Author Topic: Mental Health Screening in Schools Signals the End of Parent  (Read 31953 times)

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Offline Anonymous

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Mental Health Screening in Schools Signals the End of Parent
« Reply #240 on: June 27, 2006, 02:12:00 PM »
All good stuff and as you read into the algorythms the medications suggested are usually the ones that have shown to be more effective or have less side effects.

The more effective reason is obvious and the less side effects is chosen so that more people will stay on their treatment plan, not quit because of side effects.

Schizophrenics with 85% not taking meds have voted loud and clear that bad side effects are a fatal flaw to treatment by medication.

There is no law to force people to take meds, so until the medications get to the next generation, the 15% compliance rate will remain steady.

This time period before a novel medication is developed should give the "alternative" advocates to convince their practicioners of choice to document treatments that are not medication so that the results can be measured and compared to medications results so a true choice can be offered to the patient, and treating medical doctors.

And, the TMAP choice of more expensive medications, that have less side effects than older medications will soon be moot, as the patents run out on the developing pharmacy companies and then the generic companies will come in and cut the price to pennies on the dollar.

Life will get better, it just takes awhile.

Keep those informative articles coming, and the more the better - thanks!
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Offline Deborah

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Mental Health Screening in Schools Signals the End of Parent
« Reply #241 on: July 20, 2006, 10:36:42 AM »
From Homeland Stupidity
http://www.homelandstupidity.us/2006/03 ... rom-birth/

The federal government wants to perform mental health screening on infants and get them started on drugs which they will take for their entire lives, if the drugs don?t kill them first. And you?re going to pay for it, whether you want to or not.

Already, children as young as 3, who wind up in the foster care system, are receiving psychiatric drugs for such disorders as schizophrenia, bipolar disorder or depression, with over 60% of foster children in Texas, nearly two-thirds in Massachusetts, and 55% of foster children in Florida on as many as 16 different psychiatric drugs.

Where did the drive to medicate every child in the United States begin?

It began in Texas, with the Texas Medication Algorithm Project, an effort to create ?one size fits all? treatment for schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and depression.

The Association of American Physicians and Surgeons says that the ?TMAP algorithm guidelines for psychotropic drugs are not backed by scientific evidence, but rather on self-interested opinion. Indeed the scientific evidence contradicts all claims made about the superiority of the drugs recommended by TMAP as first line treatment ? these drugs have not been shown to be either more effective or safer than non-drug interventions or existing, cheaper, old drugs. TMAP guidelines were formulated by a consensus panel whose opinions were solicited by pharmaceutical companies that sponsored TMAP. The TMAP formularies recommend the drugs manufactured by those companies that are all on patent, very expensive, and have no better safety or effectiveness profiles than older, cheaper drugs that themselves are not very safe or effective.?

Yet under programs being pushed by a little-known federal government agency, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, the discredited TMAP algorithms, originally designed for adults, would be used on children.

In SAMHSA?s Action Agenda, based on current Bush administration policy, the government wants to ?fundamentally alter the form and function of the mental health service delivery system in this country? by implementing the recommendations of the President?s New Freedom Commission on Mental Health.

One of these programs, which is already in operation, is Foundations for Learning, which was added into the No Child Left Behind Act at the last minute by the conference committee. According to Dr. Karen R. Effrem, of the International Center for the Study of Psychiatry and Psychology, it ?provides federal funds in the form of grants to states and other agencies to provide preschool screening, parent education, social services, home visits, transportation and curriculum to support ?social and emotional development?? for children from birth to age 7. A child can receive these services if the child has been removed from child care, Head Start or similar programs for behavioral problems, or is at risk of being removed from such programs, or if one of the child?s parents has depression or another mental illness.

?The criteria for diagnosing mental disorders are very vague in general, but are extremely vague and inaccurate for children,? Effrem wrote. ?These grants will further subsidize the labeling and drugging of an alarmingly large population of young children with potent medications that have not been studied in that age group.?

Oh, and there?s one other little point. ?The federal government has no constitutional authority to be involved in mental health and early childhood issues and the record of success of these types of programs is abysmal.?

The NFC recommendations include a wide variety of mental health programs targeted at children as young as age 3, and early intervention for some children from birth.

