NY Times article on medications

While the article says that proof is not there for the psychiatric "cocktails", it does show that some kids could not function without their psychiatric drugs. All things must be balanced, in my humble opinion.

NY TIMES November 23, 2006
Proof Is Scant on Psychiatric Drug Mix for Young
By GARDINER HARRIS
Their rooms are a mess, their trophies line the walls, and both have profiles on MySpace.com. Stephen and Jacob Meszaros seem like typical teenagers until their mother offers a glimpse into the family’s medicine cabinet.

Bottles of psychiatric medications fill the shelves. Stephen, 15, takes the antidepressants Zoloft and Desyrel for depression, the anticonvulsant Lamictal to moderate his moods and the stimulant Focalin XR to improve concentration. Jacob, 14, takes Focalin XR for concentration, the anticonvulsant Depakote to moderate his moods, the antipsychotic Risperdal to reduce anger and the antihypertensive Catapres to induce sleep.

Over the last three years, each boy has been prescribed 28 different psychiatric drugs.

“Sometimes, when you look at all the drugs they’ve taken, you wonder, ‘Wow, did I really do this to my kids?’ ” said their mother, Tricia Kehoe of Sharpsville, Pa. “But I’ve seen them without the medications, and there’s a major difference.”

There is little doubt that some psychiatric medicines, taken by themselves, work well in children. For example, dozens of studies have shown that stimulants improve attentiveness. A handful of other psychiatric drugs have proven effective against childhood obsessive compulsive disorder, among other problems.

But a growing number of children and teenagers in the United States are taking not just a single drug for discrete psychiatric difficulties but combinations of powerful and even life-threatening medications to treat a dizzying array of problems.

Last year in the United States, about 1.6 million children and teenagers — 280,000 of them under age 10 — were given at least two psychiatric drugs in combination, according to an analysis performed by Medco Health Solutions at the request of The New York Times. More than 500,000 were prescribed at least three psychiatric drugs. More than 160,000 got at least four medications together, the analysis found.

Many psychiatrists and parents believe that such drug combinations, often referred to as drug cocktails, help. But there is virtually no scientific evidence to justify this multiplication of pills, researchers say. A few studies have shown that a combination of two drugs can be helpful in adult patients, but the evidence in children is scant. And there is no evidence at all — “zero,” “zip,” “nil,” experts said — that combining three or more drugs is appropriate or even effective in children or adults.

“There are not any good scientific data to support the widespread use of these medicines in children, particularly in young children where the scientific data are even more scarce,” said Dr. Thomas R. Insel, director of the National Institute of Mental Health.

Psychiatrists who prescribe drug combinations say that the ability to mix and match medications improves their chances of being able to help children who are seriously, even desperately, ill.

Dr. Joseph Biederman, a professor of psychiatry at Harvard, said that doctors commonly used multiple medicines to treat heart disease, diabetes, cancer and AIDS. “Child psychiatry is not any different,” Dr. Biederman said. “These drugs have revolutionized how we treat severe psychopathology in children.”

The controversy leaves parents in a terrible bind. Desperate to help, many agonize over whether to medicate their children.

Mothers and fathers sometimes disagree, with the dispute straining or even ending marriages. Since some psychiatric drugs can cause worrisome physical effects, parents say that they must on occasion make a terrifying choice between their child’s physical health and his mental health.

The parents interviewed for this article told their stories, they said, in hopes of gaining greater acceptance for their children and themselves. Nearly all recalled being in a store when their child threw a tantrum and feeling that onlookers branded them as bad parents. They also said they hoped to help others negotiate what many said were unequal and often fraught relationships with psychiatrists.

“We struggled so much, made so many mistakes and felt so stigmatized, I hope our story can make it easier for others,” said Jacquie Erickson of Anchorage. Her daughter, Kaitlyn Johnston, 10, has taken psychiatric drugs since she turned 5 for diagnoses that include bipolar disorder.

On Shaky Ground

Stimulants like Ritalin are by far the most commonly prescribed psychiatric medicines in children. But doctors routinely pair stimulants with antidepressants, antipsychotics and anticonvulsants, even though some of these medications can cause serious side effects, have few proven pediatric psychiatric benefits and lack clear evidence about how they interact or influence mental and physical development.

Last year, the Food and Drug Administration required drug makers to warn on their labels that antidepressants can cause suicidal thoughts and behavior in some children. Anticonvulsant drugs carry warnings about liver and pancreas damage and fatal skin rashes. The side effects of antipsychotic medicines can include rapid weight gain, diabetes, irreversible tics and, in elderly patients with dementia, sudden death. When drugs are combined, these risks compound.

