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Authors: Robert Whitaker

Anatomy of an Epidemic (57 page)

17.
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J. Swanson, “Effects of stimulant medication on learning in children with ADHD,”
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20.
Breggin,
Talking Back to Ritalin
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26.
Ibid.

27.
Rie, “Effects of methylphenidate.”

28.
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29.
Swanson, “Effects of stimulant medication.”

30.
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From Placebo to Panacea
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31.
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32.
Whalen, “Stimulant pharmacotherapy,” 327.

33.
P. Breggin, “Psychostimulants in the treatment of children diagnosed with ADHD,”
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34.
Ibid.

35.
Richters, “NIMH Collaborative Multisite.”

36.
P. Jensen, “3-year follow-up of the NIMH MTA study,”
Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
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37.
The MTA Cooperative Group, “A 14-month randomized clinical trial of treatment strategies for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder,”
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38.
Jensen, “3-year follow-up.”

39.
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40.
B. Molina, “MTA at 8 years,”
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41.
C. Miranda, “ADHD drugs could stunt growth,”
Daily Telegraph
(UK), November 12, 2007.

42.
Breggin,
Talking Back to Ritalin;
K. Bolla, “The neuropsychiatry of chronic cocaine abuse,”
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43.
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J. Zito, “Rising prevalence of antidepressants among US youths,”
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R. Fisher,
From Placebo to Panacea
(New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1997), 309.

48.
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Editorial, “Depressing research,”
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T. Laughren, Memorandum, “Background comments for Feb. 2, 2004 meeting of psychopharmacological drugs advisory committee,” January 5, 2004. Accessed at
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52.
C. Whittington, “Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors in childhood depression,”
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Editorial, “Depressing research,”
Lancet
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57.
P. Breggin,
Brain-Disabling Treatments in Psychiatry
(New York: Springer Publishing Company, 2008), 153.

58.
D. Papolos,
The Bipolar Child
(New York: Broadway Books, 2000), xiv.

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C. Moreno, “National trends in the outpatient diagnosis and treatment of bipolar disorder in youth,”
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60.
J. Kluger, “Young and Bipolar,”
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61.
L. Lurie, “Psychoses in children,”
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62.
Ibid.

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J. Anthony, “Manic-depressive psychosis in childhood,”
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70.
J. Kluger, “Young and Bipolar.”

71.
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74.
D. Papolos, “Bipolar disorder, co-occuring conditions, and the need for extreme caution before initiating drug treatment,”
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P. Breggin,
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84.
D. Papolos, “Antidepressant-induced adverse effects in juvenile-onset bipolar
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86.
M. Hellander, “Children with bipolar disorder,”
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88.
C. Reichart, “Earlier onset of bipolar disorder in children by antidepressants or stimulants,”
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89.
B. Geller, “Child and adolescent bipolar disorder,”
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90.
Papolos, “Antidepressant-induced adverse effects.”

91.
G. Faedda, “Treatment-emergent mania in pediatric bipolar disorder,”
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92.
R. Perlis, “Long-term implications of early onset in bipolar disorder,”
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93.
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95.
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96.
B. Geller, “Two-year prospective follow-up of children with a prepubertal and early adolescent bipolar disorder phenotype,”
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97.
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Social Security Administration, annual statistical reports on the SSI program, 1996–2008;
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99.
Pediatric Academic Societies, “Pediatric psychiatry admissions on the rise,” May 16, 2000, press release.

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D. Satcher,
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102.
U.S. Government Accountability Office, “Young adults with serious mental illness” (June 2008).

Chapter 12: Suffer the Children

1.
J. Zito, “Psychotropic medication patterns among youth in foster care,”
Pediatrics
121 (2008): 157–63.

Chapter 13: The Rise of an Ideology

1.
C. Ross,
Pseudoscience in Psychiatry
(New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1995).

2.
G. Klerman, “A debate on DSM-III,”
American Journal of Psychiatry
141 (1984): 539–42.

3.
M. Sabshin, “Report of the medical director,”
American Journal of Psychiatry
137 (1980): 1308.

4.
See blurbs for second edition of
The Myth of Mental Illness
, published by Harper & Row in 1974.

5.
B. Nelson, “Psychiatry’s anxious years,”
New York Times
, November 2, 1982.

6.
D. Adler, “The medical model and psychiatry’s tasks,”
Hospital and Community Psychiatry
32 (1981): 387–92.

7.
Sabshin, “Report of the medical director.”

8.
Nelson, “Psychiatry’s anxious years.”

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