Michael Ostrolenk, a licensed psychotherapist and public policy consultant who founded the Medical Privacy Coalition, wrote, ?Their influence [of the mental health establishment over government] causes our children to be labeled in infancy, and it creates a never-ending market for psychiatric drugs. The long term effects of these drugs on the brains of our children are unknown. They also create a market for other drugs used to treat the chronic side effects like obesity and diabetes, and they will be needed throughout the lives of those affected, enhancing drug company profits while bankrupting taxpayer funded programs. As these programs multiply, the use of politically motivated labeling and drugging for children who do not comply with the indoctrination of the federal curriculum will increase. Brave New World will appear less and less like fiction unless these programs are stopped.?

It appears that dumbing down the schools wasn?t enough to get everyone in America to be conforming, subservient little sheep. Now they want to drug all of our children into submission. Baa.
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Offline Deborah

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Mental Health Screening in Schools Signals the End of Parent
« Reply #242 on: July 20, 2006, 11:00:20 AM »
FOUNDATIONS FOR LEARNING???
From the Dept of Education

Program Description
OSDFS will award grants under this competition to support projects to help eligible children become ready for school.


Eligibility
Who May Apply (by category): Local Education Agencies, Nonprofit Organizations, Other Organizations and/or Agencies

Who May Apply (specifically): Local councils and public and private nonprofit organizations may apply. Novice applicants will receive a competitive preference.

To be eligible for funding, a project must propose to:

*Deliver services to eligible children and their families that foster eligible children's emotional, behavioral, and social development.
*Coordinate and facilitate access by eligible children and their families to the services available through community resources. These include mental health, physical health, substance abuse, educational, domestic violence prevention, child welfare, and social services.
*Develop or enhance early childhood community partnerships and build toward a community system of care that brings together child-serving agencies or organizations to provide individualized supports for eligible children and their families.
http://www.ed.gov/programs/learningfoun ... ility.html

http://www.edwatch.org/updates06/012406-Curie.htm
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Offline Deborah

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Are Your Children Crazy?
« Reply #243 on: July 28, 2006, 02:12:56 PM »
http://www.healthsentinel.com/org_news. ... _list_item

"Are Your Children Crazy?"
Health Sentinel
Dr. Jane M. Orient
July 27, 2006

Congress and President Bush apparently think that a lot of children have a "mental health" problem. Or that enough of them do to justify taking millions of dollars from taxpayers to fund a universal "mental health screening" for children, and eventually for everyone.

Personally, I think - from the perspective of a person who never had any - that almost all children act crazy. Those who don't are, by definition, abnormal, because they don't act like the others.

The main problem with about half of them is that they are boys. Such children are obviously made of snips and snails and puppy dog tails. On the farm there is a solution for that: a procedure for turning boy lambs into non-ram lambs. After a quick little operation, they act like peaceful little lambs instead of aggressive, disruptive rams.

We don't do surgery like that on little boys, of course, but we do have our methods: such as behavioral therapy and chemicals.

There are those who argue with some passion that society has to do something. Bad, disruptive, antisocial or depressed little kids make lots of trouble for parents and schoolteachers. Worse, they can grow up into dysfunctional, unhappy or troublemaking adults. That snotty little boy might become a dissenting nonconformist or even a rebellious man, who could throw a monkey wrench into our smoothly functioning society. We have to catch them early - for their own good.

Teams of experts are awaiting the infusion of cash. They'll be ensconced in your child's school before you even know it. A bonus is that your little darlings will probably give them quite a bit of information about you also, and then you too can receive therapy you didn't know you needed.
Do you sometimes raise your voice? Ever spank them? Hug them inappropriately? Have politically incorrect attitudes? Use forbidden words? Own a gun? Smoke cigarettes, especially indoors? Read extremist literature? Refuse to recycle? Prepare for a knock on the door.

There are many tools at the disposal of the mental health squad. Counseling sessions. Drugs (Ritalin, antidepressants, tranquilizers, maybe some new ones that need to be tested on some experimental subjects of your child's age). Group therapy. Removing the child from the home. (This may be a "last resort," but often the mere threat can accomplish wonders.)

If an interview with a child raises concerns, the next step might be a home visit. This could discover poor parenting skills, inadequate housekeeping, harmful literature, or a baby who is crying or has a bruise (signs of abuse?).

It is true that some interventions have potential side effects, say drug dependence or suicide, but to assure the health of the population some shared sacrifice and risk are needed. We will have excellent means of tracking outcomes to improve future therapies. The mental health workers' impressions will all be recorded in the school records. An added benefit could accrue to would-be employers or college recruiters.

