Bush's Mental Illness Screening Squad On the
Move
July 9, 2006. By Evelyn Pringle
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0607/S00120.htm
The tax dollar funded mental health screening programs
popping up in every corner of the nation represent an enormous gift
to Big Pharma from the Bush administration. After all, drug companies
can't push drugs without a lucrative customer base, so the screening
programs are a great solution for that little problem.
On April 29, 2002, Bush kicked off the whole mental
health screening scheme when he announced the establishment of the
New Freedom Commission (NFC) during a speech in in New Mexico where
he told the audience that mental health centers and hospitals, homeless
shelters, and the justice and school systems, have contact with
individuals suffering from mental disorders but that too many Americans
are falling through the cracks, and so he created the NFC to ensure
“that the cracks are closed.”
In words relevant here, the late President Ronald
Reagan aptly described government intervention this way: "The
nine most terrifying words in the English language are, “I'm
from the government and I'm here to help."
According to award-winning investigative reporter,
Kelly O’Meara: “Nowhere is this quote more appropriate
than when applied to George W. Bush's New Freedom Commission on
Mental Heath.”
A little over a year after Bush announced the formation
of the NFC, on July 22, 2003, government report was released that
called for redesigning the mental health systems in all 50 states.
A press release previewing the report stated:
"Achieving this goal will require greater
engagement and education of first line health care providers—primary
care practitioners—and a greater focus on mental health care
in institutions such as schools, child welfare programs, and the
criminal and juvenile justice systems. The goal is integrated care
that can screen, identify, and respond to problems early."
About 7 months later, on February 5, 2003, a subcommittee
report was released titled, "Promoting, Preserving and Restoring
Children’s Mental Heath," and stated in part:
"The extent, severity, and far-reaching consequences
of mental health problems in children and adolescents make it imperative
that our nation adopt a comprehensive, systematic, public health
approach to improving the mental health status of children."
The NFC's final report calls for screening every
child in America, including preschoolers, and points our that, "schools
are in a key position to identify mental health problems early and
to provide a link to appropriate services."
In addition, according to the final report, every
child plugged into a government program, will automatically be screened
in accordance with the following recommendation:
“Screening should be implemented upon entry
into, and periodically thereafter in, the juvenile justice and child
welfare systems, as well as in other settings and populations with
known high risk, such as the Medicaid population."
"When mental health problems are identified,"
the report says, "youth should be linked with appropriate services
and supports."
Critics say “appropriate services and supports”
means doctor’s prescribing drugs. According to the results
of a 2002 survey of recently trained child psychiatrists, in the
Journal of American Academy of Child Adolescent Psychiatry, nine
out of 10 pediatric patients under their care were treated with
prescription drugs.
The NFC specifically calls for all screening programs
to be linked to "state-of-the-art treatments" using "specific
medications for specific conditions."
The Texas Medication Algorithm Project (TMAP) is
the centerpiece of the NFC’s recommendation for “specific
medications.” Algorithms are lists of drugs with guidelines
that medical professionals must follow when prescribing medication
to patients for specific mental illnesses, and contain flow charts
that illustrate step-by-step prescribing process.
The TMAP drug lists and guidelines were developed
and approved in Texas while Bush was Governor, through an "expert
opinion consensus" by a panel of medical professionals chosen
by the pharmaceutical sponsors of the program that included Janssen
Pharmaceutica, Eli Lilly, Johnson & Johnson, Astrazeneca, Pfizer,
Novartis, Janssen-Ortho-McNeil, GlaxoSmithKline, Abbott, Bristol
Myers Squibb, Wyeth-Ayerst and Forrest Laboratories.
Critics say TMAP is a marketing scheme thought
up by Big Pharma after a slew of new psychiatric drugs were approved
for sale in the 1990’s, and drug companies realized that there
was no way to advertise and promote psychiatric drugs to recruit
customers.
Once approved, TMAP guaranteed an avalanche of
sales for Big Pharma in Texas, because medical professionals were
required to follow the TMAP guidelines with all patients in state
institutions, such as mental hospitals and prisons, and when prescribing
drugs to children in foster care or juvenile justice programs, and
for all patients covered by government funded health care programs.
