Is
Ritalin Raising Kids To Be Drug Addicts?
by
Phyllis Schlafly
6-26-0
Now that three to four million U.S. schoolchildren
are using the controversial stimulant Ritalin, its illicit use
is providing a powerful kick to college students, too. Dr. Eric
Heiligenstein puts it this way: "The study rooms are as good
as some of the local pharmacies" at the University of Wisconsin.
According to an informal investigation,
Dr. Heiligenstein found that one in five college students on
Ritalin are upping their doses or otherwise misusing their prescriptions.
Some share pills with their friends.
Some even crush and snort Ritalin as a
substitute for cocaine. Indeed, according to a 1995 Drug Enforcement
Administration report, "methylphenidate [the key ingredient
in Ritalin] is a central nervous system stimulant and shares
many of the pharmacological effects of amphetamine, methamphetamine,
and cocaine."
Production of Ritalin increased by nearly
700% between 1990 and 1997, and usage increases every year.
The justification for the boom in Ritalin is Attention Deficit
Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), first defined by the American
Psychiatric Association in 1980.
The pediatric guidelines for diagnosing
ADHD are all subjective; e.g., often has difficulty awaiting
turn, occasionally may do things compulsively, easily distracted
from tasks, fails to give close attention to details, makes
careless mistakes. With such non-scientific behavioral criteria,
it's no wonder we hear that extraordinary numbers of children
are accused of having ADHD. Not even the NCAA, the governing
body for collegiate sports, bars its athletes from using Ritalin
anymore. The NCAA now allows its use, even though Ritalin is
prohibited by the U.S. and International Olympic Committees.
One reason for the explosion of Ritalin
usage and the inability of the NCAA and other organizations
to ban its use can be found in the 1990 Individuals with Disabilities
Education Act (IDEA), passed during the Bush Administration.
IDEA mandates that "eligible children receive access to special
education and/or related services."
The old excuse of "my dog ate my homework"
has been replaced by "I got an ADHD diagnosis." Since this labeling
brings more money into the schools, it's not surprising that
schools often pressure parents to get an ADHD diagnosis and
put their child on Ritalin.
It's also in the school's interest to
deal with behavioral and discipline problems, especially of
boys, with a drug. It's so easy to use Ritalin to make kids
compliant: to get them to sit down, shut up, and do what they're
told.
Advantages of an ADHD classification also
inure to college students. Requests for extra time to complete
the SATs, MCATs and LSATs, based on an ADHD claim, substantially
increased during the 1990s. At an Ivy League school, a student
can merely present a doctor's letter and some pills to obtain
extra time for routine assignments. Whittier Law School was
sued by an ADHD student for providing only 20 extra minutes
instead of a full extra hour for an exam that was only scheduled
to be an hour long.
Many high school shootings have been linked
to prescribed mind-altering drugs. Oregon high school killer
Kip Kinkel had been given Ritalin and Prozac, Columbine killer
Eric Harris had taken another psychotropic drug, Georgia high
school student T.J. Solomon had been on Ritalin prior to his
alleged shooting spree, and Oklahoma middle school student Seth
Trickey was on two drugs described to have psychotic effects
when he allegedly shot at four students.
According to a study reported in the Journal
of the American Medical Association, about one percent of children
aged 2 to 4 are using Ritalin or Ritalin-like drugs, and that
percentage is increasing rapidly. Ritalin has not been approved
by the FDA for use by children under age six.
Many believe that a diagnosis of ADHD
is nearly impossible to make in preschoolers because behaviors
that are considered signs of the disorder in older children
are normal behaviors for toddlers. Judy Garland's dependence
on Ritalin was poignantly described in her daughter Lorna Luft's
book, "Me and My Shadows." John Silber, Chancellor of Boston
University, says that the "principal attraction of Ritalin is
that it is a comparatively cheap way to get symptomatic relief.
... It is in fact a classic example of a cheap fix: low-cost,
simple and purely superficial."
Matthew Smith began taking Ritalin at
age six. This March, at age 14, he was still on Ritalin when
he suddenly collapsed while skateboarding and died that same
evening. Oakland County (MI) Medical Examiner Ljubisa Dragovic
determined the cause of death to be Ritalin. Matthew's "long-term
exposure to stimulants" was the only explanation he could find.
Pressure rained down on Dr. Dragovic to change his conclusion,
but he held firm, saying: "I'm not telling people what to do
with their children or patients. These are our findings. Take
them or leave them."
A parent should agree to place a child
on Ritalin only after an examination by the child's own physician
(not the school's) and the parent is satisfied that there isn't
some medical or behavioral problem that might better be treated
in another way. Parents should be alert to the conflict of interest
in allowing school employees to dictate treatment for their
children.
Phyllis Schlafly Column 6-21-00
Children, Drugs, "Ice" - & Ways Out
Supporting
Documents
Model Links Locus Coeruleus & Hyperactivity
Bill To Protect Children From Rampant
Medications
Ritalin - 'Sugar-Coated Cocaine' For
Kids?
Ritalin Proven More Potent Than Cocaine
– Nearly 10 Million Kids Drugged
Is Ritalin Raising
Kids To Be Drug Addicts?
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