Though this remark would seem to fly in the teeth of everything compassionate and feeling, not to mention civil, it is nevertheless true. The suicides of this country's children are being promoted and used to convince and coerce parents fearful for their child's life that only psychiatry and pills can detect and save their children from the likelihood of a self-inflicted demise.
Yes, this is a shocking statement and one that is, no doubt, either uncomfortable or provoking to think about. But, if we care about our children and their futures we must face the rather distasteful truth that all is not as it appears with the reigning proponents of mental health and "suicide screening."
What these proponents suggest and what they seek to implement with programs such as TeenScreen, as a solution to suicide, could be the very demise of those they would purport to help.
If we segue to the field of mental health, we will see that not only is this practice seen, it is the norm. None of the over 370 "Mental disorders" carefully detailed in the diagnostic and statistical manual of psychiatry has any basis in science or fact. These "disorders" are just categories of symptoms, voted on and given a name so as to label individuals and bill insurance companies.
Yet, these psychiatric proponents of screening would have us believe that the reason our children might eventually commit suicide is because they are afflicted with one or more of these "disorders" which can then be "detected" by screening, and which, according to pharmaceutical psychiatry, most every one, is a result of a biochemical imbalance in the brain. This theory is completely unproven. Even the US Preventative Special Task Force found, in 2004 "no evidence that screening for suicide risk reduces suicide attempts or mortality."
In a recent interview with neurologist Dr. Fred Baughman he made the point that... "Not one case report of one [mental] disease was validated - not one." ..."What they do is they meet at the American Psychiatric Association, they meet in the DSM Committee and vote on making new behavioral and emotional disorders, and they vote and then they start immediately calling them diseases - total fraud!"
The website for the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, reported in 2004, "The overall rate of suicide among youth has declined slowly since 1992."
According to TeenScreen's website, which relates figures from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health, approximately 900,000 youths aged 12-19 made a plan to commit suicide during their worst or most recent episode of major depression and 712,000 acted upon it.
Actual national suicide figures for children 12-19 for 2003 was a total of 1707 deaths out of over 33 Million children in that age group. That is approximately 5.13 per hundred thousand children or .000513 percent. Even former director of TeenScreen, Rob Caruano stated: "suicides are so rare that you'd have to screen the whole country to see a difference in mortality between screened and unscreened students." In actuality your child has 100x better chance of contracting a rare disease than committing suicide. Terrible though these suicide figures are they are a far cry from the epidemic that is being promoted by these psychiatric screening proponents.
What you will not see on the TeenScreen website is that "of the over 15,000 children who were admitted to the hospital for drug related suicide attempts, over 40% were on psychotropic medication." Strange that this was not mentioned as this was on the same website as the other information. In addition, in Florida over 50% of the child suicides since 2001 were found to be on psychotropic medication or already under psychiatric care. Not exactly what you'd want to put on the front cover of your brochure.
So what does this mean? Though any number of suicides of children are shocking, the corollary that the psychiatric community is making - i.e. that all of these children have a mental disorder - for example, major depressive disorder or bi-polar - is just bad science and a slap in the face of conscientious observation.
Dr. David Cohen, Professor of Social Work at Florida International University, is quoted in an article in April of 2006 as saying, "Unless one has been living in a cave the past 20 years, one knows that youth with psychological/ behavioral learning problems are likely to be referred for psychotropic medications. If this is so it should, in effect be considered to be one of the major "purposes" of youth screening." ... "Encouraging screening as presently constituted simply encourages children to be put on medications - with no idea what this will do to the suicide rate, and with some indications that it could "increase" suicide."
This is not to say that children do not get depressed. It happens to everyone at some time or another. There are generally identifiable reasons however, which have nothing to do with the chemical reactions in their brains. Whether those reasons stem from hopelessness, loss, medical difficulties or just the human condition, pretending understanding where there is none is just an arrogant betrayal of man. If we take the recent example of farmers in India's Andra Paradesh State who, in the last 6 years over 3000 of them, have committed suicide under the crush of insurmountable debt, do we conclude without at least a nod in recognition of their plight, that they all had "mental illnesses?" Would we actually think that the correct solution is let's drug them so they aren't bothered by their situation, or would we seek to fix the deplorable conditions which have driven them to this outcome? If the tire were flat why would we kick the tail pipe?
In such a way we must consider the source of our children's upsets as palpable, real conditions that are unique to each child and that cannot be diagnosed, or even determined by their filling out a canned, invasive and divisive survey designed with the particular goal of creating a "patient for life" for the psychiatric and pharmaceutical community.
From the TeenScreen Questionnaire...
" Has there been a time when nothing was fun for you and you just weren't interested in anything?
" Has there been a time when you felt you couldn't do anything well or that you weren't as good-looking or as smart as other people?
" How often did your parents get annoyed or upset with you because of the way you were feeling or acting?
" Have you often felt very nervous when you've had to do things in front of people?
" Have you often worried a lot before you were going to play a sport or game or do some other activity?
" Have you tried to kill yourself in the last year?
" Are you still thinking of killing yourself?
" Have you thought seriously about killing yourself?
" Have you often thought about killing yourself??
" Have you ever tried to kill yourself?
Food for thought for your 12 year old!
Not surprisingly, TeenScreen and it's supporters - after being exposed for their true intentions - are now trying to distance themselves from the inevitable outcome that will result from children who are found to be "at risk" from a mental disorder - that of psychiatric evaluation and more often than not, a label and a prescription.
TeenScreen's director, Leslie McGuire recently stated, "The program (TeenScreen) is not affiliated with or funded by pharmaceutical companies." And "does not involve treatment and does not recommend or endorse any particular kind of treatment for the youth who are identified as at risk by the screening."
Her Co-director, Laurie Flynn, in direct opposition to Ms. McGuire's pronouncement stated "Treatment is the long term goal for TeenScreen." Interesting, in that according to the Journal of the American Academy of Child Psychiatry in 2002, a survey of recently trained child psychiatrists found the treatment for 9 out of 10 children consisted of drugging.
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