Trending...
- Phinge CEO Ranked #1 Globally by Crunchbase for the Last Week, Will Be in Las Vegas Jan. 4-9, the Week of CES to Discuss Netverse & IPO Coming in 2026
- Allegiant Management Group Named 2025 Market Leader in Orlando by PropertyManagement.com
- Bent Danholm Joins The American Dream TV as Central Florida Host
National analyses reveal widespread psychotropic prescribing to infants, toddlers, and young children. CCHR is urging immediate federal oversight, calling the trend a systemic failure, placing children at chemical risk.
LOS ANGELES - ColoradoDesk -- By CCHR International
Tens of thousands of American children who begin with a prescription for Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) drugs ultimately end up on multiple powerful psychiatric drugs, sometimes even before they are old enough to attend elementary school. A new Wall Street Journal analysis of 2019–2023 Medicaid data found that children aged 3 to 14 who were started on an ADHD drug were more than five times as likely to be prescribed additional psychiatric drugs within four years compared to peers not on ADHD drugs. Most of the added drugs were antidepressants or antipsychotics—agents associated with severe, sometimes irreversible, side effects.[1] However, the mental health industry watchdog, Citizens Commission on Human Rights International (CCHR), conducted its own review of state-by-state Medicaid data through Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests, and the findings were even more alarming.
From the 32 states that provided records, nearly 3 million Medicaid-enrolled children ages 0–17 were prescribed psychiatric drugs in 2023, at a cost of $1.78 billion. Among them were 270,196 toddlers and preschool-aged children—an especially vulnerable population for whom many of these drugs are not FDA-approved. Because 18 states failed to provide data, the true national total is almost certainly far higher, likely surpassing 4 million children.
In the comprehensive breakdown of Medicaid child beneficiaries, more than 1.4 million were prescribed stimulants, 920,411 were given antidepressants, 605,746 received antianxiety drugs, 465,599 were put on antipsychotics, and 384,299 were prescribed mood stabilizers.
The Wall Street Journal reports that, according to 2021 federal data, 7.1 million American children aged 3 to 17 have been given an ADHD diagnosis. Roughly half are estimated to be on ADHD drugs. Data obtained by CCHR from IQVIA, a global healthcare analytics firm, revealed 3.15 million U.S. children (0–17) were prescribed ADHD stimulants in 2020, including 58,000 children under 5 years old.
More on Colorado Desk
The FDA approves these drugs only for children six and older, meaning young children are being prescribed potent stimulants "off-label" and without long-term safety research.
CCHR's Medicaid data collection three years later indicates the situation has not merely continued but likely worsened into a full-scale public-health failure demanding immediate federal intervention.
Jan Eastgate, president of CCHR International, says that these prescribing patterns reveal a federally funded "drug and polypharmacy pipeline"—one that urgently demands congressional and state oversight to protect children from what the watchdog calls "chemical assault and negligence disguised as care."
ADHD stimulant drugs carry a black box warning that they can cause addiction, even when taken exactly as prescribed.[2] A recent American Journal of Psychiatry study found that high doses of certain ADHD stimulants were associated with a more than five-fold increased risk of psychosis or mania.[3]
Danish physician and researcher Dr. Peter C. Gøtzsche warns that stimulants can also suppress normal childhood emotional and behavioral expression, causing apathy or indifference. In some studies, more than half of children developed depression or compulsive, and meaningless behaviors while taking them.[4]
Antidepressants also carry their own black box warning for suicidal thoughts and behavior in children and young adults.[5]
Antipsychotics are linked to metabolic damage, violent behavior, and neurological disorders.[6] One of their most severe effects is tardive dyskinesia (TD)—a disfiguring movement disorder caused by antipsychotics. Its symptoms resemble Parkinson's disease: involuntary movements of the lips, tongue, jaw, fingers, toes, or other body parts. TD can persist long after the drug is stopped—sometimes permanently. It is a reported risk in the pediatric population.[7]
Even worse, individuals developing TD are often prescribed more psychiatric drugs to counter the symptoms, exposing them to additional risks such as blurred vision, tremors, irregular heartbeat, drooling, restlessness, or akathisia—a well-documented driver of extreme agitation and suicidal or violent behavior.[8]
Eastgate says the expanding trend of drugging children with cocktails of psychotropics constitutes a national emergency: "This is a chemical assault on children, masking the real causes of their distress and too often worsening the very problems these drugs claim to treat. Federal and state intervention is urgently needed to abolish these negligent polypharmacy practices."
