And I do seriously question - are certain Drug Companies or School
Nurses - or the NEA or Nurses Associations receiving payrolla for
recommending use of certain drugs?

Sounds like payolla to me and it should be investigated thoroughly for
these poor underpaid teachers - do they not realize a Union is supposed
to promote better working conditions for teachers - not get into pushing
drugs illegally?

Saba


Law: Only doctors to suggest Ritalin� Connecticut bars teachers from
recommending psychiatric drugs� Sheila Matthews, who was given
information on Ritalin by a school psychologist, supports the new law,
the first of its kind in nation.
�
ASSOCIATED PRESS
HARTFORD, Conn. , July 17 � �A new law - approved unanimously by the
Connecticut Legislature and signed by Gov. John G. Rowland - prohibits
teachers, counselors and other school officials from recommending
psychiatric drugs, including Ritalin, for any child.
� � �� � �
�
�
��Should teachers and school officials be allowed to recommend
Ritalin?�Yes�No�
Vote to see results�

� � � �WHEN SHEILA Matthews' son was in first grade, a school
psychologist diagnosed him with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder
and gave his parents information on Ritalin.
� � � �Matthews refused to put him on the drug. She believed the
boy was energetic and outgoing but not disruptive, and she suspected the
school system was trying to medicate him just to make it easier for the
teachers.
� � � �Now the state of Connecticut has weighed in on the side
of parents like Matthews with a first-in-the-nation law that reflects a
growing backlash against what some see as overuse of Ritalin and other
behavioral drugs.
� � � �The law does not prevent teachers or school officials
from recommending that a child be evaluated by a medical doctor. But it
is intended to make sure the first mention of drugs for a behavior or
learning problem comes from a doctor.
� � � �The chief sponsor, state Rep. Lenny Winkler, is an
emergency room nurse. "I cannot believe how many young kids are on
Prozac, Thorazine, Haldol - you name it," Winkler said. "It blows my
mind."
� � � �While she has no problem with the use of Ritalin under a
doctor's care, Winkler said a teacher's recommendation is often enough
to persuade parents to seek drug treatment for their child's behavior
problems.
� � � �"It's easier to give somebody a pill than to get to the
bottom of the problem," she said.
� � � �Nationally, nearly 20 million prescriptions for Ritalin,
Adderall and other stimulants used to treat ADHD were written last year
- a 35 percent increase over 1996, according to IMS Health, a health
care information company. Most of those prescriptions were for boys
under 12, IMS Health said.
� � � �In some elementary and middle schools, as many as 6
percent of all students take Ritalin or other psychiatric drugs,
according to the federal Drug Enforcement Administration.
� � � �Dr. Andres Martin, a child psychiatrist at the Yale
University Child Study Center, said schools have no business practicing
psychiatry.
� � � �"We've all heard these horror stories of parents who are
told, 'If you don't medicate your child, he can't be in the classroom,"'
he said. "You never hear the school say, 'If you don't take the damn
appendix out, this kid has a bad outcome.' You say, 'Your kid has a
stomach ache. Take him to the doctor."'
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� � � �The Connecticut Association of Boards of Education has
taken no position on the bill. Nor has the Connecticut Education
Association, the state's largest teachers union. But union President
Rosemary Coyle said the she believes the problem is overstated.
� � � �"I really believe teachers do not practice medicine,"
Coyle said. "We don't recommend kids get on drugs."
� � � �Concern about Ritalin and other drugs is widespread. The
Texas Board of Education adopted a resolution last year recommending
that schools consider non-medical solutions to behavior problems. The
Colorado school board approved a similar resolution in 1999, and
legislation regarding psychiatric drugs in school has been proposed in
nearly a dozen states.
� � � �In the New Canaan school district, Matthews and her
husband took their son, now 8, to a private psychologist, who said the
boy has trouble with reasoning. He now receives special education from
the school system.
� � � �"I was able to get, for $2,000, a different label that
has an educational connotation, rather than medical," said Matthews, who
did not want her son's name used.
� � � �New Canaan district officials did not return repeated
calls for comment. But Matthews said she has resolved many of her
differences with the school system, which did not threaten to remove her
son from class.
 Education IssuesTalk teaching�Education issues
Discussion Board� � � �"I'm really thrilled" about the new law,
she said, "because it gives parents an awareness that there should be a
clear difference between education and medication. Our schools are now
getting into the field of mental health. That's not what we send our
children to school for."
� � � �
� � � �� 2001 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This
material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
� � � �  �
 � � � � � �
�Law: Only doctors to suggest Ritalin�Colleges issue new financial
aid rules�NEA drops homosexuality resolution�ThinkQuest: Living with
learning disabilities�MSNBC Cover Page
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