The NFC recommends TMAP as the model program for
“specific medications” to be used in all 50 states.
The “specific medications” are the most expensive drugs
on the market and include drugs known as selective serotonin reuptake
inhibitors antidepressants (SSRIs), like Paxil, Prozac, Zoloft,
and Effexor, and the atypical antipsychotics, that include Zyprexa,
Risperdal, Geodon, Seroquel, Clozaril, and Abilify.
Other “specific medications” include
the ADHD drugs, fondly known as “speed” to street addicts,
such as Adderall, Dexedrine, Concerta, Ritalin and Strattera, and
a garden variety of “downers,” like Valium, Xanax, Librium
and sleeping pills.
Critics have constantly attacked Big Pharma’s
involvement in choosing the drugs on the lists. As far back as January
1999, Peter Weiden MD, one of the “experts” on the original
Texas panel, openly criticized the approval process in the Journal
of Practice in Psychiatry and Behavioural Health, because so drug
company money was involved.
For instance, he said, the guidelines for the atypical
antipsychotics were funded by Janssen, the maker of Risperdal, and
most of the guidelines' authors also had received financial support
of one kind or another from the drug companies with atypical drugs
on the list. "This potential conflict of interest may create
credibility problems," he wrote, "especially concerning
any recommendations supporting the use of atypical antipsychotics."
The way the NFC scheme is set up, tax dollars not
only fund the implementation of the screening programs, but also
a large portion of the costs for “specific medications”
that are prescribed to patients to treat mental disorders detected
by the screenings through government health care programs like Medicaid.
The fact is, when Bush took office, he owed Big
Pharma a lot favors in return for all the money he raked in from
the industry and the mental health screening scheme represents a
major part of his efforts to cover those debts.
The financial backing that Bush received from Big
Pharma is legend and its safe to say that he would not be sitting
in the White House today without it.
In 2004, a report by the advocacy group, Public
Citizen, listed 21 drug industry and HMO executives or lobbyists
among Bush’s Rangers and Pioneers – titles given only
to those people who have raised at least $200,000 or $100,000, respectively,
for one of his presidential campaigns.
The list includes 5 executives from drug companies,
6 officials from HMOs, the CEO of a pharmacy services company, the
head of a direct-mail pharmacy, and 8 lobbyists who represent drug
companies and HMOs at the time.
Eli Lilly, a manufacturer of many of the “specific
medications” chosen for the lists, has multiple ties to the
Bush family dating back decades. Before becoming President Reagan’s
Vice President, the first President Bush was a member of Lilly’s
board of directors and the current President Bush appointed Lilly
CEO, Sidney Taurel, to the Homeland Security Council.
In the year 2000, eighty-two percent of Lilly's
$1.6 million in political contributions went to Bush and the Republican
Party.
Another industry big-wig, retired Bristol-Myers
Squibb Vice-Chairman, Bruce Gelb, was a Bush Pioneer who also had
longstanding ties to the Bush family. Gelb was appointed chief of
the US Information Agency, and ambassador to Belgium, by the first
President Bush.
Before the 2000 election, Bristol-Myers executives
reportedly were pressured to make maximum donations to the Bush
campaign and reluctant donors were warned that CEO, Charles Heimbold
Jr, whom Bush later named ambassador to Sweden, would be informed
if they failed to give, according a September 5, 2003 New York Times
article.
Pfizer CEO, Hank McKinnell, was a 2004 Bush Ranger
and until 2003, served as chairman of the board of Pharmaceutical
Research & Manufacturers of America, the industry’s gigantic
trade group, until Republican lawmaker, Billy Tauzin, quit Congress
and took over the position that came with a multi-million dollar
package in combined salary and perks.
Although all of the TMPA medications are only approved
by the FDA for treatment of a limited number of mental illnesses
like schizophrenia or major depressive disorder or bipolar disorder,
in specific age groups, and with specific dosages, drug makers have
doctors prescribing the medications off-label for unapproved uses
to persons of all ages for just about any ache and pain, and especially
with patients being screened for mental illness by the government
backed programs.
To accomplish this mass screening of the nation’s
52 million school children, the NFC recommends that the TeenScreen
program, billed as a suicide prevention survey, be set up in public
school system nationwide. In May 2004, Illinois passed a resolution
approving the implementation of TeenScreen in all public schools
in that state.
