by Wendy McElroy On Sept. 9, the
'Ron Paul Amendment' was defeated in the House of Representatives
by a vote of 95-315.
The Amendment would have prevented
the funds sought by an appropriations bill (HR 5006) from being used
for the mandatory mental-health screening of Americans, including
public schoolchildren.
Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, a practicing
physician for more than 30 years,
campaigned against the new program on the grounds that it negates
parental rights and would encourage the over-medication of children.
Prior to the House vote, Paul had
vehemently
denounced mandatory mental-health screening in a letter to fellow
congressmen.
Paul wrote, "[P]sychotropic drugs are
increasingly prescribed for children who show nothing more than
children's typical rambunctious behavior. Many children have suffered
harmful effects from these drugs. Yet some parents have even been
charged with child abuse for refusing to drug their children. The
federal government should not promote national mental-health screening
programs that will force the use of these psychotropic drugs such as
Ritalin."
The idea of nationally screening
school children for mental health stems from the establishment of the
New
Freedom Commission on Mental Health in 2002. Its mission is to
"promote successful community integration for adults with a serious
mental illness and children with a serious emotional disturbance."
The commission conducted a
"comprehensive study of the…health service delivery system," which
found mental health problems to be under-diagnosed.
A 2004
progress report outlines the government’s plan to assist those
with disabilities, including mental health problems. The government
intends to use government agencies and services — such as
transportation, housing, and education "to tear down the remaining
barriers to full integration [of the disabled] into American life."
Thus, as
WorldNetDaily reports, the commission’s panel "recommended
comprehensive mental health screening for ‘consumers of all ages,’
including preschool children…Schools, the panel concluded, are in a
‘key position’ to screen the 52 million students and 6 million adults
who work at the schools."
The public schools would address "the
mental health needs of youth in the education system" through
"prevention, early identification, early intervention, and treatment."
How early?
Many
practical objections have been offered to the mental screening of
the 52 million students and the 6 million adults at schools.
— Mental health diagnoses are
subjective and, to be of value, must be formed by trained
professionals who test and observe subjects over time. The expense and
magnitude of screening 58 million people means diagnoses are likely to
be made quickly and by poorly trained people.
— The criteria for diagnosing mental
disabilities such as Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) are vague and a
matter of heated debate within the medical community itself.
— Political pressure can make schools
prone to over-apply social programs, especially when they are
connected to the continuation of funding.
— Medicating children for behavioral
problems could easily become a form of social control. That is, school
authorities could use medication to prevent behavior of which they
simply disapproved, such as rebelliousness.
— The screenings may be used to force
parents to put their children on psychiatric medication. Some parents
who have refused to do so under current policies have been threatened
or charged with
"child abuse" for no other reason than their refusal.
— Many of the psychiatric medications
administered to children have been only approved for and tested on
adults. The long-term effect on developing children has yet to be
determined.
—The known
side effects can be severe. Indeed, at least
two
deaths have been attributed to prescribing Ritalin to children.
Critics also raise matters of
principle. First and foremost is the question of
parental rights. It is not clear what rights — if any — parents
preserve over the medical treatment of their children. Will they be
threatened with the removal of their child if they refuse to place a
son or daughter on Ritalin?
Will children who resist medication
be expelled from a school that is supported by their parents' taxes?
If so, the government seems to be telling parents that education is a
privilege for which parents must not only pay but for which they must
also surrender medical control over their children.
And what of medical privacy rights?
It defies credibility that psychiatric records on tens of millions of
school children would be covered by anything resembling patient-doctor
confidentiality. Public school records that include intimate details
of medical history may well follow children into adulthood.
Accusations have also been voiced:
specifically, that the program is driven by political-pharmaceutical
alliances that benefits drug companies.
Critics point to the fact that the
Texas
Medication Algorithm Project (TMAP) has been used as a model
program.
But, according to whistleblower
Allen Jones, an employee of the Pennsylvania Office of the
Inspector General, TMAP promotes "a comprehensive national policy to
treat mental illness with expensive, patented medications of
questionable benefit and deadly side effects, and to force private
insurers to pick up more of the tab."
The
bill has moved onto the Senate, where it will be heard before the
end of the year.
Even for those who advocate the
medication of problem children, this measure contains too many
uncertainties and possibilities of abuse.
Hopefully, the Senate will find a
champion to call out for an amendment similar to that proposed by Rep.
Ron Paul.
Wendy McElroy
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Wendy McElroy is the editor
of ifeminists.com. She is the
author and editor of many books and articles, including her new
anthology
Liberty
for Women: Freedom and Feminism in the 21st Century
(Ivan R. Dee/Independent Institute, 2002). She lives with her husband
in Canada. Other
articles by Wendy McElroy can be found in the
MensNewsDaily.com archive.