Some cautions are in order. Democrats might think that potential future Republicans are crazy. Republicans might think the opposite. Should an extremist Christian be one of the screeners, he might think that nonbelievers are possessed by the devil. And an extremist secular humanist (if such exist) might think that an overly religious child is at risk for mental illness if not already impaired.

In fact, parents ought to be asking some very serious questions before the government experts interview the first child.

What are the credentials of the screeners? Most importantly, how many children have they raised to adulthood, and with what outcome?

What are the criteria for possible abnormality? What is the scientific validation? How often do different observers agree? Have any long-term studies shown a solid correlation with adult performance in life? Do today's oddball children fail, or might they turn into our greatest achievers?

Will you be allowed to get a second opinion? Can you see the record and enter corrections if indicated? Will the record at any point be destroyed, or will the stigma of a diagnosis such as "personality disorder" follow the child throughout life?

What will happen if your child fails the screen? What sort of treatment will be given? Who will supervise it? What if you don't approve of it?

What's the very worst thing that the program will have the power to do to you or your child, say if your worst enemy were to gain control of it?

Who might profit from the program (perhaps discoverable by asking who lobbied for it)? Do drug companies expect to have a large number of new consumers of their psychoactive drugs?

What are the results of studies of long-term use of drugs like Ritalin, which has effects on the brain similar to those of cocaine? Have there even been any such studies?

Can you refuse to participate in the program? If you do refuse, what are the repercussions?

What is the evidence that the program, at best, will be anything other than a waste of millions of dollars? Miraculously, throughout human history most of those crazy children have become stable, productive adults without federally mandated psychiatric treatment. Still more amazingly, their parents have managed also.

Psychiatry in the hands of government, instead of independent physicians who are working for patients, reeks of Orwell's 1984 or the Soviet era. The very need to ask the questions should tell us the right answer for this program: It's crazy.

Dr. Jane M. Orient is an internist practicing in Tucson, AZ and executive director of the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons.
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Offline Deborah

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Indiana:Social, Emotional and Behavioral Health Plan
« Reply #244 on: July 31, 2006, 12:03:37 PM »
http://www.wndu.com/news/072006/news_51723.php

WNDU 16 News Center, South Bend, Indiana
Last Updated: 07/30/2006 06:44 pm
Story filed by NewsCenter16 Reporter
Stephanie Stang

Nappanee, IN - A local state legislator is trying to stop a bill in its tracks before it even gets any support on the Senate or House floor.
Sunday, state representative Jackie Walorski hosted a rally that focused on a proposed law that revolves around mental health testing for children.

This bill isn't even a bill yet, but it could be one come this January.

Right now, it's just a plan that the Indiana Department of Education put together called the Children's Social, Emotional and Behavioral Health Plan.

Sunday, more than 300 people gathered in Nappanee to hear about this plan.

The founder of Advance America, Eric Miller, was the keynote speaker.

Miller and Walorski talked about the need to keep this plan from gaining any support in the Indiana General Assembly.

According to Walorski, the bill paves the way for every Indiana child to undergo mental health testing.

"The problem with it is it has the ability to steamroll parental rights on mental health issues. [We've] got to stop it before it gets much steam," she says.

Miller agrees. "We believe that issues involving children should be left with parents. We do not believe government should mandate mental health. We believe if [parents] know about the problem, then they will be the ones to take care of that," he says.

At the rally, people had the chance to sign a petition against the bill.

Walorski says she would like to take a petition with at least 10,000 signatures to the house speaker this January

++
6792 Total Signatures to date: http://www.petitiononline.com/TScreen/petition.html (Have all your long lost high school classmates signed the petition? What about everyone else you can think of?)
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Offline Deborah

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Mental Health Screening in Schools Signals the End of Parent
« Reply #245 on: August 18, 2006, 11:24:01 AM »
http://www.npri.org/
From the Nevada Policy Research Institute's just published August 17, 2006 E-Bulletin addressing TeenScreen.
First, do no harm
Should our public schools be giving usually-wrong
suicide surveys to Nevada students?.
By Joe Enge

A pilot program using the controversial Columbia "TeenScreen" suicide survey - under way on a limited basis in the Clark County School District for five years - will expand statewide if the state Board of Education has its way.

