Anonymous wrote:What percentage of US kids are on these drugs vs other countries' kids compared to their percentage of the world's population?
I bet the number is shockingly and very unnecessarily high.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They could treat it by referring the child to a therapist and a psychologist for further evaluation/treatment. The pediatrician is the best person to do the screening because they're the only health professional most kids see on a consistent basis. Who else is going to do it, if the parents either don't know what to look for or are in denial?
The WTOP news report says pediatricians are expected to actually "treat" the depression themselves, OR they may make a referral.
I don't think kids should be put on these powerful drugs unless they are also getting counseling. Why is that even legal??
Are you a psychiatrist/psychopharmacologist? If not, how could you possibly begin to know whether this would or would not be appropriate?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They could treat it by referring the child to a therapist and a psychologist for further evaluation/treatment. The pediatrician is the best person to do the screening because they're the only health professional most kids see on a consistent basis. Who else is going to do it, if the parents either don't know what to look for or are in denial?
The WTOP news report says pediatricians are expected to actually "treat" the depression themselves, OR they may make a referral.
I don't think kids should be put on these powerful drugs unless they are also getting counseling. Why is that even legal??
Anonymous wrote:They could treat it by referring the child to a therapist and a psychologist for further evaluation/treatment. The pediatrician is the best person to do the screening because they're the only health professional most kids see on a consistent basis. Who else is going to do it, if the parents either don't know what to look for or are in denial?