The Epidemic Of 'Medical Child Abuse'
And What Can Be Done
Dana   Ullman
Opening remarks…
The primary purpose of this article is to  encourage a stronger commitment from doctors and parents to consider using safer  medical care for infants and children FIRST before resorting to more dangerous  treatments.  One would hope and assume that doctors and parents would have a  natural inclination to make the safety of these young human souls a significant  and sincere priority, but sadly, the power and propaganda of Big Pharma has  inappropriately turned this equation around and made it seem that doctors and  parents are putting their children at risk if they don’t prescribe powerful  drugs first.  I personally disagree with this assumption and sincerely hope that  people consider this health issue to be of primary importance today.
I  certainly realize that the evidence that I present below on the epidemic  proportions of “medical child abuse” is somewhat inflammatory, but due to the  fact that this issue is presently being ignored by so many doctors and parents,  a little “inflammation” may be a necessary symptom that will lead to great  attention to this problem and perhaps to some concrete solutions to it.  
Although many people consider American health care to be “the best in the  world,” the World Health Organization has ranked the United States to be the  37th (!) in the world in the “performance of the overall health system” and 72nd  (!!) in “overall level of health” (of the 191 member countries).  American  health care may be the most expensive, but there is no evidence to prove that  increased expense leads to improved health status.
When one looks at the  countries where health status and overall health scores the highest, they are  countries in which there are a significant number of physicians and other health  care practitioners who use herbal medicines, homeopathic remedies, acupuncture  and nutritional treatments.  Perhaps American doctors and patients would benefit  from a significant change in health care practices that are not only  considerably safer than modern medical treatments, but that also seem to create  better health care status.
A newly published review of the six leading  medical journals uncovered a truly shocking observation:  “No information on  severe adverse events and withdrawal of patients owing to an adverse event was  given in 27.1% and 47.4% of articles, respectively.”[1]  When one considers that  this review only analyzed the “best” medical journals, we can and should  seriously worry about the safety of many drugs that are used today, and we  should express real indignation when doctors prescribe two or more together  (unless they were formally tested together) or when doctors prescribe them for  conditions for which they have not been tested (called  “off-label”).
Ultimately, although physicians assume that they are practicing  “scientific medicine,” most drugs today are not tested on infants or children,  and most children and adults are prescribed more than one drug at a time (and  drugs are very rarely tested for efficacy or safety when used in combination  with other drugs).  These common practices lead one to assume that modern  medicine is not adequately scientific, and these practices may be part of the  explanation for the poor health status of Americans.
The Very Real  Problem…
We all know people who have children who have benefited from  conventional medical care, but sadly, we all also know people whose children  have been harmed by it.  The most famous words of the father of medicine,  Hippocrates, are “First, do no harm.”  This dictum was directed at doctors, but  it is as appropriate for parents.  Sadly, however, our children are being put in  front of harm’s way with our present, almost callous overuse of powerful drugs  for our young ones. 
The bottom line is that too many physicians and parents  are giving drugs to children that have not been proven to be either safe or  effective for them.  It is important for parents to know and to remind doctors  that it is widely acknowledged that drugs act differently on the bodies of  infants and children than on adults.  And yet, it is extremely common for  doctors to prescribe powerful drugs to infants and children and even prescribe  more than one drug at a time, despite the fact that drugs are very rarely  evaluated scientifically in combination with other drugs.
The FDA recently  withdrew from the marketplace many popular cold and cough drugs that were  marketed for infants and children,[2] but the problem of doctors  over-prescribing other more dangerous and unproven drugs for children and the  inappropriate overuse of over-the-counter drugs in children by parents is a very  significant health problem.  One must wonder if the increase in psychiatric  disorders, immune dysfunction, autism and various other chronic diseases result  from the use of the drugs that have not yet been proven to be either safe or  effective for our infants and children.
