| Research
questions Ritalin use
CHICAGO (AP) Prescription rates for Ritalin and similar
attention-deficit-disorder drugs both widely praised and widely
maligned vary dramatically across the nation, new research indicates.
While the prevalence of the disorder is not thought to vary greatly
by region, a study being released today found that treatment rates
ranged from 1.6 percent of children's prescriptions examined in
Washington, D.C., to 6.5 percent of children's prescriptions in
Louisiana. Significantly higher rates were found in the South and
Midwest than in the West.
Overall, about 4 percent of prescriptions examined for children
ages 5 to 14 in 1999 were for stimulants including Ritalin.
The study, appearing in February's issue of Pediatrics, was done by
researchers at Express Scripts Inc., a Missouri-based pharmacy benefits
management company. The researchers reviewed a nationally representative
sample of company prescription claims for 178,800 children throughout
1999. The claims were for all types of medication.
Lead researcher Emily Cox and colleagues said that while they did
not determine if higher prescription rates represented overuse or if
lower rates represented underuse, "both may be occurring."
The variations should be examined "to reduce the risk to children
from unnecessary drug therapy as well as the negative health and
emotional consequences to children with untreated medical conditions,"
the researchers said.
Critics of excessive use of such drugs, including some doctors,
have worried that the drugs sometimes are promoted by schools and others
as a "quick fix" without other appropriate treatment.
Advertising of the drugs, physician practice styles, parents' and
teachers' values and anti-Ritalin campaigns may have contributed to the
varying drug use rates, the researchers said.
Methylphenidate, the drug more widely known by the brand name
Ritalin, was the most common stimulant prescribed. Others were dexedrine
and other amphetamines.
Stimulant use was found to be more prevalent among white children
and those from higher-income families. Miss Cox said the higher rates
likely are representative of the nation's commercially insured
population. The study did not look at Medicaid claims.
The American Academy of Pediatrics' guidelines for treating
attention deficit hyperactivity disorder cite data suggesting the
disorder affects 4 percent to 12 percent of school-age children, or as
many as 3.8 million youngsters, most of them boys.
AAP guidelines, issued in 2001, recommend stimulants and behavioral
therapy for treating ADHD and say that stimulants are generally safe and
that side effects, such as decreased appetite and jitteriness, are
usually short-lived.
"Research has clearly documented that this is a condition that
exists across countries and across socioeconomic groups," said Dr. David
Fassler, a member of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry's governing council.
"In areas where only 1 [percent] to 2 percent of children are
receiving a treatment which is known to be beneficial, we need to ask
why," he said.
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