CITIZENS COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS

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Child Death By Drugs

While psychiatrists proclaim psychoactive drugs safe and effective for children, many parents know from tragic personal experience that this is false.

Shaina DunkleSHAINA DUNKLE — 1991-2001
Vicki Dunkle’s daughter Shaina’s life had been filled with dance classes, Girl Scouts, piano lessons and softball games. But in 1999, when Shaina was in second grade, teachers said she was “too active” and “talked out of turn.” Without diagnostic tests or physical exams, a psychiatrist concluded she suffered from ADHD and prescribed a psychiatric drug. On February 26, 2001, Shaina suffered a seizure in the doctor’s office. Her mother rushed to hold her in her arms, where, minutes later, she died. “Shaina looked into my eyes as her life ended and I could do nothing to save her. It’s been two years and I relive those last few minutes every day. Believe me, it is a nightmare no parent should ever have to live with,” Mrs. Dunkle said. An autopsy revealed that Shaina had died from toxic levels of the prescribed psychiatric drug.

SAMUEL GROSSMAN — 1973-1986

 Samuel Grossman
In 1986, Samuel Grossman, 13, died after being prescribed a stimulant for “over-activity.” The autopsy revealed an enlarged heart caused by the psychiatric drug. According to the boy’s mother, “Giving this drug to a child is like playing Russian roulette. No one knows which child will get the brain damage and/or those who will die. I played the game and I lost.”

 

 

MATTHEW SMITH — 1986-2000

Matthew Smith

 

At age 7, Matthew Smith was diagnosed with ADHD. His parents were told he needed to take a stimulant to help him focus and that non-compliance could bring criminal charges for neglecting their son’s educational and emotional needs. “My wife and I were scared of the possibility of losing our children if we didn’t comply,” says Matthew’s father, Lawrence. The parents acceded to the pressure after being told that there was nothing wrong with the “medication.” But on March 21, 2000, while skateboarding, Matthew suffered a heart attack and died. The coroner determined that Matthew’s heart showed clear signs of the small blood vessel damage that is caused by stimulant drugs like amphetamines and concluded that Matthew died from long-term use of the prescribed ADHD stimulant. “I cannot go back and change things for us at this point. However, I hope to God my story and information will reach the hearts and minds of many families, so they can make an educated decision,” Mr. Smith said.

STEPHANIE HALL — 1984-1996

Stephanie Hall Stephanie Hall was a shy first grader in Ohio who loved books and school. After her teacher reported that Stephanie had a hard time “staying on task,” a doctor diagnosed Attention Deficit Disorder and prescribed a stimulant. Over the next five years, Stephanie complained of stomachaches and nausea and displayed mood swings and bizarre behavior. On January 5, 1996, at age 11, Stephanie died in her sleep from cardiac arrhythmia. Mrs. Hall remembers the last words exchanged with her daughter: “I said, ‘It’s 9 o’clock Steph, get to bed,’ and she replied ‘OK Mom, I love you.’” The next morning when her father went to wake her for school, she didn’t respond. “We called paramedics and the police...Stephanie was so cold. I kept saying to them, ‘She is supposed to bury me, not me bury her’....”


Psychiatric Guesswork

In his book A Dose of Sanity, the late neurologist and psychiatrist Sydney Walker III wrote of the dangers of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, citing cases such as these:

John, a successful and happy family man, began experiencing fatigue and sadness. Two psychiatrists saddled him with a variety of DSM labels and treated him with 26 different drugs without ever conducting a single neurological examination. When a qualified medical doctor finally conducted a thorough diagnostic evaluation, he discovered that John had a brain tumour. Once removed, his “emotional” problems and tiredness rapidly vanished.

Lilian, a 46-year-old normally athletic woman, felt sad and weary. A psychiatrist prescribed an antidepressant. “After all, Lilian had enough symptoms to be lumped into the DSM category of ‘depression’—and that was all he needed to know.” However, in the final analysis, “the simplicity was that her husband’s chronic snoring had been waking her up every five to ten minutes during the night—she was suffering from a severe case of sleep deprivation.”

