Popular on EntSun
- From Speech Therapy to 300+ Episodes: Brother Marcus Turns His Voice Into a Movement Launching a 24/7 Inspiration Radio Network on Day 100 of the Year - 343
- Homeowner Prep Announces Strategic Language Shift: Replacing "Renters" with "Future Homeowners" to Inspire Wealth-Building Mindsets - 238
- AI Disruption Meets Marine Scale: Off The Hook YS, Inc. (N Y S E American: OTH) Targets Breakout Growth with NextBoat Launch and Aggressive Expansion - 163
- UK Financial Ltd Tokenized LTNS 1, A $1.1 T Asset-Backed ERC-3643 Security Token with 11 On-Chain Contracts Verifying, Compliant Real-World Value - 135
- PlanetAI Nature Space (PNS), certificadora Europea, lanza su plataforma EUDR-PNS Ready basada en IA, satélites y trazabilidad blockchain - 131
- Evolve Construction Mobilizes Commercial Storm Response Across Illinois With AI-Powered Damage Documentation and Public Adjusters Partnership - 128
- KeysCaribbean Offers 'Skip-the-Crowds' Savings With 15 Percent Off April Stays - 125
- SeeVideo.dance Goes Live: Dual-Engine AI Video Studio Brings Seedance 2.0 and Kling 3.0 to Creative Professionals - 121
- New Hair Styles, Cuts, Coloring With Molli's Hair Lab Servicing Amelia, Ohio, Clermont County, OH - 119
- Larry R. Wasion Highlights Jump Gate I: Time Chair. The Opening Novel in His Expansive Science Fiction Series - 117
Similar on EntSun
- The Hardest Part of Building an App Isn't Starting - It's Finishing
- Dual-Engine Growth Strategy Unleashed Targeting a $9.1B Market and the Exploding AI Biotech Revolution: KALA BIO (N A S D A Q: KALA)
- Go Dental Clinic Announces Upcoming Opening of New Branch in International City, Dubai
- Contracting Resources Group and Aalis Management Consulting Launch ARG Joint Venture Under SBA Mentor-Protégé Program
- EduCare Inc. Bridges Critical Gap in Breast Cancer Education with Spanish COPE Library Launch
- Engineering leaders from industry, academia to gather at IISE Annual Conference & Expo in Arlington, Texas
- AI-Driven Neurotechnology Expansion as FDA Path Clears and New Defense Initiative Emerges for NRx Pharmaceuticals (N A S D A Q: NRXP)
- BestDoc Launches AI Call Center for Healthcare
- Acuvance Appoints Sandeep Sabharwal to Board of Directors, Strengthening Leadership to Support Continued Platform Growth
- Dr. Rosendo Icochea, MD Recognized for Contributions to Surgical Education and Medical Research
Foster Care Children Vulnerable to Maltreatment, Including Psychotropic Drug Use
EntSun News/11030165
CCHR, a mental health industry watchdog, praises OIG report
highlighting states' failed oversight of foster children's treatment and calls for immediate action to address ongoing drugging concerns.
highlighting states' failed oversight of foster children's treatment and calls for immediate action to address ongoing drugging concerns.
LOS ANGELES - EntSun -- The Office of the Inspector General (OIG) under the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services delivered a critical report on the inadequate protection of foster care children in residential behavioral treatment centers. The Citizens Commission on Human Rights International (CCHR), which has long exposed the mistreatment and psychotropic drugging of foster children, commended the OIG report titled "Many States Lack Information To Monitor Maltreatment in Residential Facilities for Children in Foster Care."[1] CCHR emphasized the report's candid assessment of the poor state of oversight and stressed the urgency of implementing its recommendations to prevent the failures of past reform efforts.
The report says, "Policymakers, news media, and advocacy groups have raised concerns about the effectiveness of oversight efforts to protect children in these settings." It surveyed each state child welfare agency to determine how they monitor child maltreatment that occurs in residential facilities. This is because "States oversee residential facilities, and ACF [Administration for Children and Families] provides funding and oversight to States for children in foster care who meet certain eligibility requirements."