TeenScreen is also an invention of Big Pharma developed
and promoted through back door funneling of money through front
groups that bill themselves as advocates for the mentally ill and
promoting suicide prevention.
By far, TeenScreen has become the most controversial
of all screening programs, and critics are quick to point out a
number of reasons. According to the June 16, 2006, Washington Post,
there were only 1,737 suicides by children and adolescents in the
US during 2003, the last year for which national statistics are
available.
According to the Department of Health and Human
Services, in 2003, for every 100,000 children the rate of suicide
for boys was 11.6 and the rate for girls was 2.7, which amounts
to less than 2 boys in every 10,000 kids, and the number of suicides
by girls in every 10,000 children, is too low to even calculate.
In perhaps one of their best arguments against
TeenScreen, critics are asking how such a low suicide rate, when
measured against the total student population, can possibly justify
subjecting 52 million children to mental health screening and the
distinct probability that a high number of children will end up
on psychiatric drugs with side effects that cause many more deaths
each year than the number of child suicides.
In fact, overall, the statistics for people injured
or killed each year due to prescription medications are extremely
high. According to a study published by Adverse Drug Reactions,
more than 1.5 million people are hospitalized each year and more
than 100,000 die from largely preventable adverse reactions to drugs
that should not have been prescribed in the first place.
Advocacy groups against TeenScreen have posted
a petition online with plans to send it to state and federal lawmakers.
Persons interested in signing the petition can click on the following
link: http://www.petitiononline.com/TScreen/petition.html
Ken Kramer, a records research specialist from
Florida, who has been investigating the TeenScreen program for several
years, says the petition is an excellent way to educate people because
it conveys many of the facts about mental health screening and can
be printed off and presented to school board members or legislators.
In 2004, Illinois became the first state to implement
mental health screening programs. Its plan calls for both children
and adults to be screened during their routine physical exams. To
that end, the state legislature passed the Illinois Children's Mental
Health Act (ICMHP), which is expected to become a model for other
states.
The final report by the ICMHP Task Force calls
for a comprehensive, coordinated children’s mental health
system comprised of prevention, early intervention, and treatment
for children ages 0-18, along with a statewide data-reporting system
to track information on each person.
It requires social-emotional development screens
with all mandated school exams (K, 4th, and 9th), and says to: “Start
early, beginning prenatally and at birth, and continue throughout
adolescence, including efforts to support adolescents in making
the transition to young adulthood,” and includes a plan to
screen all pregnant women
Critics of the Illinois plan say they are especially
curious about what might be in store for the infants screened prenatally
and at birth, at the ripe old age of 0.
The Illinois task force stressed the need to (1)
improve Medicaid reimbursement for prevention, intervention and
treatment services; (2) recognize diagnoses for young children described
in DC:0-3 and pay for mental health services for children with any
of these diagnoses; and (3) clarify for providers the diagnoses
that create eligibility for children to obtain Medicaid services.
According to former medical services billing analyst,
Chris Kelly, in plain language, this means to make sure and have
doctors diagnosis patients with specifically coded mental illnesses
for which Medicaid will pay the costs of the prescription drugs
for treatment.
And studies reveal that talk therapy is a thing
of the past because pushing pills is by far more profitable. A 2003
study by the American Psychiatric Association, on "financial
disincentives" for psychotherapy, found doctors could earn
about $263 an hour for doing three 15-minute "medication management"
sessions, verses about $156 for a single 45- to 50-minute therapy
session. Thus, conducting therapy verses medication management would
represents an hourly pay cut of 41%, the APA study said.
On August 17, 2005, the Wall Street Journal quoted,
Juan Riestra, associate director of medicine in the department of
psychiatry at Mountainside Hospital in Montclair, NJ, as saying
a psychopharmacologist is often someone "using a trendy word
as a marketing device."
When a psychopharmacologist sees 30 or 40 patients
a day, as some do, Mr Riestra told the Journal, "it becomes
like a factory."
One of the more recent screening programs that
has caught the attention of anti-drugging activists, is a survey
called "Signs of Suicide” (SOS), which is being touted
as a self-assessment screening tool and is provided free online
on the internet.