Another example is Austin, who was hailed as “the poster child for Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder.” He had been kicked out of 11 preschools in three years for doing everything from shouting obscenities and hitting other children to poking a teacher in the eye with a pencil. He was prescribed stimulants. But after a blockage was removed from his colon, he suddenly stopped terrorizing his teachers and classmates. Austin, who is now nine, was able to sit quietly and was a joy to be around. He gave up the medication. His mother said she never would have thought to connect Austin’s behaviour with the chronic constipation he had suffered since infancy. “The bad behaviours disappear as soon as the impaction is removed,” said Dr. Paul Hyman, chief of paediatric gastroenterology at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City.

Dr. Walker concluded, “It’s important to remember...that a number of DSM-oriented psychiatrists have, to a large degree, abandoned the science of differential diagnosis, and thus consider most psychiatric illnesses ‘incurable.’ This leaves them with only two weapons: psychotherapy and drugs. It’s not surprising that they’re among the first to leap on each new drug bandwagon; like long-ago doctors who recommended bleeding for every ailment, they have little else to offer....”

Abuses In Institutions

With billions in government appropriations allocated for mental health treatment, just how safe and effective are psychiatric institutions? The following cases illustrate the dangers of a system that lacks scientific understanding of causes of mental health problems, with subsequent lack of workable remedies and the terrible consequences of this.

 Jeramy Harrel
On April 12, 1991, 14-year-old Jeramy Harrel was with his grandmother when a patrol car pulled up beside them, and two hulking uniformed men who appeared to be police officers announced that they were taking Jeramy to Colonial Hills Psychiatric Hospital. They said that psychiatrist Dr. Mark Bowlan and a child welfare agent—who had never spoken with Jeramy or his parents—had filled in an application for the boy’s detention, claiming he was a “substance abuser” and that his grandparents had physically abused him. The psychiatrist also stated that Jeramy was “truant from school, failing grades, violent [and] aggressive,” and was “likely to cause serious harm to self.” It took the efforts of Texas State Senator Frank Tejeda to finally obtain Jeramy’s release from the hospital after he had discovered the boy’s admission was based on the unsubstantiated and untrue comments made by Jeramy’s 12-year-old brother, Jason. The family’s health insurance was billed $11,000 for this fraudulent “admission” and “treatment.”

In 2001, a psychiatric nurse found a 53-year-old man unresponsive 12 hours after he had been medicated for “hostile, cursing behavior.” The man died within hours. An autopsy revealed that he suffered from multiple sclerosis (MS). Hospital staff thought “MS” on his admission form meant “mental status.”

Carl McCloskey says his son, John, 19, was sodomized with a broom-like handle so savagely in a psychiatric hospital that his bowel was torn and his liver was punctured. The teenager became violently ill, lapsed into a coma, and died 14 months later.

Seventeen-year-old Kelly Stafford agreed to enter a psychiatric facility expecting a brief respite from troubled family relationships. But once the door was closed, she was kept for 309 days, many of them behind blackened windows in cruel darkness. Her arms and legs were strapped for months at a time. Others in the facility were forced to sit motionless and silent for 12-hour stretches. “I had to eat Thanksgiving and Christmas dinner in restraints,” Ms. Stafford said. “There’s not a day that goes by that you don’t think about it.”

In 2003, Dr. Masami Houki, head of Houki psychiatric clinic in Japan, was charged with manslaughter after he plugged the mouth of a 31-year-old female patient with tissue, put adhesive tape over her mouth, injected her with a tranquilizer, tied her hands and feet, and forced her to lay on the back seat of a car while being transferred to the clinic. She was dead on arrival.

In Athens, Greece, the Ntaou Pendeli psychiatric institution kept children in a ward with mentally handicapped adults. Some of the children were naked; all were housed in cold, barren rooms and often left to lie in their own faeces and urine. A teenager had been locked up for 10 years after he misbehaved when his father left his mother for another woman. He witnessed horrors such as the rape of other children by psychiatric nurses.


Restraint Deaths and Abuse

Restrained Boy Psychiatrists persist in inflicting psychosurgery and electroshock on patients even though no valid medical or scientific justification exists for these practices. After more than 60 years, psychiatrists can neither explain how they are supposed to work nor justify their extensive damage.