Ms. Kehoe, who receives government financial and child-care assistance because her children are considered mentally ill, said she knew that there were risks to the drug cocktails. Both her sons are short and underweight for their age — a common side effect of stimulants — and she fears that the drugs have affected their health and behavior in other ways.

“But I don’t think the insurance would pay for it if the F.D.A. didn’t decide that children should use it,” said Ms. Kehoe, who herself takes psychiatric medication.

In fact, the drug agency has specifically warned against the use of Lamictal, one of the drugs Stephen takes, in children who, like him, do not suffer from seizures because in 8 out of 1,000 children the drug causes life-threatening rashes.

Stephen and Jacob’s psychiatrist did not reply to telephone messages left with an office secretary on three different days. Ms. Kehoe said that she asked him to speak to this reporter but that he refused. The boys have had 11 psychiatrists over the last three years, according to prescription records, and many more before that, Ms. Kehoe said.

In interviews, Stephen and Jacob said they hated taking their drug cocktails.

“Everybody hates medications,” Jacob said.

Ms. Kehoe said her youngest son, Lucas Keck, was showing signs of attention deficit disorder and might soon need to start medication.

“I see the hyperness in him,” she said. “My pediatrician has said that he would venture to say that Lucas will be A.D.H.D.”

Stephen and Jacob were Lucas’s age — 6 — when they were given their first prescriptions.

The F.D.A. requires drug makers to prove that their drugs work safely before the agency will approve them for sale in the United States. But doctors can prescribe and combine approved medicines as they see fit. Such mixing is common in medicine but rarely studied by drug makers.

Psychiatrists started mixing psychiatric medications because the drugs were only moderately effective and often caused terrible side effects, said Dr. Steven E. Hyman, the provost of Harvard University and former director of the National Institute of Mental Health. “None of these drugs by themselves do an adequate job of controlling symptoms,” Dr. Hyman said.

If one drug failed, many psychiatrists assumed that two or more drugs used together might succeed. For decades, no one studied whether this was accurate. But in recent years, a trickle of studies have examined the question, with mixed results.

In studies in adults, some combinations of two drugs have been shown to work better than single medications to improve the symptoms of depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder and the mania associated with bipolar disorder. For example, a recent large government-financed study in adults, published in The New England Journal of Medicine, found that two antidepressants worked a bit better than one for adults who suffered from chronic, severe depression. But other studies have found no benefit from commonly prescribed drug combinations.

The use of two-medicine combinations in children is on much shakier ground. Even for single drugs, the effectiveness of some psychiatric medications in younger patients is questionable: most trials of antidepressants in depressed children, for instance, fail to show any beneficial effect. But hardly any studies have examined the safety or the effectiveness of medicine combinations in children. A 2003 review in The American Journal of Psychiatry found only six controlled trials of two-drug combinations. Four of the six failed to show any benefit; in a fifth, the improvement was offset by greater side effects.

“No one has been able to show that the benefits of these combinations outweigh the risks in children,” said Dr. Daniel J. Safer, an associate professor of psychiatry at Johns Hopkins University and an author of the 2003 review.

If the evidence for two-drug combinations is minimal, for three-drug combinations it is nonexistent, several top experts said.

“The data is zip,” Dr. Hyman said.

Many psychiatrists said that they turned to drug cocktails only in desperate circumstances. “If you’ve got a 15-year-old who is cutting up her arms, you’ve got a barn on fire and what are you supposed to do?” asked Dr. Alexander Lerman, a child and adolescent psychiatrist in New York, who said he rarely prescribed combinations.

Billy and Jackie Igafo-Te’o of Jackson, Mich., are among the desperate. In the last seven years, their 12-year-old son, Michael, “has been on just about everything you can put a child on,” Mrs. Igafo-Te’o said. He is now taking four medications: an antipsychotic, an anticonvulsant, an antidepressant and a sleep medicine.

Despite the medications, Michael’s behavior has grown increasingly disruptive. He has kicked and punched holes in almost every wall of the Igafo-Te’o home. He wrenched the sink off the wall in the upstairs bathroom and pulled two bedroom doors off their hinges, damaging the frames. The family no longer fixes the damage.

During a recent visit, Michael and Mr. Igafo-Te’o were sitting on the living-room floor. Michael wanted the phone. His father held it out of reach to prevent Michael from playing with it. Michael became increasingly desperate. He cried. He cursed.

“That’s it, you have a timeout,” Mr. Igafo-Te’o said.

“No, no, no,” Michael answered. “You pimp!”

He slapped his father in the face, hard. Mr. Igafo-Te’o hustled Michael into the kitchen and forced him to sit for 20 minutes.