This particular psychiatric screening program claims
it is being promoted as an effort to reduce suicides, alcoholism,
depression and eating disorders, to be used in high schools, colleges,
the workplace, and the military.
SOS comes highly recommended by the Bush administration
for members of the military and their families. As of May 26, 2006,
Air Force Colonel Joyce Adkins, a psychologist at the Pentagon's
Health Affairs office, claims that several thousand military people
have been screened with the program since it went online around
the beginning of 2006.
According to the May 26, 2006, Boston Globe, if
the responses to the screening indicate possible trouble, SOS suggests
options for seeking help.
Obtaining a diagnosis of mental illness could not
get any easier than with SOS. This online survey, "is always
available," Ms Adkins told the Globe. "You don't have
to go anywhere,” she said. “You don't have to have child
care or change your clothes."
SOS claims it is the creation of the "nonprofit"
Massachusetts-based corporation, Screening for Mental Health, Inc
(SMH). However, as it turns out, the development of the firm’s
screening programs, was funded with millions of dollars from Big
Pharma.
A picture taken at the company during an event
in honor of, "National Depression Screening Day," (whatever
that is), on October 18, 2001, shows Eli Lilly presenting SMH with
a check for $500,000.
But Lilly’s half-million dollar grant was
just the tip of the iceberg. SMH has also received millions of dollars
in grants from other drug giants including Pfizer, Solvay, Abbott
Labs, Wyeth, Forest Pharmaceuticals, the Robert Johnson Foundation,
AstaZeneca and GlaxoSmithKline.
Kevin Hall, New England director of the Citizens
Commission on Human Rights, has been investigating mental health
screening programs for a number of years, and was able to obtain
the SMH’s tax returns that reveal just how much money has
been funneled to the company to develop and promote the mental health
screening programs since 2001.
All total, the tax records show that Lilly poured
$2,157,925 into SMH between 2001 and 2004, and for the year 2004
alone, in addition to Lilly’s $600,000, Pfizer gave SMH $125,000,
Wyeth ponied up $100,000, and Forest Labs gave $153,000
These “free” online mental health screening
programs are also being promoted in colleges all across the country.
Brian Hokanson is a college student in Minnesota who wrote a commentary
describing his experience with an online survey.
At the beginning of last fall’s semester,
Brian noticed fliers in his residence hall that were encouraging
students to take a free online screening test for depression.
Brian says he soon found out that any combination
of answers on the screening resulted in a recommendation to see
a doctor. The first section of the test, he says, listed negative
behaviors such as “feeling bad about yourself” and “feeling
tired or having little energy.”
For each statement checked, Brian was instructed
to chose how often the statement applied to him in the previous
two weeks, ranging from “not at all” to “nearly
every day.”
In the second part of the test, the student is
asked to rate how difficult each of the behaviors checked has made
it to function in daily life, ranging from “not difficult
at all” to “extremely difficult.”
Brian says he decided to "test the test,"
and chose “not at all” for all of the behaviors except
for “poor appetite or overeating,” and he said that
statement applied to him for “several days.” On the
second section, he stated that the problem made it “not difficult
at all” for him to function in daily life.
Upon clicking on the results, Brian was told: “Your
screening results are consistent with minimal depression …
You are advised to see your doctor or a mental health professional
for a complete evaluation as soon as possible.”
As for the inventor of this particular screening
tool, Brian reports that the fine print at the bottom of the page
of the survey reads: “Copyright 1999 Pfizer, Inc.”
The good news is, that after “testing the
test,” things did not go according to plans because Brian
did not become a new SSRI customer for Pfizer, which means he won’t
be experiencing any horrific side effects from SSRI use.
The NFC also recommends screening for all pregnant
women that will predictably lead to the use of SSRIs, even though
a study as far back as the February 2, 2004, American Journal of
Pediatrics, said that pregnant women who use SSRIs "to combat
depression could be damaging the brains of their unborn babies."
According to the study, direct evidence of a link
between fetal exposure and disrupted neurological development was
apparent in a study of American mothers and their infants. "Abnormal
sleeping patterns, heart rhythms and levels of alertness,"
the study found, "were linked by researchers to drugs called
selective-serotonin re-uptake inhibitors (SSRIs)."