Proponents say that a high Nevada teen suicide rate shows the surveys are needed. Such surveys are no different than giving students eye exams, they contend, and should be part of a state-administered "health and wellness checkup."

A $1.2 million federal grant would fund the program's expansion throughout Clark County and statewide.

Unfortunately, the benign "eye exam" and "health checkup" portrayals give a false impression that the surveys are accurate and do no harm. It also jumps right over the dubious premise behind the entire program: that one even can test for suicidal predisposition.

"There is no evidence that screening for suicide risk reduces suicide attempts or mortality," says the United States Preventive Services Task Force. The panel reviews evidence on the effectiveness of different clinical preventive services for the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services.

"[T]here is limited evidence on the accuracy of screening tools to identify suicide risk," continued a May 2004 task force report, adding, "there is insufficient evidence that treatment of those at high risk reduces suicide attempts or mortality."

In June task force Chairman Ned Calonge told the Washington Post that "the panel would reach the same conclusion today.

"Whether or not we like to admit it, there are no interventions that have no harms," said Calonge. He's also chief medical officer for the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment.

Steven E. Hyman, a former director of the National Institute of Mental Health and now provost at Harvard University, agrees. "If your instrument is poor, or you don't know how to intervene to prevent a condition like suicide, there is actually a risk of harm. Besides cost and intrusiveness, there is a risk of harm in terms of stigmatization, but also interventions that backfire."

The developer of TeenScreen, psychiatrist David Shaffer, admits his survey "identifies a whole bunch of kids who aren't really suicidal, so you get a lot of false-positives. And that means if you're running a large program at a school, you're going to cripple the program because you're going to have too many kids you have to do something about."

So how many students get misidentified? Shaffer claims his survey has a 16 percent accuracy rate. That would mean that 84 out of 100 students could be informed by test-waving "experts" that they have mental health problems. Talk about depression, self-doubt, and suicidal feelings! No wonder TeenScreen keeps its survey confidential.

Picture it: You send your daughter to school to learn English, math, history, and science, but instead get a report back that she suffers from OCD (obsessive compulsive disorder) and social anxiety. That's what happened to Indiana parents Michael and Teresa Rhoades. Chelsea, their daughter, was diagnosed with OCD after checking a survey box saying she likes to help clean house. Admitting she did not party much triggered the survey's "social anxiety" diagnosis. Then she was told, if her condition got any worse, her mom should bring her in to the mental health center for treatment.

The Rhoades family now has litigation pending against the school district. Constitutional attorney and Rutherford Institute president John W. Whitehead points out that testing students without parental permission violates the federal Protection of Pupil Rights Amendment. Thus, the potential legal liability of school districts giving these surveys is enormous.

The TeenScreen surveys are touted as meeting Nevada academic health standards. Who made this determination? Two state standards relating to "substance use and abuse" briefly mention suicide, but they don't justify testing all Nevada students in their health classes - the state's expressed goal:

3.8.2 Use appropriate methods of response to negative risk-taking behaviors including suicide, alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs.

3.12.2 Develop knowledge and strategies for avoiding negative social situations including suicide, alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs.

Certainly state guidelines don't say, "Subject all students in Nevada public schools to a ham-fisted 'suicide prevention' program that smacks of psychological malpractice."

In piloting this program, the Clark County School District stuck its neck out. Then, the Nevada State Board of Education put the scheme on its June and August meeting agendas, only to quickly yank the item when a coalition of opponents submitted a formidable letter of objection.

Maybe the real question is: Just who's running the government asylum?

Joe Enge, a 15-year social studies and English teacher, is a policy fellow of the Nevada Policy Research Institute.
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Offline Antigen

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Mental Health Screening in Schools Signals the End of Parent
« Reply #246 on: September 07, 2006, 01:59:18 AM »
Hey guys. Back on page 4 of this thread ( http://wwf.fornits.com/viewtopic.php?p= ... rat#110956 ) there's a letter posted by Deb and quoted by Paul that the authorities are most unhappy with.


Illinois DCFS:
Letter from Jean Ortega Peron
Page Two
Page Four
Timothy Ka*&$@#_


Please conduct yourselves accordingly.

Thanks,
The Management
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"Don\'t let the past remind us of what we are not now."
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Offline Deborah

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Mental Health Screening in Schools Signals the End of Parent
« Reply #247 on: September 07, 2006, 01:10:35 PM »
Yes'am,
But...
Ms Ortega-Peron seems to take the liberty to demand that ALL information be removed. That is not my interpretation of the order.