“What’s the purpose of all this medication if I still have to do that?” Mr. Igafo-Te’o asked.

He said he wanted to end Michael’s drug therapy. Among other side effects, the drugs have made Michael obese, which has led to seasesconditionsandhealthtopics/asthma/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier">Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, estimated that half the children referred to his clinic for research in recent years — including many who took drug combinations — had the wrong diagnosis and often did well on fewer drugs. “Even among properly diagnosed bipolar patients, many come to our program already taking medicines that interfered with each other,” Dr. Sachs said.

But Dr. Judith Rapoport, a senior investigator in child psychiatry at the National Institute of Mental Health, said that in her experience, few children were overmedicated. Dr. Rapoport studies children with schizophrenia. Before entering her study, children must be drug-free for three weeks.

“We’ve had a handful of cases who are completely normal when they get off drugs,” Dr. Rapoport said. “But most of these kids become very, very sick and unmanageable without drugs.”

The first psychiatric problem diagnosed in most children is attention deficit disorder, treated with stimulants — drugs that improve attentiveness. But when children’s problems persist, parents’ relatively good experience with stimulants often convinces them to agree to try other medicines — in some cases drugs like the antipsychotic Risperdal or the anticonvulsant Depakote that have few proven benefits in children and greater dangers, said Dr. Ranga Krishnan, chairman of the department of psychiatry and behavioral science at Duke University.

“After you get them on one drug, parents don’t seem to mind the second,” said Dr. Krishnan, who said that he had grave doubts about the growing use of psychiatric drug cocktails in children.

Antidepressants are commonly paired with stimulants, but antidepressant use has declined over the last year after the F.D.A. warning about suicide risk. In their place, physicians are prescribing combinations that include antipsychotic and anticonvulsant drugs, according to Medco. From 2001 to 2005, the use of antipsychotic drugs in children and teenagers grew 73 percent, Medco found. Among girls, antipsychotic use more than doubled.

On Again, Off Again

Andrew Darr of Caldwell, Idaho, whose sons took medications, said that he was opposed to it from the start. “When you come home from work and instead of getting them clawing at your feet and yelling, ‘Daddy, Daddy,’ you get a lethargic grunt, it just kills you,” Mr. Darr said.

His wife, Leslie Darr, eventually agreed to stop the medicines, but only after a family tragedy.

The Darrs have four children, Nicholas, 16, Nathan, 15, Becky, 12, and Benjamin, 9. At 3, Nicholas suffered a mild brain injury when undiagnosed appendicitis led him to suffer weeks of high fever, Mrs. Darr said.

Mrs. Darr said that she was pressured by school officials to give Nicholas a stimulant at age 6. Nathan soon followed.

Three years later, the boys had a traumatic weekend away with relatives. A month after that, Mrs. Darr said, both were hospitalized for a week and given a diagnosis of bipolar disorder and prescriptions for antipsychotic, antidepressant and sleeping medicines.

Over the next three years, Nicholas’s weight ballooned to 140 pounds from 52. Nathan went to 115 pounds from 48. Neither boy got much taller, Mrs. Darr said. They did poorly in school.

Then Becky developed a brain tumor. A nurse practitioner gave Mrs. Darr free samples of an antipsychotic drug to help her cope. After starting it, she said, she could not sleep or think straight. She realized that she had been giving similar medicines to her sons for years and she decided to wean the boys off the pills.

Their behavior immediately worsened. At one point, Nicholas left the house during a blizzard wearing only boxer shorts, Mrs. Darr said. They found him in a tire swing saying, “Baaa.”

“There were several times that we almost gave up,” Mr. Darr said.

But after four months off medication, the boys’ behavior normalized, the Darrs said, and they were transferred out of special education and into regular classes. The Darrs recently allowed the boys to spend their first evening at a mall without supervision, and in July they gave both boys their first bicycles. “They’ve come a long way,” Mrs. Darr said.

In an interview, Nicholas said the drugs “were not cool.”

“You go to school and everybody thinks, ‘Look at that retard,’ ” he said.

Still, most of the parents interviewed for this article said their children’s behavior deteriorated rapidly without medication.

Joanne Johnson of Hillsborough, N.J., described a psychiatrist’s effort to wean her 17-year-old son, Brad, off of all five of his psychiatric medicines as “the biggest mistake of our lives.”

Brad, then 13, became suicidal and was hospitalized for weeks, Ms. Johnson said.

“He went into the hospital on five drugs and came out on five different ones, but he was unstable,” she said. “It took a little over two years to find the right match again.”

Brad is now taking lithium, an antipsychotic, an anticonvulsant, an antidepressant, a stimulant and a sleeping pill.