Most consumers do not know that many  drugs commonly prescribed for children today are not tested on them.[3]  A 2002  survey in the British Medical Journal (BMJ) found that almost one-half of  children were prescribed a drug that was “unlicensed” or “off-label”  prescriptions for children.[4]  A 2007 study of over 350,000 children found that  a shocking 78.7% of children in hospitals are prescribed drugs that the FDA has  not approved for use in children.[5]  If this isn’t shocking enough, it is  seriously problematic to report that a survey in England found that 90% of  infants were prescribed drugs that were not tested for safety or efficacy in  infants.[6]
If the off-label use for drugs was not found to be dangerous, it  would not be a problem.  However, the use of off-label drug use is significantly  associated with adverse drug reactions.  In fact, there is almost a 350%  increase in adverse drug reactions in children prescribed an off-label drug than  children who were prescribed a drug that had been tested for safety and  efficacy.[7]  The use of drugs for infants and children that have not been  proven to be safe constitutes a type of “medical child abuse.” 
Despite some  significant gaps in research and knowledge about the safety and efficacy of  drugs for children, the number of drugs prescribed for children has jumped  significantly in recent years.  In the U.S., the number of prescription drugs  for children with asthma increased 46.5% from 2002 to 2005.  In this same time,  the number of prescription drugs for children with ADD/ADHD increased 40.5%, and  even the number of prescription drugs for lowering cholesterol in children  increased by 15%.[8]
In 2007, the Journal of the American Medical Association  (JAMA) reported significant increases in childhood chronic diseases.[9]  Since  1960, there has been a 280% (!) increase in the “limitation of activity due to a  health condition of more than 3 months’ duration.”  This article also noted a  shadow side of increased vaccination usually ignored by physicians and the  media: “decreased exposure to viral infections in early childhood…may provide  less and less normal stimulation of the immune system with more susceptibility  to allergies in later years.” 
Read more at: 
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dana-ullman/the-epidemic-of-medical-c_b_338645.htmlWhat  can be done and what is being done…
First and foremost, physicians have  to STOP prescribing as many drugs as they are prescribing, and must  significantly reduce the number of off-label prescribing of drugs for infants  and children.  I am not suggesting that they stop the use of all off-label  prescribing, but that they work to significantly reduce these more risky  prescriptions. 
Because they sometimes feel pressure from patients who want  drugs (or something) to help their infant or child, doctors need to warn parents  that many drugs have not yet been adequately tested for safety and efficacy for  children.  Doctors need to become better educators so that parents can better  decide which risks they wish to take either with conventional drugs or various  safer alternatives.
Doctors also need to begin learning about safer treatment  methods.  Although some “alternative” methods may not yet be adequately tested  for efficacy (usually because Big Pharma cannot make as much money making and  selling these treatments), natural therapies certainly have a much better safety  profile, and there is a body of experience historically and internationally to  suggest that many (not all) natural treatments can aid in the healing of many  pediatric ailments.  In honor of the Hippocratic dictum, “first, do no harm,”  doctors need to explore and even exhaust safer methods before resorting to the  highly risky treatment modalities.
Because the FDA recently withdrew from the  marketplace many popular cold and cough medicines, more parents and physicians  should explore safer homeopathic and botanical alternatives.  One of the books  that I co-authored with Stephen Cummings, MD, Everybody’s Guide to Homeopathic  Medicines, has been the most popular guidebook to using homeopathic medicine.  Besides explaining how to choose a homeopathic medicine that fits the sick  person’s unique syndrome of symptoms, this book is also widely appreciated  because it provides detailed guidelines that define when it is medically safe to  use a safer alternative treatment or when medical supervision is recommended.  
Another useful, though more technical resource was just published by Oxford  University Press (OUP), one of the most highly respected publishers of medical  textbooks and medical journals.  OUP has begun to publish a series of textbooks  on “integrative medicine,” which is the emerging field of utilizing the best of  the various natural treatment modalities and the best of conventional medicine.   OUP just published an Integrative Pediatrics (edited by two pediatricians,  Timothy Culbert, MD, and Karen Olness, MD). 
