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Drugging your kids

Discussion in 'Other Discussions' started by Cutter, Apr 27, 2010.

  1. Cutter

    Cutter New Member

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    Why are so many kids on drugs these days? How many of you drug your kids to alter their behavior? Do you believe it is right or do you have to struggle with it? Could it be corrected with good old fashioned discipline?
     
  2. matt wade

    matt wade Well-Known Member

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    I believe it is OK to utilize drugs to correct an identifiable chemical imbalance or some other condition that can be tested for and shown through blood/lab work. ADHD and other types of behavior problems don't fall under this category. I believe ADHD and these others can be corrected by sending the kids out to play and letting them get tired. Most kids with "ADHD" have parents that are content to let TV and video games babysit their kids.
     
  3. Gina B

    Gina B Active Member

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    I do not give my kids drugs, but I'm definitely interested. What are these behavior altering drugs, and where can I get them?
     
  4. Thinkingstuff

    Thinkingstuff Active Member

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    You can have the school district where you live help you get a Psych eval to determine if your kids fit in a catagory defined in the DSM IV as needing psychotropic meds to help with their behavior. Once you do this and get a positive diagnosis you can be set up with social security and social services. If you're interested.
     
  5. matt wade

    matt wade Well-Known Member

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    I might be wrong, but I think she was joking :).
     
  6. Gina B

    Gina B Active Member

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    Nah, I just hoped to find something over the counter that would make them clean their rooms and choose friends wisely.

    Okay, seriousness...if a doctor/psych recommended medicating one of my kids, I'd consider it, but it most definitely would require quite a number of considerations and a lot of investigation. I see far too many kids drugged up when what they really need is parenting. I've also seen parents who really do seek out having their kids diagnosed and drugged simply for the social security money. It's sick, and that industry should be SO much more regulated!
     
  7. Gina B

    Gina B Active Member

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    Yeah. Deadpanning is half of who I am, but it doesn't always come across the same online, for some odd reason. Most online people NEED those emoticons. :laugh: It would be kinda funny to carry around ones on sticks in real life for those who need them in person...
     
  8. annsni

    annsni Well-Known Member
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    I've seen true issues (including ADHD) in kids where medications do help them out. A young child with ADHD does not have the ability to quiet themselves down enough nor to focus - they need to learn life skills to do so. Discipline means nothing because it's not a discipline issue. My oldest has ADD (not hyperactivity but inattentiveness) and it took many years and many tears before she was mature enough to be able to understand her issues and to work through it. She's now a sophomore in college and doing well and we never medicated her. However, there were times I was tempted because I really began to dislike her because of her behavior.

    But I do not think that every child who is medicated SHOULD be medicated. I also think that we need children who have these issues to understand that while they will struggle with it, they still need to be responsible for their actions. My daughter's friend was getting all angry with my daughter online one night and she started 'screaming' about how she's sick, she has a legitimate illness and that is why she lies. HUH??? Sorry - that illness (ADHD) does not cause her to lie. It just doesn't happen. But she was using it as an excuse to have poor behavior and sin in her life. So I think whether we medicate our children or not, we need to help them to understand that the behavior is still within themselves to control and that while it's difficult, we will help them through that struggle as their parent and they WILL be able to be successful on the other side. That's way better than blame.
     
  9. jaigner

    jaigner Active Member

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    I teach elementary school, so I see every condition under the sun. I agree that meds are too widely distributed, but I've seen kids who need them just to have a chance. I've seen other kids who just need firm discipline. I'm not a medical professional, but it seems to me you can tell the difference in a lot of cases.
     
  10. Scarlett O.

    Scarlett O. Moderator
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    Out of my 32 sixth graders, I have three of whom have been diagnosed with ADHD. One of them takes meds. In the other two cases, the parents don't like the side effects, so they do nothing.

    I wish that those who think that parents are just "drugging" kids and those who believe that ADHD is just something that lazy parents and teachers call undiscipled children could come to work with me for just one day next week.

    Just one day.

    You wouldn't make it.

    And you wouldn't believe me if I told you what these children suffer.

    Yes, some children are undisciplined and need spanking and need to run around outside and blow off some energy.

    Spanking is USELESS in dealing with ADHD children. It's like spanking a dog for barking or spanking a baby for wetting his diaper.

    And blowing off energy doesn't work because their problem isn't an accumulation of excess energy.

    These children cannot regulate even their most mundane behaviors - their handwriting (you can FORGET cursive), their thought process, their fine motor skills, not even their speech. Just getting ONE coherant sentence out is sometimes very difficult.

    It sounds like this.

    ME: Class, who can explain how to find the area of a circle to our new student?

    ADHD child: "Me! Me! I....know .....I....I....can do it! You take the.....the.....the......round thingy......the uh.....the circle and you find the.....uh.....uh...uh....you know.....the half thing......the half way thing.....the diameter thing and you multipy it by pi....by the pi.....by the pi.....by the pi number. That's what you....that's it....that the answer....I mean....not the answer....the number thing......the uh.....formula.

    And there I am, so proud that they finished a complete train of thought, and now, I have to tell them that the answer that they gave was wrong. :BangHead::BangHead:

    You can always discipline an undisciplined child.

    But these children cannot regulate their reaction response. They OVERreact to everything. It confuses the other children who think that they are being combative when they aren't. They are extremely loud and do not know it. They are disruptive and do not see it. You explain that their behavior is inappropriate and they don't understand.