“He’ll probably be on these for the rest of his life,” Ms. Johnson said.


Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company
 

jamrobmic

New Member
"Ms. Kehoe, who receives government financial and child-care assistance because her children are considered mentally ill..."

I wonder how many people reading this article will zero in on that and will assume that's why she has her kids on medication.

"Still, most of the parents interviewed for this article said their children’s behavior deteriorated rapidly without medication."

But most of the article seems to be slanted toward the idea that medicating kids is at best not proven to be helpful, and at worst is harming them.
 

On_Call

New Member
I agree - definitely slanted against the medications, I'd say. Interesting read, but fairly discouraging to the parents reading it that are a bit uncomfortable with the medication issue.

I know I have struggled with it over the years. It is certainly not anything we would choose for our children, but the benefits far outweight the negatives in my very humble opinion.
 

pepperidge

New Member
While medications have been helpful for our sons, I feel uneasy that there isn't more good scientific data on both the conditions, the best drugs for them, and heaven forbid, the best combination of drugs. We try these things out of desperation. And I hope we don't regret it done the road. But this is definitely an area of medicine that needs more research.

We are going through a medication wash (slowly) on my youngest son because nothing seems to be helping. Only thing he hasn't tried is an anti-depressant. Question is whether it would help his anxiety. But I hate to go there....
 

BusynMember

Well-Known Member
I wish doctors would do much more intensive testing to see which problems our children really seem to have. It's a guess at best, but I don't feel they take adequate time with the kids and often I worry that they are affected by "trends." I never felt this way before, but finding out how wrong they've been about ME all these years scares me for the kids who are young NOW, including my own child who was so misdiagnosed and so readily thrown all sorts of medications. "Let's see, he's hyper, yeah, it's ADHD, stims." "Yeah, has to be bipolar, mood stabilizers and antipsychotics are the ticket." Welll, he didn't have either and more testing would have shown that he had Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD). Then they could have tried Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) therapies before medications, but nobody wanted to be bothered with all the testing. So our kids often get mislabeled and misdiagnosed and put on wrong medications...or medications when they aren't even needed.

Some people NEED medications just to face the day. I get debilitating depression without medication and have been this way since childhood. I couldn't get out of bed; couldn't even leave the house for a while, and, yes, I tried just therapy (many times--no luck). It took about twenty years to find a medication combo that REALLY helped me and I wonder if that's because the doctors just had no clue what was really wrong (I'm not sure they know still, but the medications are working, so I don't really care). My son never needed medications. He needed Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) therapies. I'm far from anti-medication. I just wish professionals would be more careful about their diagnostics and less apt to throw pills at our kids before they are sure what they are dealing with. Stims, in particular, to me (just my opinion) seen way overused, and, let's face it, if it's not clear-cut ADHD, what child needs speed? I don't know--I'm kind of leery of all professionals these days. I really feel they don't take enough time, don't listen to the parents enough, and don't keep up on research. Doctors can rely too heavily on non-MD therapists who haven't had their schooling and then just medicate according to what their non-MD collegues say.

I do believe medications can save lives. They did mine. But spend more time getting to know each child. And, as parents, we have every right to question, question, question and get second, third, and forth opinions. Just my own little vent :wink:
 

mawmastewart

It never ends...
One of the reasons there is little/no research for kids and medications is because children are protected from dangerous research by ethics laws. This doesn't help those of us who are between a rock and hard place trying to do the best for our difficult child without really being able to KNOW that we are doing the right thing. I guess the only thing we can focus on is that our pioneering in this area will make the path for some behind us a little easier. And remember, this stuff is genetic so it may be our grandkids lives that we will affect positively.

I hate medications. I just posted on this very feeling on the general board because I am considering an antipsychotic in addition to the ADHD stims we are using for my son. HATE medications. Want to run away to the woods and eat vegetables, want God to HEAL him completely without medicine, want a miracle... But in the face of what we face everyday...what choices do we really have? I think a lot of medications could be avoided by a societal shift in health thinking.. but really? Is McDonalds going to go out of business? Are we going to stop eating sugar? This author really did make the parents out to be some kind of sadistic criminals.. or blind sheep following evil medical sheppards who really sound like mad scientists experimenting on our kids. It DOESN't help those of us who are struggling with the medication issue.. at all. in my humble opinion.
 

crazymama30

Active Member
The Times has done a whole series on this subject, I think I have links to them somewhere, possibly the whole article. They are interesting, but some have a skewed view.
 

Sheila

Moderator
This article is more balanced than many I've seen.

Until better diagnostic tools are developed, I don't see how the trial and error treatment practices can improve. Then factoring in how medications react differently in individuals.... It's hard decisions for the parent and professionals.
 
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