When Jennifer Martin’s 70-year-old mother experienced headaches and nausea and stopped eating and talking, a psychiatrist claimed she was in shock from recent deaths in her family and gave her ECT. Less than 24 hours later she was dead. An autopsy revealed that the problem was not depression, but a brain stem complication. “Shock treatment killed her,” Ms. Martin said.

A grieving husband says a psychiatrist recommended electroshock because it would release a chemical in the brain that would make his wife, Dorothy, feel better. Aware of her earlier heart attacks, he administered 38 electroshocks. The last one killed her.

In 2001, the New Zealand government was forced to formally apologize and pay $6.5 million to 95 former patients of the Lake Alice Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Unit for torture and abuse they suffered at the directions of psychiatrist Selwyn Leeks in the 1970s. ECT had been applied to victims’ legs, arms and genitals without anesthetic.

Gwen Whitty At 28, Gwen Whitty was a wife and mother of two with another on the way. When she developed difficulty breathing, psychiatrist Harry Bailey recommended “deep sleep therapy” for a “rest” —which turned out to involve heavy doses of barbiturates and sedatives while shackled naked to a bed, kept unconscious for two to three weeks, and given repeated electroshock. Ten years later, a doctor discovered two jagged steel plates in her head, attached to the bone by Bailey to cover holes in her skull.


In 1998, 16-year-old Tristan Sovern was held facedown by at least two mental health assistants with his arms crossed under his body. When he screamed, “You’re choking me...I can’t breathe,” staff at the U.S. psychiatric facility shoved a large towel over his mouth and tied a bed sheet around his head. Tristan died of asphyxiation.

In 1998, psychiatric staff forced 13-year-old Stephanie Jobin of Canada to lie face down on the floor and placed a beanbag chair on top of her. A female staff member sat on the chair to pin her down while another staff member held her feet, after she had already been dosed with five different psychiatric drugs. After 20 minutes of struggling, Stephanie stopped breathing and later died. Her death was ruled an accident.

The night before 15-year-old Edith Campos was sent to Desert Hills psychiatric hospital in Tucson, Arizona, she made colorful computer drawings for her family. If her mother missed her, all she needed to do was look at the picture and think of her daughter and that she would soon be home. Two weeks later, Edith came home in a coffin. During the time she was hospitalized, her parents were not allowed to speak to her. On February 4, 1998, Edith apparently died of asphyxiation, her chest compressed when she was held to the ground for at least 10 minutes after reportedly raising her fist during a confrontation with staff members.

On August 18, 1997, 16-year-old Roshelle Clayborne died during restraint at a psychiatric facility in San Antonio, Texas. Roshelle was slammed face down on the floor, her arms yanked across her chest, her wrists gripped from behind by a mental health aide. “I can’t breathe,” she gasped. Her last words were ignored. A syringe delivered 50 milligrams of Thorazine into her body and with eight staffers watching, Roshelle became suddenly still. Blood trickled from the corner of her mouth as she lost control of her bodily functions. Her limp body was rolled into a blanket and dumped in an 8-by 10-foot room. There she lay in her own waste and vomit for five minutes before anyone noticed she hadn’t moved. By the time a registered nurse arrived and began CPR, it was too late. Roshelle never revived.

In Denmark in 2002, a patient who was punished by being put into restraints was compensated in a damages suit against the treating psychiatrist. This was the first time ever that compensation was awarded to a patient harmed by the restraint procedure.


Involuntary Commitment

How easy is it to be committed? Very easy. In the United States alone, a person is involuntarily incarcerated in a psychiatric facility every 1 ¼ minutes. How therapeutic is involuntary incarceration? Consider the following examples of committal abuse.

A psychiatrist committed Ruchla “Rose” Zinger, a 64-year-old Holocaust survivor with an understandable history of mental instability, to an institution. He relied solely on reports by family members. To carry out the involuntary commitment, police broke down the door to her house, handcuffed her and shoved her down the stairs. She suffered a heart attack and died.

In 1999, psychiatrists in Germany involuntarily committed a 79-year-old woman because neighbors reported she had acted “strangely.” Despite her long-term diabetes and liver, kidney and heart conditions, she was prescribed between five and 20 times the normal dosage of powerful tranquilizers. Six days later the woman had to be rushed to a hospital emergency room, where she died.