The OIG's findings show a failure to meet these requirements. Nearly one-third of states could not identify patterns of maltreatment in residential facilities within their state. States also had limited awareness of maltreatment that occurred across chains of residential facilities operating in multiple states.
Instances of abuse and neglect (collectively referred to as maltreatment) have been reported as occurring in residential facilities, including cases of physical violence, sexual assault, and improper restraints across nationwide chains of facilities.
CCHR filed Freedom of Information Act requests to each state asking for the numbers of Medicaid/Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) child beneficiaries who were drugged in 2023. To date, 28 states have responded, revealing that 2.3 million underprivileged children and teens ages 0-17 were prescribed psychiatric drugs under Medicaid at a cost of $1.4 billion.
Stimulants are the predominant class of psychiatric drugs prescribed to them, followed by anti-anxiety drugs for 0-5 year-olds, both of which are documented to cause addiction and other dangerous adverse effects.
More on EntSun News
In 2011, the U.S. Government Accounting Office (GAO) found that foster children aged 0-17 in Medicaid were drugged at rates 2.7-4.5 times higher than were non-foster children in Medicaid. A sample of five states revealed the following percentages of foster children on psychotropic drugs:
CCHR lists some of the past government findings regarding this:
2008-2010: The Congressional Research Service found that nearly one out of every four children in foster care was using a psychiatric drug.[3]
2011: The GAO determined that the federal government had not done enough to oversee the treatment of foster children with powerful mind-altering drugs.[4]
ABC News' story, "Generation Meds," revealed foster children were more than nine times more likely than non-foster children to be prescribed drugs for which there was no FDA-recommended dose for their age.[5] Diane Sawyer and Sharyn Alfonsi uncovered that many foster children, even one-year-olds, were prescribed mind-altering drugs up to 13 times higher than that of other children.[6]
2012: Senator Charles Grassley sent letters to 34 states asking what steps they had taken to investigate doctors whose prescribing of antipsychotics, anti-anxiety drugs and painkillers to Medicaid patients far exceeded that of their peers.[7]
2014: A Congressional hearing acknowledged that at disproportionately higher rates over other children. The GAO estimated numbers as high as 20 to 39%.[8]
In a 2020 study published in Psychiatric Services, the effects of this reliance upon drugging were noted, "Psychoactive medications are the most expensive and fastest-growing class of pharmaceutical agents for children. The cost, side effects, and unprecedented growth rate at which these drugs are prescribed have raised alarms from health care clinicians, patient advocates, and agencies about the appropriateness of how these drugs are distributed to parents and their children."[9]
More on EntSun News
CCHR wants accountable oversight of congregate mental health and behavioral facilities, especially identifying the drug and treatment practices that foster care and Medicaid/CHIP child beneficiaries receive, as well as isolating top prescribers. Tough penalties are needed for child maltreatment involving psychotropic drugs or other psychotherapeutic practices.
About CCHR: It was established in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and eminent professor of psychiatry, Dr. Thomas Szasz. Helping achieve hundreds of laws to protect individuals, the 2004 federal Prohibition of Mandatory Medication Amendment banned children from being forced to take psychiatric drugs as a requisite for education.