Nowadays, virtually every  leading conventional medical school in America has a course in “integrative  medicine” (or alternative and complementary medicine).[10]  Although these  courses are generally just an overview and introduction to the various  “alternative therapies,” they provide good seeds for the medical students to  determine which treatments should be a part of the medical care they will later  provide.  One way to predict the future of medicine is to ask medical students  what interests them. 
In 2008, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)  published a position paper acknowledging the widespread use of alternative and  complementary therapies for children and encouraging doctors to discuss options  with parents.[11]  An AAP survey found that 54% of pediatricians in the US  agreed that “pediatricians should consider the use of all potential therapies,  not just those of mainstream medicine.”
Doctors, however, need to understand  that alternative therapies are not just a different “treatment,” but also a  different approach to understanding and treating whole person health care.   Acupuncture, ayurveda, and homeopathic medicines provide time-tested and  historically verified benefits that deserve the investigation of doctors and  parents everywhere who want to use safer methods before resorting to more risky  treatments.  And there is a small but significant (and growing) body of research  to confirm the efficacy of these systems of medicine, despite the strong  tendency for skeptics to ignore this body of evidence.
Parents have to START  asking their doctors if the drugs they are prescribing for their children have  formally been found to be safe for them.  If more than one drug is recommended,  parents should ask for the evidence that these two drugs, taken together, are  safe and effective.  Parents will benefit from learning when some type of  medical treatment is truly necessary because many common ailments do not require  medical attention, therefore safer home treatment methods can and should be  considered. 
The bottom line is that there is increasing interest in  alternative and complementary treatments for children.  A survey in Canada  published in Pediatrics (2007) found that more than half of the children who  visited a university-affiliated hospital had received alternative and  complementary medicines.[12]  Homeopathic medicine was by far the most popular  treatment, used by 39% of the families. 
In 2002, the British Medical  Journal (BMJ) reported that 75% of Germans have used complementary or natural  medicine.[13]  They also reported that 5,700 doctors received specialized  training in natural medicine, with this number doubling to 10,800 by 2000.   Homeopathic medicine is practiced by 4,500 medical doctors in Germany, almost  twice as many as did so in 1994.  The German government conducted this survey,  discovering a 33% reduction in sick days if people used natural therapies,  especially homeopathy or acupuncture.  
Although homeopathic medicine is not  well known in the U.S., homeopathy has maintained a unique international  presence that has included appreciation and advocacy for many of the most  respected cultural heroes of the past 200 years, including 11 U.S. Presidents  and scores of world leaders (ranging from Gandhi to Tony Blair), six popes,  numerous European royalty, literary greats, sports superstars, corporate  leaders, as well as a wide range of first class physicians and  scientists.[14]  
In reference to homeopathy, it is common for skeptics  of homeopathy to purposefully misinform others that “there is no research that  proves that homeopathy works.”  Such misinformation is typical of Big Pharma  shills and closed-minded skeptics who revel in confusing the public. 
In  fact, one of the most serious public health problems in the developing world  today is diarrhea, a condition that claims the lives of several million kids  each year as a result of dehydration.  Three double-blind and placebo-controlled  trials have shown efficacy of treatment from homeopathic care.[15] The number  one reason that children in the U.S. seek medical treatment is for ear  infections, and the American Academy of Pediatrics has sought to discourage  doctors from prescribing antibiotics due to their questionable efficacy and  potential problems.  There is some good evidence that homeopathic medicines are  effective for this common ailment.[16]  There have also been several trials  showing efficacy of homeopathic treatment for children with  ADD/ADHD.[17]
Ultimately, both doctors and parents need to educate themselves  about safer methods of treatment for the short-term as well as long-term health  of our blessed young ones.
