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Point Park University to Present June 8-9 Symposium on Bipolar Children: Cutting Edge Controversy, Insight and Research

June 5, 2007
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PITTSBURGH, June 5 /PRNewswire/ — Point Park University will present its seventh annual Childhood and Society Symposium from June 8-9 in Pittsburgh. This year’s topic is Bipolar Children: Cutting Edge Controversy, Insight and Research.

Organized by Dr. Sharna Olfman, a Professor of Psychology at Point Park whose books include No Child Left Different and Childhood Lost, the symposium will feature an internationally known group of clinicians and researchers who share her alarm about the meteoric rise in the number of children across the socioeconomic spectrum who are being diagnosed with Bipolar Disorder and prescribed a cocktail of potent psychiatric drugs that include anti-psychotics and mood stabilizers.

Participants include Joel Bakan (The Corporation) Larry Diller (Running On Ritalin) David Healy (Let Them Eat Prozac) Elizabeth Roberts (Should You Medicate Your Child’s Mind?) and Toni Vaughn Heineman (Children and Youth in Foster Care). The goal is to present the complex factors that are contributing to this dangerous practice and to advocate for change from practices that amount to child abuse. The symposium will examine:

   — Conflict of interest between drug companies who liberally fund their      own drug research and patient welfare   — Marketing the pediatric Bipolar Diagnosis and drugs directly to      families through website, TV and magazines   — HMO medicine that encourages 5-minute assessments by pediatricians with      no background in child psychiatry   — American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry is pressing for new      diagnostic guidelines for pediatric BD to be included in the next      edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM V). This would      codify the practice of diagnosing unruly children with BD and lead to      an even steeper rise of diagnoses and prescriptions for children.   — In the wake of the “refrigerator mother” theory of autism,      psychiatrists are prone to explain children’s unruly behavior in terms      of brain chemistry rather than parenting. Now taken to an extreme, the      permissive parent of an unruly child is more likely to be told by a      psychiatrist that her child has Bipolar Disorder when he is really in      need of consistent discipline.   — Teachers, pressured by budget cutbacks and oversized classes frequently      act as psychiatrists and pressure parents to get their children      medicated. A child with a psychiatric diagnosis can bring in much      needed state and federal funding to a cash strapped school.   — Antidepressants and stimulants are known to induce mania, and children      are almost always diagnosed with BD after they have diagnosed with      depression or ADHD and have been on a course of medication.   — Once diagnosed, physicians rarely change the diagnosis even if the      drugs aren’t working or are causing adverse side effects. Instead, they      add more meds.   — This trend cuts across the socioeconomic spectrum, children from gated      communities as well as children in foster care are being misdiagnosed.   — As many as two and a half million children in the U.S are on      antipsychotic drugs, originally created for adult schizophrenics   — This trend is exclusive to the U.S.   

The symposium is open to the media. All speakers are available for interviews.

Point Park University

CONTACT: Ginny Frizzi, Director of Media Relations of Point ParkUniversity, +1-412-392-3987, vfrizzi@pointpark.edu

Web site: http://www.pointpark.edu/