More on Colorado Desk
Clinical experts agree the system is out of control. Alexandra Perez, a clinical psychologist at Emory University School of Medicine, told The Wall Street Journal she has seen children as young as four years old who were already on multiple psychiatric drugs. Many of these children had histories of trauma or adversity that were mislabeled as ADHD and drugged instead of addressed through non-drug support.
A 2021 review in Frontiers in Psychiatry summarized more than 20 years of research documenting substantial growth in pediatric psychotropic polypharmacy. In the studies reviewed:
Four years after those findings, the Wall Street Journal shows the trend has only worsened, as confirmed also by CCHR's own Medicaid analysis. Between 2019 and 2022:
CCHR, founded 56 years ago by the Church of Scientology and professor of psychiatry Thomas Szasz, said the latest data reveal an entrenched national failure to protect children. "Pumping kids with ADHD stimulants—often amphetamines—combined with mind-altering antidepressants, antipsychotics, or sedative-hypnotics, is evidence of a mental health system that has normalized harm under the guise of treatment," Eastgate said. "This is not care—it is harm. The practice should be abolished."
Sources:
[1] Shalini Ramachandran, et al., "Millions of Kids Are on ADHD Pills. For Many, It's the Start of a Drug Cascade," Wall Street Journal, 20 Nov. 2025, www.wsj.com/health/wellness/kids-adhd-drugs-medication-06dfa0b7?st=oRRSe8&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink
[2] www.cchrint.org/2023/05/16/fda-finally-adds-addiction-to-black-box-warning-on-adhd-drugs/; www.fda.gov/media/168066/download
[3] www.cchrint.org/2024/09/20/new-study-warns-of-high-dose-adhd-drugs-inducing-psychosis/; www.nbcnews.com/health/mental-health/high-doses-adhd-drugs-linked-greater-risk-psychosis-rcna170707
[4] Peter C. Gøtzsche, MD, "Critical Psychiatry Textbook, Chapter 9: ADHD (Part Two)," Mad In America, 14 Aug. 2023
[5] medshun.com/article/why-do-antipsychotics-cause-violence
[6] pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3004713/; medshun.com/article/why-do-antipsychotics-cause-violence; psychiatryonline.org/doi/10.1176/appi.ps.201500272
[7] pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38862692/
[8] www.cchrint.org/2021/10/11/consumers-beware-of-antipsychotics-long-term-debilitating-effects/
[9] pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8236612/
Tens of thousands of American children who begin with a prescription for Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) drugs ultimately end up on multiple powerful psychiatric drugs, sometimes even before they are old enough to attend elementary school. A new Wall Street Journal analysis of 2019–2023 Medicaid data found that children aged 3 to 14 who were started on an ADHD drug were more than five times as likely to be prescribed additional psychiatric drugs within four years compared to peers not on ADHD drugs. Most of the added drugs were antidepressants or antipsychotics—agents associated with severe, sometimes irreversible, side effects.[1] However, the mental health industry watchdog, Citizens Commission on Human Rights International (CCHR), conducted its own review of state-by-state Medicaid data through Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests, and the findings were even more alarming.
From the 32 states that provided records, nearly 3 million Medicaid-enrolled children ages 0–17 were prescribed psychiatric drugs in 2023, at a cost of $1.78 billion. Among them were 270,196 toddlers and preschool-aged children—an especially vulnerable population for whom many of these drugs are not FDA-approved. Because 18 states failed to provide data, the true national total is almost certainly far higher, likely surpassing 4 million children.
In the comprehensive breakdown of Medicaid child beneficiaries, more than 1.4 million were prescribed stimulants, 920,411 were given antidepressants, 605,746 received antianxiety drugs, 465,599 were put on antipsychotics, and 384,299 were prescribed mood stabilizers.
The Wall Street Journal reports that, according to 2021 federal data, 7.1 million American children aged 3 to 17 have been given an ADHD diagnosis. Roughly half are estimated to be on ADHD drugs. Data obtained by CCHR from IQVIA, a global healthcare analytics firm, revealed 3.15 million U.S. children (0–17) were prescribed ADHD stimulants in 2020, including 58,000 children under 5 years old.
