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The Human Brain
The areas of the brain that are affected by mental disorders
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Lost Lives
Asia's mental health crisis
[11/10/2003] |
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Indicates premium content |
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E-mail your letter to the editor
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| STEVE LISS FOR TIME |
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| Medicating Young Minds |
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Drugs have become increasingly popular for treating kids with mood and behavior problems. But how will that affect them in the long run? |
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By Jeffrey Kluger |
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Posted Monday, December 1, 2003; 21:00 HKT
Getting by is hard enough in middle school. It's harder still when you've got other things on your mindand Andrea Okeson, 13, had plenty to distract her. There were the constant stomach pains to consider; there was the nervousness, the distractibility, the overwhelming need to be alone. And, of course, there was the business of repeatedly checking the locks on the doors. All these things grew, inexplicably, to consume Andrea, until by the time she was through with the eighth grade, she seemed pretty much through with everything else too. "Andrea," said a teacher to her one day, "you look like death."
The problem, though neither Andrea nor her teacher knew it, was that her adolescent brain was being tossed by the neurochemical storms of generalized anxiety, obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)a decidedly lousy trifecta. If that was what eighth grade was, ninth was unimaginable.
But that was then. Andrea, now 18, is a freshman at the College of St. Catherine in St. Paul, Minnesota, enjoying her friends and her studies and looking forward to a career in fashion merchandising, all thanks to a bit of chemical stabilizing provided by a pair of pills: Lexapro, an antidepressant, and Adderall, a relatively new anti-ADHD drug. "I feel excited about things," Andrea says. "I feel like I got me back."
So a little medicine fixed what ailed a child. Good news all around, right? Well, yesand no. Lexapro is the perfect answer for anxiety all right, provided that you're willing to overlook the fact that it does its work by artificially manipulating the very chemicals responsible for feelings and thought. Adderall is the perfect answer for ADHD, provided that you overlook the fact that it's a stimulant like Dexedrine. Oh, yes, you also have to overlook the fact that Adderall has left Andrea with such side effects as weight loss and sleeplessness, and both drugs are being poured into a young brain that has years to go before it's finally fully formed. Still, says Andrea, "I'm just glad there were things that could be done."
Those thingswhether Lexapro or Ritalin or Prozac or something elseare being done for more and more children the world over. In the U.S., they are being done with such frequency that some Americans have justifiably begun to ask, "Are we raising Generation Rx?"
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