Doctors reported she had needed urgent medical attention at least a day earlier and the autopsy showed that she died of breathing difficulties—a complication of tranquilizers.

An 8-year-old boy from Massachusetts, who suffered from epilepsy, was rushed by his parents to a hospital for a medication adjustment after he experienced hallucinations. Instead of adjusting his medication, staff committed him to a psychiatric facility. It took the frantic parents an entire day to secure his transfer to a medical hospital for appropriate care.

Dana Davis was slammed face down on his living room floor and handcuffed by police before his horrified wife and six-year-old son. This occurred after he walked out of the office of a psychiatrist he didn’t like. As he was leaving, she asked, “Can you promise that you will not commit suicide between now and your next meeting?” Jokingly he quipped, “I’m no soothsayer!” Thirty minutes later, the three police officers were taking him to the hospital where he was found not suicidal and was released.

Seventy-four-year-old William, suffering congestive heart failure and reliant on an oxygen tank to breathe, said “Yes” when his homecare nurse asked if he felt depressed. Within 30 minutes, an attendant from a local psychiatric hospital arrived at his home and when William refused to go with him, called the police. They arrived, unhooked the oxygen tank, searched him for weapons, shoved him into a police car and drove him to the psychiatric facility. With no examination, William was admitted as “suicidal,” and held for 72 hours involuntarily, for “observation.” The next day a psychiatrist said he needed to be detained another 48 hours and possibly as long as six months. William was “saved” only by the onset of a heart attack. He was transferred to a general hospital where a medical doctor determined that William had no need for psychiatric confinement. William’s health insurance was billed $4,000 for four days in the psychiatric facility (even though he had only been there two days and not by choice), and he was billed $800 personally.


Other Deaths
An 8-year-old suffered a stroke. Family history and risk factors other than Ritalin use were absent. “Stroke is a well-documented complication of amphetamine abuse,” the authors of one study commented.
The U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) MedWatch program, a voluntary system for reporting complications from drug usage, reported the following adverse reactions from methylphenidate (the main stimulant used for “ADHD") between 1990-1997: 160 deaths; 569 hospitalizations, 36 of which were life-threatening; 949 central or peripheral nervous system occurrences; 126 cardiovascular (heart) occurrences. Consider that this reporting system may only represent between 1% and 10% of the actual adverse reactions from this drug.

Between 1997 and 2000, there were an additional 26 deaths attributed to methylphenidate (all prescription forms of it) bringing the total reported to FDA MedWatch for the decade 1990-2000 to 186.

In 2001, there was one report of a 14-year-old who experienced a fatal cardiac arrest while skateboarding, after eight years of Ritalin treatment. According to a Doctors for Disaster Preparedness newsletter, “Autopsy showed scarring in small blood vessels (WorldNetDaily 5/7/00).”

“Methylphenidate [is] chemically and pharmacologically similar to amphetamine....The possibility of vasculitis connected to methylphenidate should not be surprising.”

CCHR What we Believe

What CCHR Believe

Drugging Our Children

Drugging Our Children

RECOGNITION OF CCHR

CCHR's humanitarian work has been recognised the world over for ensuring legal rights and protections for consumers and/or their families. Read more...

DRUG WARNINGS

CCHR led the fight for informed consent to psychiatric treatment, obtaining the first law in South Australia in 1979 that granted patients the right to consent to or refuse electroshock treatment. In recent years, it has filed numerous requests to the Therapeutic Goods Administration to reveal all the adverse drug reactions for psychotropic drugs reported to it. Click here to read more

DRUG SIDE EFFECTS

No matter what country someone is prescribed a psychiatric drug, the side effects are the same: dangerous, sometimes life-threatening, but always debilitating. CCHR International in Los Angeles decoded the U.S. Food and Drug Administration psychotropic drug reports database to produce this drug side effects search engine for consumers. This is also relevant to all Australians. You can also view a selection of ADHD drug reactions including Ritalin, Concerta, Dexamphetamine & Strattera obtained by CCHR.

Psychiatric Drugs

An Australian Report Titled, Psychiatric Drugs and Violence documents how Antidepressants and Antipsychotics can Cause Violence.
The report was written as Australians are not adequately warned that psychiatric drugs can cause homicidal actions and thoughts....

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