More on Colorado Desk
- Colorado: Marijuana Sales Near $1B, Raising Almost $200M of Tax Revenue in 2025
- CredHub and Real Property Management Join Forces to Empower Franchise Owners with Rental Payment Credit Reporting Solutions
- Leimert Park Announces Weeklong Kwanzaa Festival & Kwanzaa Parade Celebrating Black History, Culture, and Community
- Renowned Alternative Medicine Specialist Dr. Sebi and His African Bio Mineral Balance Therapy Are the Focus of New Book
- Psychiatric Drug Damage Ignored for Decades; CCHR Demands Federal Action
The FDA approves these drugs only for children six and older, meaning young children are being prescribed potent stimulants "off-label" and without long-term safety research.
CCHR's Medicaid data collection three years later indicates the situation has not merely continued but likely worsened into a full-scale public-health failure demanding immediate federal intervention.
Jan Eastgate, president of CCHR International, says that these prescribing patterns reveal a federally funded "drug and polypharmacy pipeline"—one that urgently demands congressional and state oversight to protect children from what the watchdog calls "chemical assault and negligence disguised as care."
ADHD stimulant drugs carry a black box warning that they can cause addiction, even when taken exactly as prescribed.[2] A recent American Journal of Psychiatry study found that high doses of certain ADHD stimulants were associated with a more than five-fold increased risk of psychosis or mania.[3]
Danish physician and researcher Dr. Peter C. Gøtzsche warns that stimulants can also suppress normal childhood emotional and behavioral expression, causing apathy or indifference. In some studies, more than half of children developed depression or compulsive, and meaningless behaviors while taking them.[4]
Antidepressants also carry their own black box warning for suicidal thoughts and behavior in children and young adults.[5]
Antipsychotics are linked to metabolic damage, violent behavior, and neurological disorders.[6] One of their most severe effects is tardive dyskinesia (TD)—a disfiguring movement disorder caused by antipsychotics. Its symptoms resemble Parkinson's disease: involuntary movements of the lips, tongue, jaw, fingers, toes, or other body parts. TD can persist long after the drug is stopped—sometimes permanently. It is a reported risk in the pediatric population.[7]
Even worse, individuals developing TD are often prescribed more psychiatric drugs to counter the symptoms, exposing them to additional risks such as blurred vision, tremors, irregular heartbeat, drooling, restlessness, or akathisia—a well-documented driver of extreme agitation and suicidal or violent behavior.[8]
Eastgate says the expanding trend of drugging children with cocktails of psychotropics constitutes a national emergency: "This is a chemical assault on children, masking the real causes of their distress and too often worsening the very problems these drugs claim to treat. Federal and state intervention is urgently needed to abolish these negligent polypharmacy practices."
More on Colorado Desk
- Why Millions Are Losing Sexual Sensation, And Why It's Not Age, Hormones, or Desire
- Justin Jeansonne An Emerging Country Singer-Songwriter Music Fans Have Been Waiting For…a True Maverick
- Russellville Huntington Learning Center Expands Access to Literacy Support; Approved Provider Under Arkansas Department of Education
- Governor Polis, Senators Bennet and Hickenlooper Call on President Trump to Reverse Denial of Colorado's Disaster Requests, and to Provide Needed Support in Aftermath of Recent Devastating Fires and Floods
- UK Financial Ltd Launches U.S. Operations Following Delaware Approval
Clinical experts agree the system is out of control. Alexandra Perez, a clinical psychologist at Emory University School of Medicine, told The Wall Street Journal she has seen children as young as four years old who were already on multiple psychiatric drugs. Many of these children had histories of trauma or adversity that were mislabeled as ADHD and drugged instead of addressed through non-drug support.
A 2021 review in Frontiers in Psychiatry summarized more than 20 years of research documenting substantial growth in pediatric psychotropic polypharmacy. In the studies reviewed:
- Up to 300,000 U.S. youth were found to be receiving three or more psychiatric drug classes simultaneously in certain Medicaid datasets.
