http://www.insightmag.com/archive/200110015.shtml
New
Research Indicts Ritalin
By Kelly
Patricia O’Meara
komeara@InsightMag.com
A recent study reveals that
the drug being prescribed to tens of millions of school-age children for a scientifically
unproved mental disorder is more potent than cocaine.
Thirty years ago the World
Health Organization (WHO) concluded that Ritalin was pharmacologically similar
to cocaine in the pattern of abuse it fostered and cited it as a Schedule II
drug — the most addictive in medical use. The Department of Justice also cited
Ritalin as a Schedule II drug under the Controlled Substances Act, and the Drug
Enforcement Agency (DEA) warned that “Ritalin substitutes for cocaine and
d-amphetamine in a number of behavioral paradigms.”
Despite decades of official warnings
and supporting research confirming the similarities of methylphenidate
(Ritalin) and cocaine, tens of millions of children in the United States have
been prescribed this psychotropic drug for a widely accepted yet scientifically
unproved mental condition: attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Now
a recently concluded study at the Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) not only
confirms the similarities of cocaine and Ritalin, but finds that Ritalin is
more potent than cocaine in its effect on the dopamine system, which many
doctors believe is one of the areas of the brain most affected by drugs such as
Ritalin and cocaine.
The outcome of this research was so
surprising that team leader Nora Volkow, a psychiatrist who is associate
laboratory director for life sciences at BNL, told the media that she and the
team were “shocked as hell” at the results. “The data,” explains Volkow,
“clearly show that the notion that Ritalin is a weak stimulant is completely
incorrect.”
This revelation should be of no
surprise to the medical and psychiatric communities, given the already
documented warnings about methylphenidate by federal law-enforcement agencies
and international organizations, but it is noteworthy on one level. Volkow’s
newly released research reinforces what critics long have known — that the
“medication” being prescribed for ADHD is not merely similar to cocaine but is
in fact more potent. And the results raise further questions about the validity
and repercussions of having an entire generation of children diagnosed with a
“mental disorder” or “brain disease” which to date has no basis in physical
science.
Volkow’s findings, published in the
Journal of Neuroscience and reported in the Journal of the American Medical
Association, may act as a wake-up call to parents, educators and lawmakers who
have yet to address the question of whether ADHD is a real physical, medical or
neurological disease that can be scientifically confirmed or is even
confirmable. Because the ADHD diagnosis is the No. 1 reason for drugging
school-age children, and Volkow’s research reconfirms that Ritalin isn’t just
kid stuff, parents may want to re-evaluate their child’s treatment. The numbers
alone are a telling sign of where the push to medicate is going.
According to the DEA, the number of
prescriptions written for Ritalin since 1991 has increased by a factor of five
(2.2 million) and about 80 percent of the 11 million prescriptions written for
Ritalin are to “treat” ADHD. This means that nearly 9 million children have
been prescribed the cocainelike “medication.”
Furthermore, according to a study
published last February in the Journal of the American Medical Association,
“Trends in the Prescribing of Psychotropic Medications to Preschoolers,”
psychotropic medications have tripled in preschoolers ages 2 to 4 during a
five-year period. More disturbing, say critics, given Volkow’s recent
revelations, is that during the last 15 years the use of Ritalin increased by
311 percent for those ages 15 to 19 and 170 percent for those ages 5 to 14.
The most recent figures available
reveal that in 1998 there were approximately 46 million children in
kindergarten through grade 12. Twenty percent — one of every five children in
school — have been doped with the mind-altering drug.
This can be good news only for
investors in the Swiss-based pharmaceutical company Novartis, which makes
Ritalin. For instance, if the number of children taking the drug increased
fivefold, so did the drug company’s resultant profits and (presumably) stock
value. In a June 28, 1999, article, “Doping Kids,” Insight estimated that
Novartis generated an increase in its stock-market value of $1,236 per child
prescribed Ritalin. Based on these evaluations, the drug company would have
enjoyed an increased stock-market value of approximately $10 billion or more
since 1991.
