Hyperactivity Meds Jump 46%

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Following an FDA study that found a 46% rise in ADHD prescriptions from 2002-2010, a review in Death and Taxes looks at better marketing and other possible causes of the increase. Among them is Robert Spitzer’s (formulator of the ADD diagnosis) concern that 30% of ADD is “misdiagnosed,” and Peter Breggin’s that “people are so eager nowadays for biological explanations, so physicians and the public grabbed on to what is essentially a PR campaign — perhaps the most successful one in the last 30 years in the Western industrialized nations — that if you have a mental disturbance, it’s biochemical.”

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Mad in America hosts blogs by a diverse group of writers. These posts are designed to serve as a public forum for a discussion—broadly speaking—of psychiatry and its treatments. The opinions expressed are the writers’ own.

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Kermit Cole
Kermit Cole, MFT, founding editor of Mad in America, works in Santa Fe, New Mexico as a couples and family therapist. Inspired by Open Dialogue, he works as part of a team and consults with couples and families that have members identified as patients. His work in residential treatment — largely with severely traumatized and/or "psychotic" clients — led to an appreciation of the power and beauty of systemic philosophy and practice, as the alternative to the prevailing focus on individual pathology. A former film-maker, he has undergraduate and master's degrees in psychology from Harvard University as well as an MFT degree from the Council for Relationships in Philadelphia. Kermit leads workshops and webinars on the role of humor in psychotherapy and other human services. You can reach him at [email protected].

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