Go Slow on Mental Health Screening


http://www.changingworldviews.com/GuestCommentaries/karenreffremarticle1.htm

Dr. Karen R. Effrem

International Center for the Study of Psychiatry and Psychology
Posted November 15, 2004

Go Slow on Mental Health Screening
Labeling and drugging potentially millions of children

Michael F. Hogans letter ("Long-term study needed," Oct. 21) accuses
Sheldon Richman of misstatements and "misrepresentations" in his Oct.
17 forum ("Bushs Brave New World"). I contend that the
misrepresentations are not coming from Mr. Richman, but from Mr. Hogan.

Despite Mr. Hogans 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 psychiatrys 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. SSRIs 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. Hogans 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 Pauls bill, the Let Parents Raise
their Kids 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.

Provided as a public service by Gary Konigsberg of www.totalitarian-pseudoscience.org