From: Dave on
Dr. Julie Zito, professor of pharmacy and psychiatry at the UMB School
of Pharmacy (Baltimore, MD) recently authored a study of how
psychotropic medications are frequently used on children in the USA.
These drugs act on the central nervous system to alter emotion or
behavior temporarily.

While Zito's study was specifically how doctors treat youths in foster
care, her paper tells us a great deal about the general overuse of
these drugs beyond what has been approved by the US Food and Drug
Administration.

Because there is a lack of “substantive evidence of their
effectiveness and safety,” according to Dr. Zito, this issue should be
recognized as a real danger to children. Doctors are over-medicating
kids with drugs that were never designed for their growing bodies. "We
are generalizing our [knowledge] from adults to children without
knowing enough about pharmacokinetics, dosing, or long-term safety in
the pediatric population,” warns Zito.

In a study of Texas children with Medicaid coverage, foster care youth
received at least three times more psychotropic drugs than comparable
children in poor families. But there is no clear treatment advantage
to the foster children. The Texas study indicated that decisions to
give some children three or more psychotropic drugs may be largely
based on behavioral and emotional symptoms rather than conclusive
diagnosis of a specific mental condition. “These data do not provide
sufficient information to address questions of severity and impairment
that might explain such complex drug regimens,” Zito suggests.

These children, it seems, are simply targets for drugs being thrown at
them by doctors and pharmaceutical companies with a "who cares"
attitude. If it can be billed to Medicaid, than why not.

This study was published earlier this year in the journal
"Pediatrics." More than 75 percent of the psychotropic medications
used for children are "off-label," a practice of prescribing drugs for
a purpose other than the approved use on its label.

Dave

Full text article above extracted from http://shamvswham.blogspot.com/