[1] "Many States Lack Information To Monitor Maltreatment in Residential Facilities for Children in Foster Care," June 2024, oig.hhs.gov/documents/evaluation/9920/OEI-07-22-00530.pdf
[2] Kelly O'Meara, "National Child Abuse Prevention Month: Stop Mass Drugging of Foster Care Kids," CCHR International, 28 Apr. 2015, www.cchrint.org/2015/04/28/national-child-abuse-prevention-month-stop-mass-drugging-of-foster-care-kids/
[3] Kelly O'Meara, "Congress Saying Foster Kids are 'Over-drugged' is Like Saying Nuclear Waste is 'Overly-toxic,'" CCHR International, 3 June 2014, www.cchrint.org/2014/06/03/congress-saying-foster-kids-are-over-drugged-is-like-saying-nuclear-waste-is-overly-toxic/
[4] "New Study Shows U.S. Government Fails to Oversee Treatment of Foster Children With Mind-Altering Drugs: GAO report released today caps off year-long investigation by ABC News," ABC News, 30 Nov. 2011, abcnews.go.com/US/study-shows-foster-children-high-rates-prescription-psychiatric/story?id=15058380
[5] "New Study Shows U.S. Government Fails to Oversee Treatment of Foster Children With Mind-Altering Drugs: GAO report released today caps off year-long investigation by ABC News," ABC News, 30 Nov. 2011, abcnews.go.com/US/study-shows-foster-children-high-rates-prescription-psychiatric/story?id=15058380
[6] "ABC News Investigation: Diane Sawyer and Sharyn Alfonsi to Report on the Overmedication of Children in the U.S. Foster Care System," ABC News, 20 Nov. 2011, abcnews.go.com/blogs/headlines/2011/11/abc-news-investigation-diane-sawyer-and-sharyn-alfonsi-to-report-on-the-overmedication-of-children-in-the-u-s-foster-care-system
[7] "Senate Watchdog Targets High-Prescribing Medicaid Docs," ProPublica, 24 Jan. 2012, www.propublica.org/article/senate-watchdog-targets-high-prescribing-medicaid-docs
[8] Kelly O'Meara, "Congress Saying Foster Kids are 'Over-drugged' is Like Saying Nuclear Waste is 'Overly-toxic,'" CCHR International, 3 June 2014, www.cchrint.org/2014/06/03/congress-saying-foster-kids-are-over-drugged-is-like-saying-nuclear-waste-is-overly-toxic/
[9] Kelly J. Kelleher, M.D., "Policy and Practice Innovations to Improve Prescribing of Psychoactive Medications for Children," Psychiatric Services, 19 Mar. 2020
The report says, "Policymakers, news media, and advocacy groups have raised concerns about the effectiveness of oversight efforts to protect children in these settings." It surveyed each state child welfare agency to determine how they monitor child maltreatment that occurs in residential facilities. This is because "States oversee residential facilities, and ACF [Administration for Children and Families] provides funding and oversight to States for children in foster care who meet certain eligibility requirements."
The OIG's findings show a failure to meet these requirements. Nearly one-third of states could not identify patterns of maltreatment in residential facilities within their state. States also had limited awareness of maltreatment that occurred across chains of residential facilities operating in multiple states.
Instances of abuse and neglect (collectively referred to as maltreatment) have been reported as occurring in residential facilities, including cases of physical violence, sexual assault, and improper restraints across nationwide chains of facilities.
CCHR filed Freedom of Information Act requests to each state asking for the numbers of Medicaid/Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) child beneficiaries who were drugged in 2023. To date, 28 states have responded, revealing that 2.3 million underprivileged children and teens ages 0-17 were prescribed psychiatric drugs under Medicaid at a cost of $1.4 billion.
Stimulants are the predominant class of psychiatric drugs prescribed to them, followed by anti-anxiety drugs for 0-5 year-olds, both of which are documented to cause addiction and other dangerous adverse effects.
More on EntSun News
- Colorfront Launches New Mac App For Creating Apple Immersive Video
- Michele Mundy's "Divinely Tailored" Gains Momentum
- The International Songwriters Day Song Contest Announces its Winners!
- Evermore Bliss Launches AI Wedding Speech Writer to Help Users Create Personalized, Heartfelt Toasts
- Keenethics enters the ChatGPT Apps ecosystem as a new growth opportunity for businesses
In 2011, the U.S. Government Accounting Office (GAO) found that foster children aged 0-17 in Medicaid were drugged at rates 2.7-4.5 times higher than were non-foster children in Medicaid. A sample of five states revealed the following percentages of foster children on psychotropic drugs:
- Massachusetts 39.1%
- Texas 32.2%.
