his paper outlines the deliberate marketing of harmful drugs to
children as a direct result of the drug industry take over of the
American mental health system. My point of departure is Ivan Illich’s broader assertion that "The medical system has become a
major threat to health." (1976) Time has proven Illich to be a
prophet: medicine is now the leading cause of death in America.
(Null 2005) What is wrong in American medicine is also wrong in
psychiatry. Pharma marketeers claim psychiatric drug treatment is a
scientific miracle. However, the outcome evidence on psychiatric
treatment shows otherwise: the recovery rate for treated
schizophrenia has fallen from 70% in the mid-nineteenth century to
11% today, while the death rate for the "new" atypical antipsychotic
drugs is double that of the older typical class. These outcomes
contrast with 49-51% recovery Third World countries, like India and
Nigeria, where these drugs are not used consistently. (Whitaker
2004) The suicide rate for treated schizophrenia in the UK has
increased 20 fold since the introduction of antipsychotic drugs in
1954. (Healy et al 2006) Five times as many people are being defined
as permanently mentally ill (disabled) today than before the
introduction of drug treatment. (Whitaker 2005) Yet, inspite of
these ominous facts, millions of American children are routinely
being given these dangerous drugs.
How did this happen?
The drugging of American children is not accidental. It is a part
of the larger problem of the premeditated medicalization of modern
life discussed by Illich (1976), McKnight (1999) and others.
However, the issue goes beyond the use of drugs: it is about
freedom. The massive pharmaceutical corporations, which barely
existed before World War II, are the most profitable