It doesn't ake a doctor to understand human nature, in fact the profession can only work to insult and pervert it. That's just what has happened here.
QUOTE: "...10-minute question-and-answer test, ranging from 14 to 52 questions,"
...and picked out 10 of 68 students as 'needing further testing'? Who, in the name of Davey Crockett's sweat-stained buckskins, would trust a half-fannied, dimwitted, Parade magazine, horsepoop smelling test like this?
"Survey Under Siege"? Really? Can't find a professional psychiatrist, psychologist, PLUMBER, even?
Fercryinoutloud.
Where's my mallet? Someone's gonna get whacked!
They say that kids are good at hiding problems. What makes them think they are going to open up on a test?
Attention Smartypants People Get out! We don't want you here. This thread is only for stoopid and ignorant people. If you know anything about this subject, just leave. You'll be glad you did |
I'm really disgusted at the schools/government into the intrusion of our kids' lives. Here in PA, the schools are now going to start including the BMI on students' report cards (a calculation that determines ideal weight vs. obesity). For one, it's none of their damn business what my son's BMI is, and second, I don't need the school to tell me whether or not my son is overweight.
As for suicide prevention/pushing psychotropics, I have several thoughts on that. Too many people think that prescription drugs can make up for bad parenting; they can't. There are kids that do need some of these meds, but they are vastly in the minority. Having worked for almost 20 years around kids in both a psychiatric setting as well as a medical setting, I can say this with confidence. I have seen a recent trend to NOT prescribe SSRI's (anti-depressants such as Prozac, Paxil, Zoloft, etc.), which is reassuring. There are a lot on meds for ADHD; sometimes it's appropriate, sometimes not.
Just the other day, one of the pediatrician's in our practice received the survey forms back from a teacher regarding one of the doc's patients (to eval for ADHD). The teacher filled it in much differently than the parent; if you look at the parent's survey, the child should be on meds (the mother specified that she wanted her son started on Strattera;what does that tell you?), yet the teacher's form indicated none of these behaviors; the child will not get the rx, and thus will not get the label of ADHD.
I think this proves that the impetus to start meds can be from EITHER the parent or the school, and sometimes from both. The doctor is certainly doing the right thing by PROPERLY EVALUATING the child before writing the script.
We're living in a much different world; many parents and schools just want to jam pills down their kids' throats to fix a problem, either real or perceived. With all of the meds we have, I wonder if, several decades from now, we'll see a lot of people with kidney and liver failure?
I think any FReeper present here during the 1990's would have been flagged and refered to intervention counseling.