Posted on 08/24/2005 5:44:07 AM PDT by dukeman
When 15-year-old Chelsea Rhoades left for school early one day last December, her family expected it to be just another normal, uneventful day at one of Indianas premier public high schools. But school officials had slightly different plans.
When Chelsea arrived in her school homeroom that day, her teacher directed everyone who did not have an opt-out slip to another classroom. Only five students had slips. The rest, who had no idea what the teacher was talking about, were divided into groups of 10-15, herded into classrooms and placed in front of computers. Chelsea, who was busy helping a friend in a wheelchair get situated in front of a computer, barely registered what she was signing when a form was placed in front of her. No explanations were issued. At least, none that Chelsea can recall. All she knew was that she was about to take a test. What she didnt know was that the test, made up of yes-and-no questions with no room for alternate answers or explanations, is part of a TeenScreen mental health screening program for suicide and social disorders that is being implemented in schools across the country, often without parental knowledge or consent.
After completing the test, which took 10 minutes, the students were instructed to wait outside. Thats where an employee with the local community mental health center found Chelsea, directed her to a more private hallway and then informed her that, according to her test results, she was suffering from OCD (obsessive compulsive disorder) and social anxiety. The mental health worker explained that the test results indicated Chelsea had OCD because she responded that she liked to help clean the house and social anxiety disorder because she responded that she didnt party much. The worker told her that if her condition got any worse, her mom should bring her to the mental health center for treatment.
According to Chelsea, all her friends were told that something was wrong with them, too. In fact, it seemed that the only students who werent told they were suffering from some sort of so-called disorder were the ones with the opt-out slips. And when Chelseas mom heard about the events of the day and her daughters diagnosis of OCD and social disorder, she immediately took action.
Driven by recommendations from President Bushs New Freedom Commission on Mental Health, which has called for mental health screening for all school-aged children, including those in preschool, TeenScreen is sweeping across the nation and finding its way into our public schools. Some states have already moved forward to implement recommendations by the commission. For example, the Illinois legislature has passed a plan to screen the mental health of all pregnant women and children up to 18 years of age. The plan also includes the use of antidepressant drugs. Under such a plan, both children and adults will be screened for so-called mental illness during their routine physical exams.
This all began in April 2002 when President Bush launched a new mental health commission. After supposedly conducting a comprehensive study, the commission recommended mental health screening for consumers of all ages, including preschool children. Schools, the commission concluded, are in a key position to screen the 52 million students and 6 million adults who work in the public schools.
So whats the problem with that? For one, although these programs are touted as suicide prevention tools, they seem to have more to do with drugging children than saving livesand they are understandably raising an outcry among parents and child advocacy groups alike. For example, the Alliance for Human Research Protection (www.ahrp.org) speaks about this screening program in terms of its being a duo-drug promotion scam and declaring otherwise normal children to be mentally ill. And Phyllis Schlafly (www.eagleforum.org) points out that drug companies are gearing up for bigger sales of antidepressants at the same time that the FDA is requiring warnings that antidepressants increase the risk of suicidal thinking and behavior in children who take them.
Chelseas parents have done a great deal to sound the alarm in their community about this insidious program. They used part of the family budget to place a large advertisement in their local paper in an effort to inform other parents about troubling aspects of the mental health screening program that include possible referrals of students for treatment, which could include drugs; entirely subjective diagnoses of psychological problems; and lack of evidence that screening for suicide risk reduces suicide attempts. And with the help of The Rutherford Institute, they are also preparing to file a lawsuit against the school district for its failure to inform them about the test or gain their permission.
It has been well established that parents have a fundamental constitutional right over the care, custody and control of their children, absent some showing of abuse or neglect. So for those who want to protect their families from this latest assault on the family, there are some immediate steps that can be taken to combat the problem.
First, learn your rights as a parent under the Protection of Pupil Rights Amendment. The PPRA is a federal law that was intended to protect the rights of parents and students. The PPRA allows parents to inspect their childrens instructional materials and requires that schools obtain written parental consent before schools engage in such programs as mental health screening. Also, contact your local school officials and demand that you be notified immediately if they are conducting mental health screening on your children. Finally, contact your representatives in Congress and protest these invasive activities that are being foisted on unsuspecting students and families.
For Chelsea and her family, the battle is just beginning. But if they are able to prevail, hopefully the Indiana school district, as well as other schools, will develop a little social anxiety of their own.
Constitutional attorney and author John W. Whitehead is founder and president of The Rutherford Institute and author of the award-winning Grasping for the Wind. He can be contacted at johnw@rutherford.org.