- In one large Medicaid study of individuals aged 2–24 treated for ADHD: use of two or more ADHD drugs rose from 16.8% to 20.5%; prescriptions for two or more additional psychotropic classes increased from 26.0% to 40.7%
- Another study reported that 73.1% of children aged 6–18 receiving ADHD drugs had psychotropic polypharmacy, versus 26.9% in younger (2–5) and older (19–24) groups.[9]
Four years after those findings, the Wall Street Journal shows the trend has only worsened, as confirmed also by CCHR's own Medicaid analysis. Between 2019 and 2022:
- Nearly 5,000 providers prescribed ADHD drugs to at least 100 children each
- On average, 25% of these children also received one or more additional psychiatric drugs
- By 2023, 39,000 children (23%) on ADHD drugs were taking two or more psychiatric drugs simultaneously, and more than 4,400 were on four separate drugs at once.
CCHR, founded 56 years ago by the Church of Scientology and professor of psychiatry Thomas Szasz, said the latest data reveal an entrenched national failure to protect children. "Pumping kids with ADHD stimulants—often amphetamines—combined with mind-altering antidepressants, antipsychotics, or sedative-hypnotics, is evidence of a mental health system that has normalized harm under the guise of treatment," Eastgate said. "This is not care—it is harm. The practice should be abolished."
Sources:
[1] Shalini Ramachandran, et al., "Millions of Kids Are on ADHD Pills. For Many, It's the Start of a Drug Cascade," Wall Street Journal, 20 Nov. 2025, www.wsj.com/health/wellness/kids-adhd-drugs-medication-06dfa0b7?st=oRRSe8&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink
[2] www.cchrint.org/2023/05/16/fda-finally-adds-addiction-to-black-box-warning-on-adhd-drugs/; www.fda.gov/media/168066/download
[3] www.cchrint.org/2024/09/20/new-study-warns-of-high-dose-adhd-drugs-inducing-psychosis/; www.nbcnews.com/health/mental-health/high-doses-adhd-drugs-linked-greater-risk-psychosis-rcna170707
[4] Peter C. Gøtzsche, MD, "Critical Psychiatry Textbook, Chapter 9: ADHD (Part Two)," Mad In America, 14 Aug. 2023
[5] medshun.com/article/why-do-antipsychotics-cause-violence
[6] pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3004713/; medshun.com/article/why-do-antipsychotics-cause-violence; psychiatryonline.org/doi/10.1176/appi.ps.201500272
[7] pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38862692/
[8] www.cchrint.org/2021/10/11/consumers-beware-of-antipsychotics-long-term-debilitating-effects/
[9] pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8236612/
Source: Citizens Commission on Human Rights International
0 Comments
Latest on Colorado Desk
- Tru by Hilton Columbia South Opens to Guests
- Christy Sports donates $56K in new gear to SOS Outreach to help kids hit the slopes
- Colorado Springs: Galley Road Bridge project completion date delayed
- GLP-1 Therapies for Weight Loss: Vibrant Health Launches the Ultimate Resource for Colorado Residents Seeking Safe, Lasting Results
- "BigPirate" Sets Sail: A New Narrative-Driven Social Casino Adventure
- Phinge CEO Ranked #1 Globally by Crunchbase for the Last Week, Will Be in Las Vegas Jan. 4-9, the Week of CES to Discuss Netverse & IPO Coming in 2026
- Colorado: Governor Polis Makes Appointments in the 6th Judicial District
- Women's Everyday Safety Is Changing - The Blue Luna Shows How
- Microgaming Unveils Red Papaya: A New Studio Delivering Cutting-Edge, Feature-Rich Slots
- BOHO Design Rentals Launches Luxury Sofa Rentals in Denver
- Adam's Plumbing & Heating Unveils the Ultimate Lakewood Plumbing Repair & Installation Resource for Homeowners and Businesses
- Five New Proposition 123 Equity Program Selections to Support Housing Coloradans Can Afford Across Colorado
- 5-Star Duncan Injury Group Expands Personal Injury Representation to Arizona
- The End of "Influencer" Gambling: Bonusetu Analyzes Finland's Strict New Casino Marketing Laws
- AI-Driven Cybersecurity Leader Gains Industry Recognition, Secures $6M Institutional Investment, Builds Momentum Toward $16M Annual Run-Rate Revenue
- TRIO Heating, Air & Plumbing Now Ranks #1 in San Jose
- Colorado Springs Airport Introduces FlyMyAirport
- Milwaukee Job Corps Center Hosts Alumni Day, Calls Alumni to Action on Open Enrollment Campaign
- Golden Paper Identifies Global Growth in Packaging Papers and Upgrades Its High-End Production Capacity
- Colorado: Trump Administration Decreasing Safety & Attacking Science