(Dana Ullman, MPH, is America's leading  spokesperson for homeopathy and is the founder of Homeopathic.com He is the  author of 10 books, including his bestseller, Everybody's Guide To Homeopathic  Medicines His most recent book is, The Homeopathic Revolution: Why Famous People  and Cultural Heroes Choose. Dana lives, practices, and writes from Berkeley,  California.  )
REFERENCES:
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[1]  Pitrou I, Boutron I, Ahmad N, Ravaud P. Reporting of Safety Results in Published  Reports of Randomized Controlled Trials. Arch Intern Med.  2009;169(19):1756-1761.  http://archinte.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/full/169/19/1756
[2] Aguilera L. Pediatric OTC Cough and Cold Product Safety.  US Pharmacist  2009;34(7):39-  41.  http://www.uspharmacist.com/content/c/14137/
[3] Australian Parliament’s Committee on Children and Young People—Inquiry  into the Use of Prescription Drugs and Over-the-counter Medications in Children  and Young People.Report 11/52. May 2002.
[4] Jong GW, Eland IA, Sturkenboom  MCJM, van den Anker JN, and Stricker BHC. Unlicensed and off label prescription  of drugs to children: population based cohort study. BMJ. 2002 June 1;  324(7349): 1313–1314.
[5] Shah SS, Hall M, Goodman DM, et al. Off-label Drug  Use in Hospitalized Children. Arch Pediatr Adolesc  Med. 2007;161(  3):282-290.
[6] Conroy S, McIntyre J, Choonara I.  Unlicensed and off label drug use in neonates. Archives of Disease in Childhood  - Fetal and Neonatal Edition 1999;80:F142-F145.   doi:10.1136/fn.80.2.F142
[7] Horen B, Montastruc JL, and Lapeyre-mestre  M. Adverse drug reactions and off-label drug use in paediatric outpatients.  Br  J Clin Pharmacol. 54(6); Dec 2002, 665–670.  doi:  10.1046/j.1365-2125.2002.t01-3-01689.x.
[8] Cox ER, Halloran  DR, Homan SM, Welliver S, and Mager DE.  Trends in the Prevalence of Chronic  Medication Use in Children: 2002–2005. Pediatrics. 122,5 November 2008,  e1053-e1061. doi:10.1542/peds.2008-0214
[9] Perrin JM, Bloom SR,  Gortmaker SL.  The Increase of Childhood Chronic Conditions in the United  States. JAMA. 2007;297:2755-2759.
[10] Consortium of Academic Health  Centers for Integrative Medicine. http://www.imconsortium.org/members/home.html
[11] Kemper KJ, Vohra S, Walls R. The Use of Complementary and Alternative  Medicine in Pediatrics. Pediatrics 2008;122;1374-  1386. DOI:  10.1542/peds.2008-2173. http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/reprint/122/6/1374.pdf
[12] Jean D, Cyr C. Use of complementary and alternative medicine in a  general pediatric clinic. Pediatrics. July 2007; 120 (1):e138-e141.
[13]  Tuffs, Annette, Three out of Four Germans Have Used Complementary or Natural  Remedies, BMJ, November 2 2002;325:990.
[14] Ullman, Dana.  The Homeopathic  Revolution: Why Famous People and Cultural Heroes Choose Homeopathy.  Berkeley:  North Atlantic Books, 2007.
[15] Jacobs J, Jonas WB, Jimenez-Perez M,  Crothers D. Homeopathy for childhood diarrhoea: combined results and  meta-analysis from three randomized, controlled clinical trials. Pediatric  Infectious Disease Journal 2003; 22: 229-234.
[16] Jacobs J, Springer DA,  Crothers D. Homeopathic treatment of acute otitis media in children: a  preliminary randomized placebo-controlled trial. Pediatric Infectious Disease  Journal 2001; 20: 177183.
[17] Frei, H, Everts R, von Ammon K, Kaufmann F,  Walther D, Hsu-Schmitz SF, Collenberg M, Fuhrer K, Hassink R, Steinlin M,  Thurneysen A.  Homeopathic treatment of children with attention deficit  hyperactivity disorder: a randomised, double blind, placebo controlled crossover  trial.  Eur J Pediatr., July 27,2005164:758-  767.
Read more at: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dana-ullman/the-epidemic-of-medical-c_b_338645.html