To summarize, it appears to me that the judge demands only the following:

1) Both parents to send demand letters.
- Just a technicality, but Mother, Ayalla's wasn't included.

D) No photos of the children the internet
- None were posted on Fornits and the link to the photos is now dead.

F 1) No names, only initials, AK and EK
- I'll do this before the 18 Aug deadline.

2) no location of placement
- to my knowledge that information was not posted.

3) any medical info including: any dx, medication names and dosages, any treatment received, treatment plans/reports, any medical records/reports
- to my knowledge none of this information was posted on Fornits, only that the kids were being held and drugged against their mother's wishes.

Other than posting inititals instead of names, it appears to me that the info can stay. Do you interpret it differently?
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Offline Anonymous

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TeenScreen in Kenosha
« Reply #248 on: November 16, 2006, 01:13:03 AM »
Quote from: ""Deborah""

But in fact according to research Wisconsin has their own share of TeenScreen sites:



WISCONSIN -

Fond du Lac High School

Waunakee School District

Milwaukee County

Kenosha Unified School District



You can post your comments about TeenScreen here:



http://www.schoolinfosystem.org/archive ... screen.php



TEENSCREEN is all but dumped in Kenosha.  See the Kenosha Partents Union (www.kenoshaparentsunion.org) for details, or better yet, The Daily Keoshan (www.dailykenoshan.com)

John Nordquist, publisher
The DailyKenoshan
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Offline Deborah

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Mental Health Screening in Schools Signals the End of Parent
« Reply #249 on: August 29, 2007, 07:57:21 PM »
Get On the Horn and Stop Bush's Madness

Is your Congressman listed below? If not, you can locate your own
Congressman here http://www.house.gov/writerep/ and request that they
co-sponsor HR 2387.

http://tinyurl.com/2kbdt3

Parental consent for mental health screens
I am a co-sponsor of the "Parental Consent Act of 2007"(H.R. 2387) which
seeks to essentially prohibit any student mental health screening program that allows mental health screening of individuals under 18 years of age without the express, written, voluntary, informed consent of the parent or legal guardian of the individual involved.

I appreciate the value of having mental health problems diagnosed and
treated early but I have serious concerns about universal or mandatory
mental health screening. I am worried that federally funded universal or
mandatory mental health screening in schools without parental consent
could potentially lead to labeling more children as "ADD" or
"hyperactive" and thus force more kids into taking possibly dangerous
psychotropic drugs, such as Ritalin, against their parents' wishes. Many
children have already suffered harmful side effects from using psychotropic drugs. These side effects can include mania, violence,
dependence, and weight gain. Furthermore, it is known that parents have
been threatened by school districts with child abuse charges if they resist efforts to drug their children.

I know that some people believe that my concerns are overblown but I
feel very strongly that parents' have a fundamental right to raise their
children as they see fit and that includes making decision about
evaluation and treatment of mental health conditions.

Indiana 5th District
Congressman Dan Burton

The Parental Consent Act of 2007 can be found here:
http://thomas.loc.gov/home/gpoxmlc110/h2387_ih.xml
Sponsor
Rep Paul, Ron, Texas

Co-Sponsors
Rep Bachmann, Michele, Minnesota
Rep Bartlett, Roscoe G., Maryland
Rep Blackburn, Marsha, Tennessee
Rep Brown-Waite, Ginny, Florida
Rep Burton, Dan, Indiana
Rep Camp, Dave, Michigan
Rep Davis, Danny K., Illinois
Rep Doolittle, John T., California
Rep Everett, Terry, Alabama
Rep Hensarling, Jeb, Texas
Rep Hunter, Duncan, California
Rep McCotter, Thaddeus G., Michigan
Rep Miller, Jeff, Florida
Rep Musgrave, Marilyn N., Colorado
Rep Neugebauer, Randy, Texas
Rep Poe, Ted, Texas
Rep Simpson, Michael K., Idaho
Rep Tancredo, Thomas G., Colorado
Rep Walberg, Timothy, Michigan
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Hidden Lake Academy, after operating 12 years unlicensed will now be monitored by the state. Access information on the Federal Class Action lawsuit against HLA here: http://www.fornits.com/wwf/viewtopic.php?t=17700