    I know nothing, short of drugs, alternate teaching/testing styles, and Godly patience that can help the ADHD family to cope.

    Pray for these families. And pray that you never have a child with this problem and others just tell you to spank him or make him go outside and play.
     
    #10 Scarlett O., Apr 27, 2010
    Last edited: Apr 27, 2010
  11. jaigner

    jaigner Active Member

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    Yes, yes, yes, you're right. Parents who send their kids to public school but do nothing to treat their kids' imbalances need to come up and just see how their child's behavior hurts other kids' ability to learn.

    It does take Godly patience.
     
  12. menageriekeeper

    menageriekeeper Active Member

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    Let me tell you about growing up with ADD (yeah, and sometimes I had the HD to go with): life is INTENSE.

    You try going through life when your mind changes from one subject to the next every five seconds and often for no particular reason. Let me tell you what it is like. Its like someone holding the remote control and changing your tv channel JUST as you've gotten the gist of the show, but before you can decide if you want to watch it. There is NO control.

    Then there are the very few things that catch and keep your focus, but in those cases you focus so hard that you can't be distracted. In my case, once I learned to read and got control of my dyslexia (btw, neither condition existed as a diagnosis when I was a child. I was just the "odd duck") I focused so hard that the rest of the world ceased to exist. To this day I have to be touched if someone wants my attention while I am reading.

    ADD is no joke and not a way to calm down undisciplined kids. I got spanked plenty as a kid, it didn't change how I perceived the world. Time and maturity taught me coping skills and that slowly allowed me to almost control my thoughts. Just don't turn on a radio or tv set while you are talking to me OR try to hold a conversation with me in a room where several conversations are being held at the same time. Not only will I not be able to focus on what you are saying, but even what I do hear I won't remember.
     
  13. Benjamin

    Benjamin Well-Known Member
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    Amen! Here too, but much better than to have been given permanent mind altering drugs to a child that has no say in the matter.



    You and me; we're like twins sometimes. :smilewinkgrin:
     
  14. rbell

    rbell Active Member

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    There are some cases where meds are very helpful and needed.

    Of course...there are parents out there who use meds as the "easy way out." And no meds should EVER be offered to kids without parental consent (yes, in some areas, that can happen).

    Furthermore, any parent who allows his/her kid to be placed on psychotropic meds (benzodiapines, tri-cyclics, SSRI's, ADHD stimulants, etc.)--for goodness' sake--do your homework! Read up. Get a second (or more) opinion. And run--fast--from doctors who hand the stuff out like candy.

    One particularly messed-up family (now in another state)--the son was on SIX psychotropic meds. One doctor prescribed them all...including three that were contra-indicated to each other! I told the mother (who was, frankly, a nut case) to never take her son back there, and to get him to a doctor that was less likely to kill or injure him. She ignored my request.

    Poor kid spent his time alternating between hopped up and zoned out.

    That example is one extreme. Claiming that there are never, ever cases where medical help is needed...that's the other extreme.

    One doctor friend of mine always goes through the following issues with kids dealing with ADHD, depression, anxiety, etc., before going the pharma route:

    Week 1: Change nothing, but parents keep a COMPLETE and DETAILED record of the following: Diet (ALL food & drinks), sleep, exposure to media (TV, internet, video games), amount of active exercise.

    Week 2-3: Eliminate all caffeine and as much refined sugar as possible. Take multi-vitamin. Set regular bed and wake times. Limit media exposure to 1 hr/day or less. Insist on daily outside play time (if nothing else, take a walk outside).

    His theory: Between diet changes, rest & exercise, and reduction of caffeine, much is fixed. The kicker: our media exposes the brain to imagery at a much faster rate than can be handled. Thus, our brain is in "overdrive" too much; hence, the overdiagnosis of ADHD.

    Oh, and he also makes 2 other good suggestions:

    1. If the kid has an "early birthday:" Consider holding him/her back for 1st grade.
    2. If he's a boy, quit trying to make him something other than a boy. Of course they're active. They're boys. Same with the odor. :D
     
  15. Benjamin

    Benjamin Well-Known Member
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    I agree with that and think you gave some fair advice. As a parent I consider my son to be mildly affected, at least in comparison to myself. We had two teachers suggest medication might be the answer for him when he was younger. My son had the advantage of me being very attune with coping skills. He may well could have been diagnosed more severe and had more issues had he not had me to guide him.

    Here is where I struggle with giving any medication, not because there are not currently times which exist when the damage without drugs would be worse than without them. But I feel this is unfortunate, because I believe in my heart that in almost every case there would be natural, none medical ways to teach a child to cope and adapt with the issues they face. I believe if the focus were more on developing these methods than on the use of drugs great strides toward advancing natural systems of treatment could be developed to the point that almost 100% “could be” treated naturally.

    Of course these types of treatments would be very intensive and time consuming, especially at first. It would also take a lot of scientific study and developing of procedures. But I do believe the ability to accomplish natural healing is possible, unfortunately it is just not very convenient to do so, or not as convenient as drugs.

    For the large part, Medical Doctors are trained to prescribe medications, not to develop natural healing and to train parents in developing time consuming, in-depth skills that it would take to help their child naturally.

    I believe drugs should be a last last last resort and would personally put the threshold to the door of drug treatment much further away than it current perceived by most.

    Just my 2 cents.
     
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