The study leader, Philip Zeskind, a psychologist
and research professor of pediatrics at the University of North
Carolina, noted that SSRIs disrupt the neurological systems of children,
and said "this is more than just a possibility, we're talking
about hundreds of thousands of babies being exposed to these drugs
during pregnancy."
"These babies are bathed in serotonin during
a key period of their development and we really don't know what
it's doing to them or what the long-term effects might be,"
he advised. The Professor warned that "these drugs are being
given away like smarties, and this is a big problem."
Drug makers have also been successful in getting
lawmakers to set up mandatory mental health screening for pregnant
women the minute their infants leave the womb. On June 16, 2006,
Senators Robert Menendez (D-NJ) and Richard Durbin (D-IL) announced
legislation “that aims to eradicate the devastating effects
of postpartum depression on American families.”
According their press release, the “MOTHERS
Act was introduced in response to a recently passed, first-of-its-kind
New Jersey law requiring doctors and nurses to educate and screen
expectant mothers about PPD.”
“Many women have successfully recovered from
postpartum depression with the help of therapy, medication, and
support groups,” Senator Menendez said in the press release.
“By increasing education and early treatment
of postpartum depression,” it said, “mothers, husbands,
and families, will be able to recognize the symptoms of this condition
and help new mothers get the treatment they need and deserve.”
Anyone interested in a quick course on the potential
dangers of this program, and the lethal effects of the most commonly
prescribed drugs for women with PPD, need only go read the transcripts
of the Andrea Yates’ trials and check out the drugs they were
feeding her for PPD, at the time she drowned her 5 children in the
bathtub in November 2004.
Dr Anne Blake Tracy, is the author of "Prozac:
Panacea or Pandora?" and a well-known expert on SSRIs and has
served as a consultant for many high-profile cases involving SSRI
induced violence, including cases of mothers who have killed their
babies, and often themselves, after being placed on SSRIs.
According to Dr Tracy, investigators found Zoloft
in the apartment of Emiri Padron, after she smothered her baby on
June 22, 2004, and then stabbed herself in the chest twice.
On July 26, 2004, she says, Mary Ellen Moffitt
suffocated her 5-week-old infant before killing herself after being
prescribed Paxil for PPD.
In another tragedy in October 2002, Annie Mae Haskew
smothered her 10-week-old baby after she was diagnosed with PPD
and placed on antidepressants.
At the other end of the life-cycle, the mental
health screening squad is swarming in on the nation’s 36 million
senior citizens, who already represent a gold mine to Big Pharma
because they use so many medications. The screening program for
the elderly is set up through the, “Positive Aging Act of
2005.”
The Act provides federal tax dollars for community-based
mental health treatment outreach teams and states: (a) In General-
The Secretary ... shall award grants to public or private nonprofit
entities that are community-based providers of geriatric mental
health services, to support the establishment and maintenance by
such entities of multi-disciplinary geriatric mental health outreach
teams in community settings where older adults reside or receive
social services.
The Act wants outreach teams to:
(1) adopt and implement ... evidence-based intervention
and treatment protocols (to the extent such protocols are available)
for mental disorders prevalent in older individuals (including,
but not limited to, mood and anxiety disorders, dementias of all
kinds, psychotic disorders, and substance and alcohol abuse), ...
(2) provide screening for mental disorders, diagnostic
services, referrals for treatment, and case management and coordination
through such teams; and
This plan seeks to round up seniors for screening
wherever they can be found, including (1) senior centers; (2) adult
day care programs; and (3) assisted living facilities.
A new recruitment scheme for senior citizens was
totally unnecessary because Big Pharma has been over-medicating
these customers for years. Recent research reveals that nursing
home residents in particular are being drugged in record numbers.
Kenneth Thomas, a registered nurse with 29 years
of experience, says elderly people in nursing homes are regularly
put on antidepressants, even though most of them,” he notes,
“lived 7 or more decades without drugging away their blues.”
“Based on my direct observation and experience,”
he says, “many of the patients I've seen with so-called “mental
illness” actually have underlying physical conditions that
are easily treatable by medical, non-psychiatric, methods.”
