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Part 1,674,000 on Why It’s Shite to Prescribe Psych Meds to Kids

Jan 26 2009 | Comments 2

Okay, I’m not immediately going to follow through on that headline, because I’m reassured by the Washington Post’s jaunty tone:

Hallucinations Are Rare Side Effects of ADHD Medications

The L.A. Times puts it a little differently:

ADHD drugs cause hallucinations in some kids, study says

Here’s Julie Steenhuysen’s Reuters breakdown:

CHICAGO (Reuters) – Drugs for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder can cause children to have hallucinations even when taken as directed, U.S. government researchers said on Monday.

U.S. Food and Drug Administration researchers analyzed data from 49 clinical studies conducted by makers of the drugs and found they can cause psychosis and mania in some patients, including some with no obvious risk factors. In some cases, children hallucinated that worms, bugs or snakes were crawling on them.

“Patients and physicians should be aware of the possibility that psychiatric symptoms consistent with psychosis or mania” might arise in the course of treatment, Dr. Andrew Mosholder and colleagues wrote in the journal Pediatrics.

Their analysis provides fresh detail about known risks of the drugs, which include Novartis AG’s Ritalin and Focalin XR, Shire Plc’s Adderall XR and Daytrana patch, Johnson & Johnson’s Concerta, Eli Lilly and Co’s Strattera and Celltech Pharmaceuticals Inc’s Metadate CD.

It also includes data on Cephalon Inc’s modafinil, sold as Provigil, a narcolepsy drug that was rejected as an ADHD treatment in children.


liz | 2:07 PM | Uncategorized

Joe Says:

I hate to imagine the following scenario but it has likely happened – A child experiences ADHD medication related “psychosis or mania.” The prescriber fails to associate these side effects with the ADHD drug and consequently prescribes an additional medication, perhaps an anti-psychotic. Of course, the child is now further burdened with another diagnosis, another medication, another set of side effects, another label, and the indignity of being “treated” for an illness that he or she does not actually have.

Jan 27 8:06 AM

Geoff Says:

This is an EXTREMELY rare side effect — and a short-lived one. Kids die from aspirin every year. Show some perspective and stop sensationalizing.

May 13 10:01 PM

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