In March 2003, Patty, Michael, and Sheila appeared on a Montel Williams show on promoting "A Parents Right to Choose," along with Connecticut Rep, Lenny Winkler, Bruce Wiseman, Patricia Marks, Dr Mary Ann Block, and Vicky and Steve Dunkle, whose 10-year-old daughter died from Desipramine toxicity, after the antidepressant was prescribed for ADHD as a result of pressure from school officials to medicate the child.
The guests covered everything from the subjective diagnosis of mental disorders, with no confirming medical testing, to the many side effects of psychiatric drugs, to the fact that most children involved in school shootings were on psychiatric drugs. They warned that due to coercion in schools, parents all over the country were losing the right to choose whether their kids would take powerful drugs, including stimulants, referred to as "kiddie cocaine." At the end of the program, Montel asked the audience to write to Congress asking for federal legislation against the coerced drugging of school children.
After the show aired, CHADD, the main front group for the stimulant makers, organized a letter writing campaign to Montel, who they said "mocked" ADHD, as part of responding to "offensive media depictions" of ADHD, they claimed in CHADD's 2002-2003 Annual Report.
The group also published an open letter to Montel, saying no one would "dispute that unnecessarily placing a child on medication is deplorable."
"But the greater travesty is delaying proper diagnosis and effective treatment for those who truly need it," CHADD said. "The sad truth is that many more children with mental disorders slip unrecognized past the gatekeepers of mental health services than those who are improperly diagnosed."In April 2003, Ablechild issued a press release blasting CHADD for lobbying against the CMSA with claims that only a "handful" of incidents had occurred involving parents being coerced by schools to drug their children.
In lobbying to CHADD's membership, the group's CEO, E Clarke Ross, used the electronic newsletter, "News from CHADD," to raise questions about whether the problem was common enough to require federal legislation and called such cases "isolated and highly publicized." Because a number of states and school boards had passed laws or resolutions, Ross claimed the federal bill was "legislative overkill."
However, for a May 13, 2003 investigative report on the CMSA published in "Insight Magazine," in which Ross again referred to "a few highly publicized cases," Kelly Patricia O'Meara interviewed Mike Stokke, deputy chief of staff to the Speaker of the House at the time, and found cases of school personnel demanding that parents drug children as a condition of staying in school were far from isolated in numbers or areas.
In case after case, Stokke told Insight, "when we started meeting some of these families who have been through this problem, such as in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, we saw the coercive action of the state come in and say that the teacher says you have to take these drugs.""And if you don't it's child neglect and the child is taken away from the parents," he said. "Many of the parents that we talk to are people who have the means to fight back but what is troubling," he said, "is that there are many families out there in similar situations who don't have the means to fight the system."
In the press release, Ablechild noted that CHADD was only opposing the CMSA because its livelihood was at stake being the group was funded by stimulant makers. Complaints about the funneling of money through CHADD, to increase drug sales and the diagnosis of ADHD, were discussed at length during the September 29, 2002, hearing on the use of behavioral drugs in schools. Po rtions of a 1995 report on the matter, by the US Drug Enforcement Administration, were even read into the record.
"It has recently come to the attention of the DEA that Ciba-Geigy, the manufacturer of Ritalin, marketing under the brand name Ritalin, contributed $748,000 to CHADD from 1991 to '94," the agency reported. "The DEA has concerns that the depth of the financial relationship with the manufacturer was not well known to the public, including CHADD members, that have relied upon CHADD for guidance as it pertains to the diagnosis and treatment of their children," it wrote.
The agency was particularly concerned that most of the ADHD material prepared for public consumption by CHADD, and made available to parents, did not address the potential or actual abuse of Ritalin. Instead, it was portrayed as a benign, mild substance that's not associated with abuse or any serious side effects.
CHADD received $848,000 from Novartis in 2001, according to testimony at the hearing.
Kids Disabled for Cash
On its website, CHADD provides a link to a webpage on "Disability Benefits," and tells parents that some kids with ADHD can be declared disabled and receive benefits including "cash payments," under the federal Supplemental Security Income program.
"Children under age 18 who have disabilities, including some children with AD/HD, can receive SSI if they meet eligibility criteria," CHADD says. "The SSI program can provide monthly cash payments based on family income, qualify the child for Medicaid health care services in many states, and ensure referral of a child into the system of care available under State Title V programs for Children with Special Health Care Needs."
At the congressional hearing ten years ago, Colorado Representative, Bob Schaffer, reported concerns about Federal cash incentives to label children with ADHD, and specifically the two that resulted in cash payments to parents and schools.