He makes the point that anyone who has been taken
from their home and put into an unfamiliar place confined to bed
or wheelchair would be logically upset. “Any loss of personal
freedom,” he explains, “tends to bring people downward
emotionally.”
According to Mr Thomas, there are many ways to
help an elderly person gain more independence and have some autonomy
even in restricted environments such as nursing homes and rehab
centers. “Most of these elderly,” he notes, “just
need someone to talk to, not another pill.”
In October 2005, the Journal of the American Medical
Association, published a meta-analysis of 15 randomized trials of
more than 5,000 elderly patients treated with atypicals that found
patients taking the drugs had a 54% increased chance of dying within
3 months, compared with patients taking a placebo.
Another Big Pharma money-making tactic is to promote
the off-label prescribing of drugs at a higher dose than necessary
which, experts say, is extremely dangerous with older people because
their bodies cannot not metabolize or excrete drugs as rapidly as
younger patients.
In a study published in the June 13, 2005, Archives
of Internal Medicine, that examined the quality of antipsychotic
prescriptions for nearly 2.5 million Medicaid patients in nursing
homes, “over half (58.2%),” received antipsychotics
that exceeded the maximum recommended dosage or received duplicate
therapy or had inappropriate indications for the drugs to begin
with.
The study found that more than 200,000 nursing
home residents received antipsychotic therapy with “no appropriate
indications for use.”
As a result of concealing negative information
about these psychiatric drugs and the promotional tactics by the
drug makers of encouraging the off-label prescribing of the medications
for so many different uses, experts say, tens of millions of people
are now taking the medications without any valid indication for
their use.
In fact, so many people are being prescribed these
expensive drugs that the TMAP part of the marketing scheme is coming
apart at the seams due to pure and simple greed. State lawmakers
say that the costs incurred due to the over-prescribing of the drugs
are bankrupting state Medicaid programs and they have to stop the
practice of over-prescribing to keep from going broke.
According to the July 27, 2005, Wall Street Journal,
antidepressants and antipsychotics are the third and fourth biggest
classes of drugs in the US after cholesterol and heartburn medicines,
with sales of $20.7 billion in 2004, with much "of that cost
is borne by government health-care plans," the journal said.
The prices per pill for these drugs are themselves
insane. For example, in South Carolina, Zyprexa is the most expensive
atypical covered by Medicaid, and according to James Assey, a pharmacist
with the South Carolina Department of Health and Human Services,
a one-month supply pills costs Medicaid over $700.
The state of Georgia totally removed Zyprexa from
its preferred drug list and any doctor who wants to start a Medicaid
patient on Zyprexa, must now submit a clinical rationale stating
why it's the only drug appropriate, according to the November 28,
2005, Indianapolis Business Journal.
Other states, including Tennessee, Illinois, Louisiana,
and Pennsylvania also now require doctors to obtain prior authorization
before prescribing Zyprexa to Medicaid patients, the Journal reports.
Big Pharma is making a ton of money off selling
these drugs off-label for kids. A report in the April 24, 2005,
Columbus Dispatch, found that 40,000 children aged 6-18 who were
covered by Medicaid were prescribed psychotropic drugs: 31% of the
children were in foster care, and 22% were in juvenile detention.
Medicaid spent $65.5 million for drugs used primarily as "chemical
restraints," according to Pyle, P, “Drugged into Submission.”
According to FDA estimates, 11 million antidepressant
prescriptions were written in 2003 for under 19-year-olds, representing
a 27% increase in 3 years.
The sale of ADHD drugs, also skyrocked in 2003.
In 5 to 9-year-old children their use increased 85%, and in preschoolers
usage was up 49%, according to Medco Health Solution’s, 2004
Drug Trend Symposium. Overall, sales of psychiatric drugs totaled
$26.7 billion in 2004, according to NDC Health Corp, a Georgia-based
health information firm.
*************
Information for injured parties can be found at Lawyers and Settlements.com
http://www.lawyersandsettlements.com/articles/pharma_business.html
Evelyn Pringle
evelyn.pringle@sbcglobal.net
(Evelyn Pringle is a columnist for OpEd News and
an investigative journalist focused on exposing corruption in government
and corporate America)
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