- Florida 22%,
- Michigan 21%,
- Oregon 19.7%[2]
- Florida: 185,428 0-17 year-olds (at a cost of $178.45 million), of which 18,938 were 0-5 years old (with drug costs of $2.78 million)
- Michigan: 100,364 0-17 year-olds ($73.37 million), of which 6,839 were 0-5 ($2.27 million)
- Massachusetts 59,169 0-17 year-olds ($68.81 million) of which 1,890 were ages 0-5 ($557,827)
CCHR lists some of the past government findings regarding this:
2008-2010: The Congressional Research Service found that nearly one out of every four children in foster care was using a psychiatric drug.[3]
2011: The GAO determined that the federal government had not done enough to oversee the treatment of foster children with powerful mind-altering drugs.[4]
ABC News' story, "Generation Meds," revealed foster children were more than nine times more likely than non-foster children to be prescribed drugs for which there was no FDA-recommended dose for their age.[5] Diane Sawyer and Sharyn Alfonsi uncovered that many foster children, even one-year-olds, were prescribed mind-altering drugs up to 13 times higher than that of other children.[6]
2012: Senator Charles Grassley sent letters to 34 states asking what steps they had taken to investigate doctors whose prescribing of antipsychotics, anti-anxiety drugs and painkillers to Medicaid patients far exceeded that of their peers.[7]
2014: A Congressional hearing acknowledged that at disproportionately higher rates over other children. The GAO estimated numbers as high as 20 to 39%.[8]
In a 2020 study published in Psychiatric Services, the effects of this reliance upon drugging were noted, "Psychoactive medications are the most expensive and fastest-growing class of pharmaceutical agents for children. The cost, side effects, and unprecedented growth rate at which these drugs are prescribed have raised alarms from health care clinicians, patient advocates, and agencies about the appropriateness of how these drugs are distributed to parents and their children."[9]
More on EntSun News
- 'Into the Cole: A Tribute to Nat King Cole' Arrives at Catalina Jazz Club starring Aaron Akins
- May 2nd Dark Hour's Halfway to Halloween Spring Market
- New and Returning Events for 2026 Season
- Spring Into Your New Home at Heritage at South Brunswick
- UK Financial Ltd Launches UKFL Premier One as Its Official Broadcast Channel for Premium Content, Podcasts & Independent Expert Analysis
CCHR wants accountable oversight of congregate mental health and behavioral facilities, especially identifying the drug and treatment practices that foster care and Medicaid/CHIP child beneficiaries receive, as well as isolating top prescribers. Tough penalties are needed for child maltreatment involving psychotropic drugs or other psychotherapeutic practices.
About CCHR: It was established in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and eminent professor of psychiatry, Dr. Thomas Szasz. Helping achieve hundreds of laws to protect individuals, the 2004 federal Prohibition of Mandatory Medication Amendment banned children from being forced to take psychiatric drugs as a requisite for education.
