BAD MEDICINE:
Patricia Weathers says she was coerced into doping son Michael Mozer.
- Alan Solomon
September 24, 2002
--
LITTLE Michael Mozer was driven mad by prescription drugs school
officials forced his mother to give him. Now he wants to dish out some harsh
medicine to the "educators" and doctors who nearly ruined his life.
The family of the 12-year-old Dutchess County boy has filed a suit in White
Plains federal court that they hope will change the way educators and doctors
diagnose kids and push psychiatric medication on them.
The suit charges Michael's principal, the school district and its school
psychologist with negligence and violating his constitutional rights by coercing
his mom to drug him - and banning him from school unless he was medicated.
The coercion involved child-abuse allegations filed against her by educators
she says were angry that she stopped doping Michael up with a cocktail of drugs
that turned him into a psychotic who heard voices.
The suit also charges two Poughkeepsie doctors and the school psychologist
with medical malpractice for misdiagnosing Michael with attention deficit
hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) without properly examining him.
The doctors are also accused of diagnosing Michael with additional
psychiatric problems, instead of realizing that the ADHD drug Ritalin and the
drugs Paxil and Dexedrine were responsible for his anxiety attacks, insomnia and
other ailments.
"I want to prevent school districts from continuing these types of strong-arm
tactics on parents," said Michael's mom, Patricia Weathers, 32. "If this lawsuit
will make schools stop and think of the consequences their action may have, then
my son has succeeded."
The lawsuit, seeking damages of at least $75,000, also charges that no one
properly informed Weathers of the possible side effects of the drugs, and that,
as her son's mental health deteriorated, they pushed her to give him more
powerful drugs.
The school district began pressuring Weathers to medicate Michael in 1997,
when he was a first-grader, and continued to do so for two years, she charges.
Over that time, Dr. Lynee Liptay, to whom the school referred the mom, didn't
require that Michael take medication on weekends and during summer vacations,
court papers say.
"It shows you how ludicrous it is to call something a disease when the
treatment is only required during school hours," said Michael's lawyer, Alan
Milstein.
The suit also charges that another doctor referred by the school, Julia
Speicher, prescribed a combination of Dexedrine and Paxil, although both drugs,
alone or combined, are not approved by the Food and Drug Administration for
children.
By December 1999, school officials and Speicher were suggesting that Michael
take Risperdal, a powerful drug used to treat schizophrenia, the court papers
say.
School Superintendent W. Michael Mahoney and the others named in the suit did
not return messages left at their offices.
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"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
"Who gets to decide what the greater good is and how many will be sacrificed to it?"