoses and criteria, they do not prevent suicide, and they
can be based on the student’s worldview.
- In the states, educating state
legislators about the mental health screening programs will be very
important. States must oppose changes in their laws that would accept
the federal New Freedom Commission grants that Illinois accepted. States
would also be wise to consider a law similar to New Jersey’s for
personal student surveys. The New Jersey law strengthens the federal
Protection of Pupil Rights Amendment (PPRA) that applies to mental
health screening. Finally, strengthening the state special education
laws would be very helpful, so that parental refusal of a special
education evaluation that includes mental health screening, for
instance, cannot be overridden by the schools.
- States may already have some protections
for parental consent in mental health screening in schools, but it is
unclear how these protections will apply to screening programs funded by
HHS grants. IDEA requires parental consent before any evaluation or
re-evaluation, including those done for mental health in special
education. According to the Protection of Pupil Rights Amendment (PPRA),
active parental consent is required and “no student shall be required,
as part of any applicable program, to submit to a survey, analysis, or
evaluation that reveals information concerning…mental or psychological
problems of the student or the student's family.” PPRA applies to
surveys done under Department of Education funds. What is not clear is
whether PPRA will also apply to the screening New Freedom Commission
grants under the Department of Health and Human Services. That is why
we strongly supported and continue to support Congressman Paul’s
attempts to protect parental consent in the appropriations process as
well as in stand-alone legislation, The Let Parents Raise their Kids
Act. While this is being sorted out, we recommend that parents use
this
letter drafted by the Law Project for Psychiatric Rights or
this one
from the National Education Consortium to put your child’s school on
notice that you will not accept any mental health screening.
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