| Wednesday, June 7th, 2006 | Kristen DiPaolo | CWK Producer |
“So, if you are going to give your child a medicine that is going to slow their ability to learn and then send them to school, that’s a serious thing. You really want your child treated with the least amount of this medicine that is required…for the shortest period.”
– Shannon Croft, M.D., Child Psychiatrist, Emory University School of Medicine
A soaring number of children are being prescribed a powerful class of drugs called antipsychotics. Research from Vanderbilt University shows the number of kids taking antipsychotics has increased at least five-fold since a decade ago.
Lauren Weinrich, 14, is one of those kids.
Growing up, Lauren would have violent outbursts. “You were always concerned about that phone call,” says her mom, Robin. “She could grab a knife. She could use a simple thing [such] as a fork.”
Lauren would physically hurt her brother and sister. Afterwards, she was sorry.
“I’d be like, ‘Oh my gosh! Don’t tell anybody, please! I’m so sorry!’” says Lauren.
To stop the violence, Lauren’s doctor prescribed an antipsychotic. “All of a sudden you’ve elevated the type of medication she’s taking,” says Robin. “It’s not just a simple antidepressant or mood stabilizer, now it’s an antipsychotic.”
Ten years ago, antipsychotics were mostly used to treat schizophrenia.
Now, kids are taking them for the aggression that comes with autism, attention deficit, or, in Lauren’s case, bipolar disorder.
“When she gets frustrated or angry now it’s mostly yelling and screaming,” says Robin, “but there’s no physical reaction.”
Doctors say they’ve seen antipsychotics work in adults, and that’s one reason they’re being prescribed to kids.
But no long-term studies show the drugs to be safe or effective in kids.
And they can have dangerous side effects.
“There are some studies that have shown serious weight gain in children and adolescents that have been started on these medicines,” says Dr. Shannon Croft, a child psychiatrist at the Emory University School of Medicine, “and some have gone on to develop diabetes because of the weight gain.”
Other side effects include a trembling similar to Parkinson’s disease — and damage to a child’s ability to think.
“So if you are going to give your child a medicine that is going to slow their ability to learn and then send them to school, that’s a serious thing,” says Dr. Croft. “You really want your child treated with the least amount of this medicine that is required, for the shortest period.”
Lauren’s mom is worried about future side effects, but her daughter needs help today.
“If we did not make the right decisions for her medically,” says Robin, “she could be in a hospital, she could be in a psychiatric unit, she could be in jail for killing somebody.”
Doctors say it is not a good idea for kids to suddenly stop taking an antipsychotic. Part two of this series addresses how to determine if your child really needs one of these powerful drugs.