In fact, the number of children being
prescribed the cocainelike drug is rising at such a rate that, while good for
investors, if ADHD were based on science and were a communicable disease, the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would consider it a major medical
epidemic among America’s youth. In the meantime, prescriptions continue to
increase even as researchers continue to focus on the effect of psychotropic
drugs such as Ritalin rather than on how scientifically to verify or validate
the diagnosis. And critics of this mass drugging have become convinced that is
no accident.
Take neurologist Fred Baughman for
example, who tells Insight, “Yes, they have proved and we’ve known for decades
that Ritalin alters/damages/changes the brain. But with no evidence that ADHD
is a disease we also know that these children are normal. All this research
[from Volkow at BNL] says to me is that 9 million children diagnosed as having
ADHD are being damaged by Ritalin just as with cocaine and every other
psychotropic drug.”
“The point,” explains Baughman, “is
that normal children are being drugged exactly like the Cali and Medellín
cartels, but under the guise of medication to help and with all in the medical
community being knowing participants. She [Volkow] found something very
alarming about Ritalin and at the same time is writing like ADHD is a proven
thing — that ADHD is a real disease. It just isn’t so. It’s pure propaganda and
there never has been proof of a specific chemical [or] physical abnormality in
children diagnosed with the alleged ADHD. None.”
Renay Tanner, an expert in human
rights and psychiatry and a doctoral candidate in sociomedical sciences at
Columbia University, tells Insight, “Volkow isn’t saying anything new. She’s
just looked at the issue with a different technique. The important thing to
remember is that no child ever has died from ADHD, yet a number of children
have died from the ‘treatment,’ not to mention the brain damage, stunted growth
and suicidal feelings they experience. One has to ask why children are being
targeted for the myth of the chemical imbalance when no one can show that an
alleged sufferer has a chemical imbalance and no one — certainly not the
medical community — even knows what such a chemical imbalance might be.”
Tanner continues: “The brain is too
complex and our understanding of it is too minimal to be giving children these
drugs. We know the drugs cause harm to the brain but have yet to find any real
evidence that they are helpful. Sure, the drugs may shut them up, and I suppose
that’s good for the parents and teachers, but is it good for the children? I
strongly believe that the federal government should remove the financial
incentives from school districts as a kind of reward for the number of children
put on these drugs. After all, why does the government do this? Is it good
intentions gone bad or social policy with unintended consequences? At the most,
Volkow’s research is excellent evidence that children should not be given
Ritalin. One has to ask why this research wasn’t done before millions of
children were put on a mind-altering drug.”
Despite Volkow’s revelations about
Ritalin’s potency, critics don’t see changes in the status quo anytime soon.
Beverly Eakman, founder of the National Education Consortium, a nonprofit
corporation specializing in education law, and the author of Cloning of the
American Mind, tells Insight, “The agenda is to dope as many kids as possible
because it makes them more suggestible — more open to doing what normally they
wouldn’t do.”
According to Eakman, “These drugs make
children more manageable, not necessarily better. ADHD is a phenomenon, not a
‘brain disease.’ It is culture-caused, and what we need to focus on is that we
are manufacturing drugs for diseases that don’t exist. Because the diagnosis of
ADHD is fraudulent, it doesn’t matter whether a drug ‘works.’ You’ve got
doctors being encouraged to prescribe these drugs whenever a complaint from a
patient is too difficult or costly to diagnose. Why aren’t people up in arms
about the fact that children are being forced to take a drug that is stronger
than cocaine for a disease that is yet to be proven?”
Critics of the ADHD diagnosis have
been asking this question for years, but the psychiatric community appears to
have turned more and more to medicating. A closer look at what leaders in
psychiatry are saying may prove helpful. In January, for example, National
Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) Director Steve Hyman reported at the NIMH
Advisory Council meeting that “we can make correct clinical diagnoses if the right
kind of evaluation is available to children. When proper diagnosis is made,
methylphenidate/Ritalin can be safe and effective.” Hyman warned: “We ignore
mood disorders in children at our peril. Just because a child is in their seat
doesn’t mean they are okay.”
Critics suggest that it also doesn’t
mean that they aren’t okay, and that Hyman’s remarks only confirm that
psychiatric diagnosis is subjective — that diagnosis of mental health depends
upon who is looking.
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