The subtle messages sent by the school contradict everything a Conservative and a Christian might stand for.
We recently got a large amount of donations to our homeschool library from an exschool teacher. Much of the stuff was excellent, but we threw out 3 HUGE boxes of inappropriate stuff.
We had piles of school posters, nobody wanted them. Among the poster slogans:
The most important goal in life is to help society.
Wisdom is silence.
Be one with nature.
You are the center of your universe.
Me too. Might make an interesting blog if you can write. :-)
There's an idea, linkinpunk.
Even if you don't make it public, I suggest you keep a diary or journal of what happens, starting today.
I'd be interested to know what led to your decision to send him to public school.
Thanks, maybe I will.
Have you checked to see if your local school has a "dual credit" option with a local college.
We opted out of high school, but started the "dual credit" program in 10th grade after homeschooling up to that point.
You still have to "deprogram" some of the garbage from the liberal profs, but I found we never had any "peer pressure" issues or normal NEA intrusion issues to deal with at the local college.
You're weird. You should go get your screening done. (Do you like A-1 sauce with your meatloaf? I do.)
Laura Earl must be one of the most sane people I know. She hates housework because it cuts into her party time. I'm almost as sane as she is.
Well, I hate cleaning, avoid it when I can, and party as much as possible. So I am AOK!
BUSH'S FAULT!
Nope! I like Lea & Perrins!......I'm REALLY wierd!......
Psychiatric Abuse in the Soviet Union
Under the Soviet regime, authorities often sent dissidents and other socially undesirable people to psychiatric institutions for an indefinite period of detention and treatment. In a criminal proceeding, a psychiatric evaluation was often used when the evidence available would not necessarily lead to a conviction. A finding by a psychiatrist of mental incompetence prevents a defendant from standing trial. Judges almost always adopted the psychiatrists recommended treatment, which could range from outpatient medical supervision to placement in a special psychiatric hospital. In those situations the defendant loses his or her right to appeal by virtue of mental incapacity. Once released from a psychiatric hospital, "patients" were routinely ordered to register with their local hospital and receive regular supervision (Soviet Psychiatric Abuse: The Shadow over World Psychiatry 1985, 22-23).
Bloch and Reddaway studied 200 cases of Soviets ordered to receive psychiatric care between 1962 and 1977 and developed a classification of these people. Three hundred cases from the period of 1977-1985 reflected these same targeted categories. All victims share the characteristic of having deviated from the social conventions prescribed by the state. Victims usually fell into one of five categories: 1) advocates of human rights and democratization; 2) nationalists; 3) would-be emigrants; 4) religious believers; and 5) citizens inconvenient to authorities (Soviet Psychiatric Abuse: The Shadow over World Psychiatry 1985, 30). Though there is no specific mention of homosexual men, lesbians, who could not be prosecuted under the criminal code, were sent to mental hospitals and forcibly treated (The Guardian 24 June 1995). Bloch and Reddaway support the plausibility of such treatment when they acknowledge that forced psychiatric treatment was used not only for dissidents, but also for "social deviants" (Psychiatric Terror 1977, 278).
A common diagnosis of criminally committed soviet citizens was that of "sluggish" or "creeping" schizophrenia, symptoms of which include "dissemination of slander," "exaggerated religious belief," and "excessive valuation of the West" (Helsinki Watch May 1990). Many of the sources consulted by Bloch and Reddaway cite the use of Sulphazine, or Sulfazine, a purified sulfur substance which has not been used in the West since the 1930s because of its lack of therapeutic effect, by psychiatrists treating criminally committed patients. Reactions to this drug include "high fever and pain at the site of injection and throughout the body" (Soviet Psychiatric Abuse: The Shadow over World Psychiatry 1985, 27).
;)
As long as there are no corn or peanuts in that meatloaf, you're ok.
The idiots in my school first tried to diagnose me with ADD, then when my parents and the doctor lauhed at them. Another tried to convince my parents I was dumb as a sack of rocks. Now I've grduated college and doing just fine no thanks to those morons.
The idiots in my school first tried to diagnose me with ADD. My parents and the family doctor laughed at them. Another tried to convince my parents I was dumb as a sack of rocks. Now I've grduated college and doing just fine no thanks to those morons.
I like the meatloaf heated, with ketchup, cheese, and onions.
I kind of like that one ... it can get REALLY LOUD at my house!
If it is a sandwich made from leftover meatloaf, you are ok. However, if it is a leftover sandwich made from meatloaf, you may have a problem. ;-)
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