The Miami Herald:Study: Florida's psych drug rules for foster kids ignored
A new state study found that child-welfare doctors and case workers aren't following the rules when it comes to the drugging of 6- and 7-year-olds in state care.:
From the article:
Child-welfare doctors and case managers routinely failed to complete legally required treatment plans, share information or properly document the prescribing of powerful psychiatric drugs for children, according to a new state study of 6- and 7-year-olds medicated in state care.
One of the 268 children was Gabriel Myers. The troubled 7-year-old, medicated with an adult anti-depressant known to cause suicides in children, hanged himself in April in his Margate foster home.
But the state study, which documents how many times caseworkers and doctors followed child-welfare rules and laws, shows that it would be a mistake to blame Gabriel's death solely on the drug, Symbyax, said Florida's drug czar, William Janes.
''It wasn't just the medications,'' said Janes, who sits on a committee investigating ways to prevent cases like Gabriel's. ``It was the system and his world. His environment just collapsed on him. And there was no one there to really put their arms around him.''
The Department of Children and Families study, presented Monday to the committee, indicates that a number of rules and laws on medication for children in state care weren't followed for all 6- and 7-year-olds:
• In 86 percent of cases, the prescribing physician didn't complete what's known as a Psychotherapeutic Medication Treatment Plan, which helps case workers, legal guardians, judges and other physicians determine a child's mental well being.
• In 75 percent of the cases, the case workers did not provide physicians with pertinent medical information about the child.
• In 76 percent of the cases, the case worker didn't provide parents with information about the psychotropic drugs their kids were being prescribed. Nor did the case worker help arrange transportation or phone conversations between the doctor and the child's guardian.
• In 58 percent of the cases, the case manager didn't attempt to speak with or meet the parent or guardian prior to seeking a court order to medicate the child.
• In 89 percent of the cases where parental consent wasn't obtained to medicate children, case managers failed to inform state lawyers that they were seeking a court order to administer the medication.
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1 comments:
And with numbers like these, people who Should Know Better, are still clamoring for Single Payer - Govt - to take over All of America's Health Care System.
This is what Govt Health Care Money actually looks like, and the way it actually works.
These kids are being poisoned/scalped by bounty hunters.
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