Children with ADHD are easy targets because they will be
lifelong patients and repeat customers.
May 22, 2014
A report from the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention last week confirmed what many have suspected:
more than 10,000 2- and 3-year-olds in the U.S. are
being dosed with drugs like Ritalin and Adderall for
"attention deficit hyperactivity disorder." You read
that right.
There is no medical basis to the dosing. American
Academy of Pediatrics' guidelines for ADHD "do not even
address the diagnosis in children 3 and younger—let
alone the use of such stimulant medications," reported
the
New York Times, especially because "hyperactivity
and impulsivity are developmentally appropriate for
toddlers."
Toddlers on Medicaid are especially targeted for ADHD
meds, commensurate with Big Pharma's heisting of
government funds as its main source of revenue, a
marketing plan also seen with Medicare, TRICARE and the
VA prescriptions.
Why does the richest nation in the world have so many
children afflicted with ADHD, conduct disorders,
depression, "spectrum" disorders, oppositional defiant
disorder, mixed manias, social phobia and bipolar
disorder?
Because children are good customers.
"Children are known to be compliant patients and that
makes them a highly desirable market for drugs,” says
former
Pharma rep Gwen Olsen, author of Confessions of an
Rx Drug Pusher. "Children are forced by school personnel
to take their drugs, they are forced by their parents to
take their drugs, and they are forced by their doctors
to take their drugs. So, children are the ideal
patient-type because they represent refilled
prescription compliance and 'longevity.' In other words,
they will be lifelong patients and repeat customers for
Pharma."
Pathologizing kids for money is so insidious,
psychiatrist
Phillip Sinaikin recounts reading a scientific
article in which it was debated whether a 3-year-old
girl who ran out in traffic had oppositional defiant
disorder or bipolar disorder! The latter is marked by
the "grandiose delusions" that she was special and cars
could not harm her, said the article.
Stimulants for ADHD are not innocuous. They produce
sleep, growth and appetite problems in children,
hallucinations and other mental problems and set them up
for life-long drug use. There is another class of drugs
Big Pharma has convinced doctors to prescribe to large
swathes of kids, especially Medicaid kids—atypical
antipsychotics like Risperal and Zyprexa. Big Pharma
even schmoozed doctors on the golf course to get kids
hooked on the dubious drugs. Court documents unsealed in
South Carolina in 2009 show that Lilly sales reps used
golf bets to push Zyprexa, one doctor agreeing to
start new patients on Zyprexa "each time a sales
representative parred." Nice.
Texas' Medicaid program spent $557,256 for just two
months' worth of pediatric Geodon, another atypical
antipsychotic, in 2005, according to
court documents, and Geodon was not even approved
for children at the time.
A National Institute of Mental Health
study of children ages 8 to 19 with psychotic
symptoms found Risperdal and Zyprexa were no more
effective than the older antipsychotic, Moban, but
caused such obesity a safety panel ordered the children
off the drugs. In just eight weeks, children on Zyprexa
gained 13 pounds and kids on Risperdal gained 9 pounds.
Kids taking the older drug, Moban, gained less than a
pound.
"Kids at school were making fun of me," said study
participant Brandon Constantineau, who put on 35 pounds
while taking Risperdal. In fact, the atypical
antipyschotics cause so much weight gain and diabetes,
Alaska won a $15 million settlement from Eli Lilly
in a suit to recoup medical costs generated by Medicaid
patients who developed diabetes while taking Zyprexa.
(The government also bought a lot of Risperdal for
adults. The Department of Veterans Affairs spent
$717 million on Risperdal for Afghanistan and Iraq
war troops's PTSD over a period of nine years only to
discover, after a large-scale study, the drug worked no
better than placebo. Oops. VA doctors wrote more than 5
million prescriptions for risperidone/Risperdal from
2000 through June 2010 apparently for naught.)
