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Ablechild - Unsung Hero in Battle Against Psychopharmaceutical Industry

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Over the past ten years, Patty and Sheila have become national spokespersons. The normally shy, quiet Patty has made appearances on more than two dozen media programs including ABC's Good Morning America, the Today Show on NBC, Hannity & Colmes on Fox, CNN's Lou Dobbs, A&E's Investigative Reports, and Montel Williams.

She has also been interviewed for stories in major newspapers including the New York Times, New York Post, USA Today, and Christian Science Monitor, as well as Time, People and Redbook magazines, and has been interviewed by Gary Null, Sean Hannity, Michael Regan, and other popular radio talk show hosts.

In February 2001, Patty received a "Human Rights Award," from CCHR, and was recognized for standing up against the injustice of psychiatric labeling and drugging of children in public schools at the group's annual banquet. Sheila received an award from CCHR in 2002, and was recognized for her hard work and role as national spokesperson.

Sheila has also appeared on TV numerous times including shows on CNN, NBC and Fox, and has been interviewed on many talk radio programs. Her story has also been featured in major newspapers and magazines including the Boston Globe, USA Today, Insight News, and the Hartford Courant, as well as Time Magazine and the Ladies Home Journal.

In her home state of Connecticut, Sheila worked with State Representative, Lenny Winkler (a nurse by trade), to secure passage of the first state law in the country that restricts schools from suggesting psychiatric diagnosing and drugging of any child as a condition of attending school. She testified before the Connecticut State Assembly about her own personal experience with the school trying to pressure her to put her son on Ritalin and the lack of validity of the disorders children are being labeled with.

Sheila was with the Connecticut Governor when he signed the bill into law in 2001 and told USA Today that she was thrilled "because it gives parents an awareness that there should be a clear difference between education and medication."

"No other industry has total access to our children the way the psychiatric community does, and I think this new law is just the beginning of changes to come," she told Kelly Patricia O'Meara, in an interview for Insight News.

"Kids should be off-limits as targets of convenience for the drug industry," Sheila said. "I want the mental-health industry out of our schools."

However, any victory celebration was short lived because in September 2001, a number of family orientated magazines began running the first ever ads for ADHD drugs. "It seems like every time we take a step forward, they come back and hit us harder," Patty told Time Magazine.

After the Connecticut law was passed, Sheila continued to work with other parents on state and federal levels to pass similar bills. By 2003, seven states had passed laws against schools coercing parents to drug their children or expelling students whose parents refused to medicate them.

On a national level, both Sheila and Patty made many trips to Washington to educate lawmakers. In September 2001, Patty and CCHR's Bruce Wiseman and Marla Filidei, briefed legislators at a national congress of the "National Foundation of Women Legislators," and gained their unanimous approval of a model law in the "Child Medication Safety Act (CMSA)," which mandates that: "State educational agencies develop and implement policies and procedures that will prohibit school personnel from requiring a child to obtain a prescription for a controlled substance such as Ritalin as a condition of attending school or receiving services."

In both October and November of 2001, Sheila traveled to Washington with Marla and Lawrence Smith, whose 11-year-old son died of a heart attack caused by Ritalin, to meet with key lawmakers and discuss the crisis of children being diagnosed and drugged in schools and the need for federal legislation to end it. They also worked with Congressional staff to get co-sponsors for the CMSA

In July 2002, the nationally syndicated columnist and radio show host, Armstrong Williams, featured Sheila, Patty and Lawrence Smith in a radio show on safeguarding children from being labeled and drugged in public schools.

The next month, Patty appeared on NBC's "Today Show," on August 8, 2002, and the same day, the "New York Post," ran an article reporting that Patty was calling for a state wide tracking system to determine how widespread forced drugging was in schools.

On September 24, 2002, Patty was a guest on Hannity & Colmes on Fox, and was interviewed on CNN's "Talk Back Live," two days later. The next month, Patty and Michael were both guests on the "John Walsh Show," on NBC. Patty was also featured in a Discovery Channel program that month with pediatrician, Dr Lawrence Diller, and psychiatrist, Dr Peter Breggin, which focused on the over-drugging of kids for ADHD.

Strongest Foe Funded by ADHD Drug Makers

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Evelyn Pringle is an investigative journalist and researcher focused on exposing corruption in government and corporate America.

The views expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author
and do not necessarily reflect those of this website or its editors.

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Many Unsung Heroes by Evelyn Pringle on Friday, Nov 19, 2010 at 10:52:08 AM
Gone insane by Arthur M. Howard-(Scotoni) on Saturday, Nov 20, 2010 at 2:59:27 AM
'ADHD' fraud by Julian ONeill on Saturday, Nov 20, 2010 at 3:01:46 AM