Pubdate: Wed, 23 Feb 2000 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2000 San Jose Mercury News Contact: 750 Ridder Park Drive, San Jose, CA 95190 Fax: (408) 271-3792 Website: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Author: Lisa M. Krieger And Julia Prodis Sulek TODDLERS GIVEN BEHAVIOR DRUGS Medical Journal Calls Practice Disturbing Growing numbers of preschoolers as young as age 2 are being treated with Ritalin and other behavior-altering drugs, new research shows. The practice is disturbing and has the possibility of damaging youngsters' developing brains, according to the authors of the report and an accompanying editorial published in Tuesday's Journal of the American Medical Association. The findings that 1 to 1.5 percent of children in the study between ages 2 and 4 were receiving stimulants, antidepressants or antipsychotic medications shocked some Bay Area pediatricians and day care providers. Hyperactive toddlers, they suggested, might be better served by a rousing game of ring-around-the-rosy. ``Gosh, preschoolers. I don't know how they would differentiate a spirited child with a hyperactive one at that age,'' said Dr. Jacquelynn Tsu, a San Jose pediatrician who also has a degree in elementary education. The study of 2,000 young children revealed the number of prescriptions written for such drugs increased by 1.3 to 3 times in three different parts of the country between the years 1991 and 1995. Overall, use of all these medications remains relatively rare: Children between the ages of 2 and 4 years were treated at one-tenth the rate of their 5- to 14-year-old counterparts. Some Bay Area mental health experts said use of these drugs may not be intrinsically harmful -- and can, in fact, offer important therapeutic relief to troubled children. ``Kids do develop psychiatric problems, early on, that can interfere with their social and academic development,'' said Dr. Mark Levy, a Mill Valley psychotherapist. ``If they can't focus, for instance, they're identified as stupid -- and they find school traumatic. They quickly go off track.'' Use of the drugs was considerably higher among children in the state Medicaid programs than children who belonged to private HMOs. Children in Medicaid, uniformly poor, are known to be at greater risk of emotional disability and major social stressors. Words of caution Some therapists cautioned that the wholesale use of medications might be a quick-and-easy solution by health insurers to solve what might be more deeply rooted social problems. Even in appropriate cases, such medication should be used in tandem with family therapy or behavior modification, they said. While previous research has documented an increase in treatment with psychotherapeutic drugs among school-age children, this is the most definitive study of medication trends in this 2- to 4-year-old age group. ``These findings are remarkable in light of the limited knowledge base that underlies psychotropic medication use in very young children . . . The possibility of adverse effects on the developing brain cannot be ruled out,'' wrote lead researcher Julie Magno Zito of the University of Maryland in Baltimore. In an accompanying editorial in the same issue of JAMA, Dr. Joseph T. Coyle of Harvard Medical School, Boston, urged that ``the reasons for these troubling changes in practice need to be identified . . . These disturbing prescription practices demand more thorough investigation.'' The usual reasons for prescribing such medicines to children include pain relief, anxiety caused by medical and dental procedures, bed wetting, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and depression. Stimulants lead way Stimulants were the leading treatment among all children, with the drug Ritalin (methylphenidate) representing 9 out of 10 stimulant prescriptions. Ritalin is used to treat attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder by increasing attention and decreasing restlessness in children who are overactive, impulsive and cannot concentrate. Still, child care providers wonder about the need to use it with very young children. ``Most of the hyperness is from behavior and needing redirection,'' said Sunshine Mitchell, assistant director of a Kindercare Learning Center in Campbell. ``They need to have outside time every morning and afternoon. You need to sing songs and dance -- anything you can for them to let off energy.'' Saul Wasserman, a San Jose child psychiatrist, said, ``You have to make sure the child is the one with the problem. ``If you have a poor day care arrangement and the child is bored, unattended and gets into things, that's not a reason for medication. It's a reason to improve the day care situation.'' Critics say that public attitudes have changed expectations of childhood behavior. Over the past two decades, the pressure on children to perform has increased -- while the support needed to help improve performance has declined. Community programs such as Head Start and television shows such as ``Sesame Street,'' while benefiting millions, also have led to expectations that children can concentrate enough to learn numbers and the alphabet at an earlier age. Yet at the same time, poverty rates for children have climbed, and more families are requiring two incomes to maintain their standard of living. So very young children are taken from the household and introduced to pre-academic learning and a more demanding social structure. Testing criticized Zito and her colleagues concluded that the vast majority of psychotropic medications prescribed for preschoolers have not been thoroughly tested for children this young and so lack product labeling information approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. 46urther testing of these drugs is needed to assure their safety, said Dr. Nanette Orman, a psychiatrist in private practice in Los Altos and a clinical instructor at Stanford University School of Medicine. ``Children are a different species than adults, so measures of safety and efficacy that apply to adults can't be used for children,'' she said. The researchers analyzed data from 1991, 1993 and 1995 from medical records of children in a Medicaid program in a Midwestern state, a second Medicaid program in a mid-Atlantic state and a health maintenance organization in the northwest United States. The specific locations of the children were not disclosed. The study does not provide the diagnoses of the children or the professional identities or specialties of the prescribers, which could shed some light on the reason for these prescribing patterns. Contact Lisa M. Krieger at or (408)920-5565. Contact Julia Prodis Sulek at or (408) 278-3409. - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson