| 'Legislative Sprawl': Mandating Mental Health Coverage | | Print | |
| Written by Beverly K. Eakman | |
| Tuesday, 02 February 2010 14:00 | |
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Mental health has morphed into a cottage industry with scores of advocating organizations and lobbyists — NAMI, the American Psychiatric Association, Children and Adults with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorders (CHADD), the National Education Association and, of course, pharmaceutical companies. Industry bigwigs have repeatedly insisted that mental-health issues are no different than physical illnesses. The problem is that one cannot verify a mental illness — not with an X-ray, a blood test, a urinalysis or by any other means. Unlike brain injuries, Alzheimer’s and other clear-cut brain impairments due to strokes, high fevers and birth defects, mental illness per se is purely subjective. Perhaps someday researchers will discover issues at the cellular level that definitively cause a certain subset of behaviors, or which exacerbate stress, but at the moment they cannot. So it is no wonder that the various medications and therapies directed at curing, or even alleviating, emotional distress have virtually no track record of success. When parents are paid $600 cash per month by the state to have their child diagnosed as ‘disabled', some parents will be very happy when a diagnosis is made. Who are the parents to question the ‘expert’? I wonder how many kids go in for an ‘evaluation’ without coming out with a diagnosis? I would guess zero. [M]y math shows a 1,122-percent probability of getting a diagnosis whenever anyone goes into a psychologist’s office. In fact, I [would] bet there is no code for ‘normal’ on their billing sheets. The state, in effect, killed [Rebecca Riley] by paying the parents cash in exchange for allowing psychiatrists to diagnose their child. If they [had] paid them $600 not to label and drug their kid, she would still be alive. The Riley case aside, most people are not versed in risk-to-benefit ratios; nor do they keep up with which medications “mix” and which medications don’t. When they get stressed, they often panic, can’t get through to their doctors or the pharmacy, and make mistakes. Moreover, mandated parity for mental “illness” will wind up legitimizing as diseases the normal ups and downs of daily life, killing or maiming more people than it helps. Parity is an audacious attempt to expand the nanny state and, as such, represents a classic example of “legislative sprawl.”
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Comments (11)
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Psychiatry is like anthropogenic global warming... it is junk pseudo-science. Freud was a fraud. The biggest beneficiaries of psychiatry are pharmaceutical companies. Big government also finds it useful to have a populace hooked on mind altering drugs. They are easier to manipulate.
Mandating Mental Health Coverage
The Physicians Desk Reference states that SSRI antidepressants and all antidepressants can cause mania, psychosis, abnormal thinking, paranoia, hostility, etc. These side effects can also appear during withdrawal. Also, these adverse reactions are not listed as Rare but are listed as either Frequent or Infrequent.
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Global warming is real. Someone would have to keep their head buried or strictly listen to Right-wing media to think otherwise. But inclusion of mental health care into real issues of common good brings in, not only the loonies, but big pharma and the plutocracy who would keep "We the people" suppressed for the sake of their own coffers.
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Mr. Clark: I agree. But Ms. Eakman and her followers, it seems, would have us deny treatment which could be truly beneficial to children who truly need it, whose parents have tried every therapeutic, nutritional, and environmental intervention possible--to no avail--just to spite big pharma. I'm all for sticking it to the big drug companies, but not if it means condemning a child to mental illness. From the information available, the Riley case combines awful parents with an unprofessional doctor (I've never heard of a responsible dr. diagnosing a 2-year-old with ADHD or a 3-year-old with bipolar, much less prescribing meds for such). It shouldn't be used as a representative case.
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The tragic results of treating the soul like it's a body part hits very close to home for me. Many of my relatives are on medication for depression and panic attacks or sleep problems. I am convinced that if they would eat right and exercise and participate in supportive relationships,(with God first) most of their mental issues would evaporate. It's hard to watch people you love live this way.
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You have obviously never known a person or loved a person struck with a serious mental illness. How would you like a manic or schizophrenic child who was not covered by insurance? How about denying coverage for lung cancer if the patient smoked or denying coverage for a heart attack treatment for an obese person. They had choices. A person struck by a severe mental illness had no choice. More and more research show it is a defect of neurotransmitters, ie a malfunction of the brain. Hoping mentally ill people will recover without medical treatment is like expecting people to recover from diabetes or cancer without treatment. I also see you are a retired federal worker. I'll bet you have no worries what so ever about insurance coverage. The abuse of the health system by people claiming disabilities that are non existent certainly is no more so in mental health than any other injury or illness.
Quoting Fred Baughman? LOLOLOLOL!!!
Go back into your cave, Ms. Eakman. You are way out of your depth. Moreover, you don't have a clue about mental illness in this country and the problems getting treatment.
Rebecca Riley
Jane -- Sorry but you need to learn more about the tragic case of Rebecca Riley. In fact, the parents gave the child outrageous doses on cold medications (which kill children every year) on top of psychotropic medication.
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Frank-- |
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