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GEORGIA VIEW
Editorial: Back On The Drugs
A recent study by the Partnership For a Drug Free
America reports that more teens abused a prescription painkiller in
2004, than ecstasy, cocaine, crack, or LSD.
Add these millions of painkiller abusers to the millions of youth
prescribed Ritalin, Prozac, Zoloft, Welbutrin, and the multitude of
other psychotropic Class II pharmaceutical drugs ingested by teens,
America might very well have ten to twenty percent of it’s youth drugged
with illegal or poorly monitored psychotropic medications.
I say poorly monitored because my experience as a guardian ad-Litem is
that psychotropic drugs are being distributed to many children for many
reasons without the therapy that would insure the monitoring of serious
side effects. Many of the terrible murders and suicides being witnessed
today have been committed by youth using Prozac, Ritalin and other
psychotropic medications without adequate therapies.
How many teachers are aware of the number of children in their
classrooms using these drugs (legally or illegally?).
Fifty to seventy percent of the children in the
Juvenile Justice system have diagnosable mental illness. As a guardian
ad-Litem, I believe the statistic holds true for children in the Child
Protection system also (50% to 75%.)
Teachers and administrators are being blamed for the high rate of
dropouts and low student achievement. I would make the argument that the
number of drug using and mentally ill children in our schools today
interferes dramatically with the business of education. Don’t blame the
teachers or school administrators. What’s wrong is poor public policy.
A discussion around early childhood programs, mental health services,
and the use of psychotropic medications is overdue.
Mike Tikkanen
23 April 2005
http://www.maconareaonline.com/news.asp?id=10495
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