Adderrall:Is it Worth the Risk?

Staff                                              Writer
Contributor
Posted by Staff Writer February 24, 2006 8:12 AM

It's a scary a thing. Why all of a sudden are more and more of our children being diagnosed daily with attention deficit disorder and hyperactivity and being prescribed so called "cure-all" drugs. A staggering 29 million prescriptions were written in 2004 for stimulant drugs such Adderall, Ritalin and other similar drugs to treat this so called epidemic disease, most of them for children. Two weeks ago, according to reports sent to federal drug regulators, 25 people suddenly died and 54 others suffered serious unexplained heart problems while taking stimulant like drugs over a four year period.

This report should cause red flags to be raised and alarms to sound. Since these types of drugs are among the most widely prescribed medicines in the world, and the fact is that most of these drugs are ingested by children, we better start paying close attention to what is going on. Of the 24 reported deaths, 19 were children! The report stated:

The rare occurrence of pediatric sudden death during stimulant therapy of A.D.H.D. is an issue that warrants close monitoring.

A committee from the FDA is supposedly meeting to discuss the ramifications of the report and make recommendations as to whether further research needs to be undertaken to see if drugs are really to blame for the these sudden, unexpected deaths.

In Canada, officials suspended the sale of a long acting hyperactivity drug called Adderall XR after a reports of 20 sudden deaths were linked to the drug, 12 among children. However, after the studying the issue for only 7 months, sales of the drug resumed.

And there have been many studies. As a matter of fact, I suspect that there have been dozens of studies of controlled studies to determine if there is any correlation between the drugs and heart problems. Yet, I wonder who has studied and funded these studies? I wonder how long these studies lasted. I wonder how many patients were included in each of these studies. Again, I suspect that these studies do not include enough patients, do last long enough and are paid for and funded by the drug companies who profit the most from the continued sale of these drugs.

Let's get real. Our children are no more active than they we were 10, 20 or 30 years ago. Our children are no more "attention deficit disorders" than we do. (I mean no disrespect to those that do suffer from ADHD as there are those that really do benefit from this therapy).

There are too many pill doctors who write "scripts" for a hundred dollars for a five minute visit with no real diagnosis. There are too many teenage girls who have figured out that Adderall is the greatest diet drug on the planet. There are too many teenage boys who have figured that Ritalin is better than speed. And there are too many stupid parents that just don't ask the right questions and keep taking their kids to the doctor for all the wrong reasons.

These drugs increase blood pressure, heart rates and have been known to increase the risk of cardiovascular problems. So, why don't the prescribing doctors and parents weigh the risks of stimulant use to whether the drug is really needed in the first place?


1 Comment

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dills
Posted by dills
April 08, 2006 5:23 PM

Why don't you read a book or two on ADD and ADHD...Number one, is that they are very different situations. Number two is that the common, as well as what seems to be your perception, is that it affects just kids, and anyone ADD is hyperactive. The problems and symptoms are much more vast, complex, and inhibiting than that.
ADD and ADHD can not "disappear" or be "grown out of" once adulthood hits. Rather, both situations can be applied to any age, and include many things easily tied to "oh they're just kids" or "he's just a forgetful dad."
The biggest thing that helps ADD is education of the family, the patient, and usually-as most doctors and psychotherapists know little if anything about it-the doctors as well.
Secondly a child needs the proper medication, and it needs to be the "therapeutic" dose.

I could go on and on, but you should read something on the subject! Once you figure it out for yourself, if you can. You'll realize that it is a pretty "obvious" thing to diagnose. Not because the drug companies dreamt it up either.

So I agree with you that doctors should not willy nilly prescribe drugs...nothing is solved merely with a pill. However, by the time that pill-if prescribed-becomes part of the treatment, the entire family, or at the very least the patient-regardless of age-should be VERY educated about the diagnosis.

Therefore it sounds like your doctors/psychotherapists (as most do) have not worked (at all!) towards educating you, your kids, whomever...
So ignore the pills, and read up on the bigger issue...I apologize for sounding occasionally like a jerk, but you do not know anything about ADHD/ADD. Start there...knowledge is power.

good luck...

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