Pharma ads to get children on the drugs are also
unconscionable. The London-based ad agency, Junction 11
(GSW Worldwide) hired noted Welsh oil painter, Mark
Moran, to create the award-winning Risperdal
"Living Nightmares" campaign. The paintings were
designed to "capture physicians' attention and
communicate patients' agony and need for treatment" said
its originators while helping Janssen to "own the
relapse/prevention space." The paintings were called,
among other things, "Dog-Woman," "Witches," "Rotting
Flesh" and " Boiling
Rain."
Another Risperdal campaign, called "Prescribe Early,"
uses a macabre abandoned wallet, teddy bear and keys on
a barren street, "to reposition a drug that was being
used too late to achieve its maximum benefits,"
said its ad agency, Torre Lazur McCann. Get it? You
should have prescribed the drug earlier.
Brand managers for the atypical antipsychotic
Seroquel also chased children, even considering creating
Winnie the Pooh characters like Tigger (bipolar) and
Eeyore (depressed) according to published reports, at an
AstraZeneca sales meeting. A mother I interviewed
said she saw toys emblazened with Seroquel logos in a
healthcare setting.
"Disney-fying" psychoactive drugs for children is not
just a U.S. phenomenon. A lime-green kids' brochure for
Zyprexa,
published by Britain's National Health Service shows
cartoons of happy children skating, roller blading and
playing soccer while telling kids, "Many children,
teenagers and young people need to take medicines
prescribed by doctors to help them stay well and
healthy." Similar NHS brochures exist for Risperdal and
Strattera, an ADHD drug.
Pyschoactives are not the only drugs pushed on kids
and often prescribed early, as one cynical doctor put
it, "before the symptoms go away." Singulair is heavily
marketed to kids for allergies and asthma, and even
comes in a cherry-flavored chewable formulation. "When
your child breathes in an asthma trigger, such as pollen
from trees or weeds, the body releases leukotrienes
(loo-ko-TRY-eens)" and Singulair blocks the
loo-ko-TRY-eens, said marketing materials
jointly produced and distributed by Merck and the
publisher Scholastic.
Many were offended by the partnership. Marketing
included an endorsement from Olympic gold-medalist
swimmer Peter Vanderkaay, a basketball "skills
challenge" for kids 9 to 14 and materials distributed
through the American Academy of Pediatrics, said
published reports. The Scholastic sales pieces assure
parents that Singulair is "steroid-free" but kids may
experience, "hallucinations (seeing things that are not
there), irritability, restlessness, sleepwalking,
suicidal thoughts and actions (including suicide),
trembling, and trouble sleeping." But hey, they won't
have sniffles.
One mother I interviewed gave her son Singulair for
"hayfever" and he took his
own life days later. Soon after, warnings about
suicide appeared on the label. In 2010,
television news reports investigated Singulair's
links to ADHD-like, out-of-control behaviors. Parents on
the website askapatient.com recount chilling stories of
how
Singulair turned their children into people they
"didn't even know" and many say the drug should be
banned. Many parents were urged by doctors to treat
their toddlers' sniffles, asthma or allergy symptoms
"early."
Believe it or not, Pharma has even reclassified
babies spitting up as "GERD" to make money off kids.
Prescriptions for GERD for babies have
quadrupled in recent years. Even though babies spit
up approximately 70 times a day, it's normal and does
not damage the esophagus like reflux disease, writes
pediatrician Darshak Sanghavi, author of A Map of the
Child. Prescriptions for GERD meds, on the other hand
(proton pump inhibitor drugs or PPIs) are damaging, says
Sanghavi, and "may increase brain bleeds and gut damage
in preterm infants as well as the risk of food allergies
in older infants."
The use of GERD meds is up by 147 percent in children
and other non-psychiatric meds are also ballooning in
use. Since 2001, high blood pressure meds for kids have
risen
17 percent, respiratory meds 42 percent and diabetes
meds by 150 percent. And 50 percent of pediatricians
also prescribe kids insomnia drugs, according to an
article in the journal
Pediatrics.
http://www.alternet.org/personal-health/toddlers-dosed-speed-how-big-pharma-hooks-americas-kids-dangerous-meds?page=0%2C1