[1] "Many States Lack Information To Monitor Maltreatment in Residential Facilities for Children in Foster Care," June 2024, oig.hhs.gov/documents/evaluation/9920/OEI-07-22-00530.pdf
[2] Kelly O'Meara, "National Child Abuse Prevention Month: Stop Mass Drugging of Foster Care Kids," CCHR International, 28 Apr. 2015, www.cchrint.org/2015/04/28/national-child-abuse-prevention-month-stop-mass-drugging-of-foster-care-kids/
[3] Kelly O'Meara, "Congress Saying Foster Kids are 'Over-drugged' is Like Saying Nuclear Waste is 'Overly-toxic,'" CCHR International, 3 June 2014, www.cchrint.org/2014/06/03/congress-saying-foster-kids-are-over-drugged-is-like-saying-nuclear-waste-is-overly-toxic/
[4] "New Study Shows U.S. Government Fails to Oversee Treatment of Foster Children With Mind-Altering Drugs: GAO report released today caps off year-long investigation by ABC News," ABC News, 30 Nov. 2011, abcnews.go.com/US/study-shows-foster-children-high-rates-prescription-psychiatric/story?id=15058380
[5] "New Study Shows U.S. Government Fails to Oversee Treatment of Foster Children With Mind-Altering Drugs: GAO report released today caps off year-long investigation by ABC News," ABC News, 30 Nov. 2011, abcnews.go.com/US/study-shows-foster-children-high-rates-prescription-psychiatric/story?id=15058380
[6] "ABC News Investigation: Diane Sawyer and Sharyn Alfonsi to Report on the Overmedication of Children in the U.S. Foster Care System," ABC News, 20 Nov. 2011, abcnews.go.com/blogs/headlines/2011/11/abc-news-investigation-diane-sawyer-and-sharyn-alfonsi-to-report-on-the-overmedication-of-children-in-the-u-s-foster-care-system
[7] "Senate Watchdog Targets High-Prescribing Medicaid Docs," ProPublica, 24 Jan. 2012, www.propublica.org/article/senate-watchdog-targets-high-prescribing-medicaid-docs
[8] Kelly O'Meara, "Congress Saying Foster Kids are 'Over-drugged' is Like Saying Nuclear Waste is 'Overly-toxic,'" CCHR International, 3 June 2014, www.cchrint.org/2014/06/03/congress-saying-foster-kids-are-over-drugged-is-like-saying-nuclear-waste-is-overly-toxic/
[9] Kelly J. Kelleher, M.D., "Policy and Practice Innovations to Improve Prescribing of Psychoactive Medications for Children," Psychiatric Services, 19 Mar. 2020
Source: Citizens Commission on Human Rights
0 Comments
Latest on EntSun News
- AI-Driven Neurotechnology Expansion as FDA Path Clears and New Defense Initiative Emerges for NRx Pharmaceuticals (N A S D A Q: NRXP)
- BestDoc Launches AI Call Center for Healthcare
- Professional Corporate Lunch Catering Services for Seamless Office Events in Orlando, Florida
- Acuvance Appoints Sandeep Sabharwal to Board of Directors, Strengthening Leadership to Support Continued Platform Growth
- Grange Insurance Association to Rebrand as Granwest Insurance on July 1, 2026
- Dr. Rosendo Icochea, MD Recognized for Contributions to Surgical Education and Medical Research
- Giftella Launches AI Gift-Finder App That Replaces Guesswork With Personalized Picks in Seconds
- Beverly.io Announces Nationwide Expansion and Poppins Payroll Partnership for Families
- Joseline Hernandez To Host Exclusive Viewing Party For New Show Get Money Girls Miami
- Lux Boutique Announces Exclusive Sidewalk Sale April 16–19 Featuring Up to 60% Off Storewide
- Nkenne Presents "homecoming" — A Premier Afrobeats Cultural Experience In New York City
- AudioZoo Podcast Drama Unveils a New Tale of "The Man Who Wasn't – The Story of Amadeus Nickels"
- New Book: The Battle for Truth and Shadows - Guardians of Light - Epic Fantasy Unveils a War Between Light and Deception
- Clash of Prompts: The World's First AI Prompt Battle Royale
- This high-quality pull tab machine adds variety for your guests
- $7.6 Billion US Crypto ATM Market by 2034; California and Texas Crypto ATM Deployments for Bitcoin Bancorp (Stock Symbol: BCBC); 1000 Kiosk Inventory
- MainConcept Announces Multiview Encoding for Apple Immersive Video
- CCHR Rejects Global Psychiatric Push to Electroshock Children
- iVAM2-ST2110 to Simplify IP Transitions and Reduce Monitoring Complexity
- Americans Leave Behind or Discard 42% of Their Belongings When Moving Out for the First Time, Talker Research Finds
