HR 2769
112th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. R. 2769
To prohibit the use of Federal funds for any universal or mandatory
mental health screening program.
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
August 1, 2011
Mr. PAUL (for himself, Mr. BURTON of Indiana, and Mrs. BLACKBURN) introduced
the following bill; which was referred to the Committee on Energy and Commerce,
and in addition to the Committees on Ways and Means and Education and the
Workforce, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each
case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction
of the committee concerned
A BILL
To prohibit the use of Federal funds for any universal or mandatory
mental health screening program.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United
States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the `Parental Consent Act of 2011'.
SEC. 2. FINDINGS.
The Congress finds as follows:
(1) The United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) issued findings
and recommendations against screening for suicide that corroborate those
of the Canadian Preventive Services Task Force, `USPSTF found no evidence
that screening for suicide risk reduces suicide attempts or mortality. There
is limited evidence on the accuracy of screening tools to identify suicide
risk in the primary care setting, including tools to identify those at high
risk.'.
(2) The 1999 Surgeon General's report on mental health admitted the serious
conflicts in the medical literature regarding the definitions of mental
health and mental illness when it said, `In other words, what it means to
be mentally healthy is subject to many different interpretations that are
rooted in value judgments that may vary across cultures. The challenge of
defining mental health has stalled the development of programs to foster
mental health (Secker, 1998). . . .'.
(3) A 2005 report by the National Center for Infant and Early Childhood
Health Policy admitted, with respect to the psychiatric screening of children
from birth to age 5, the following: `We have mentioned a number of the problems
for the new field of IMH [Infant Mental Health] throughout this paper, and
many of them complicate examining outcomes.'. Briefly, such problems include:
(B) Lack of agreement about diagnosis.
(C) Criteria for referrals or acceptance into services are not always
well defined.
(D) Lack of longitudinal outcome studies.
(E) Appropriate assessment and treatment requires multiple informants
involved with the young child: parents, clinicians, child care staff,
preschool staff, medical personnel, and other service providers.
(F) Broad parameters for determining socioemotional outcomes are not clearly
defined, although much attention is now being given to school readiness.
(4) Authors of the bible of psychiatric diagnosis, the Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual, admit that the diagnostic criteria for mental illness are vague,
saying, `DSM-IV criteria remain a consensus without clear empirical data
supporting the number of items required for the diagnosis. . . . Furthermore,
the behavioral characteristics specified in DSM-IV, despite efforts to standardize
them, remain subjective. . . .' (American Psychiatric Association Committee
on the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM-IV 1994), pp. 1162-1163).
(5) Because of the subjectivity of psychiatric diagnosis, it is all too
easy for a psychiatrist to label a person's disagreement with the psychiatrist's
political beliefs a mental disorder.
(6) Efforts are underway to add a diagnosis of `extreme intolerance' to
the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual. Prisoners in the California State
penal system judged to have this extreme intolerance based on race or sexual
orientation are considered to be delusional and are being medicated with
anti-psychotic drugs (Washington Post 12/10/05).
(7) At least one federally funded school violence prevention program has
suggested that a child who shares his or her parent's traditional values
may be likely to instigate school violence.
(8) Despite many statements in the popular press and by groups promoting
the psychiatric labeling and medication of children, that ADD/ADHD is due
to a chemical imbalance in the brain, the 1998 National Institutes of Health
Consensus Conference said, `. . . further research is necessary to firmly
establish ADHD as a brain disorder. This is not unique to ADHD, but applies
as well to most psychiatric disorders, including disabling diseases such
as schizophrenia. . . . Although an independent diagnostic test for ADHD
does not exist. . . . Finally, after years of clinical research and experience
with ADHD, our knowledge about the cause or causes of ADHD remains speculative.'.
(9) There has been a precipitous increase in the prescription rates of psychiatric
drugs in children:
(A) The use of antipsychotic medication in children has increased nearly
fivefold between 1995 and 2002 with more than 2.5 million children receiving
these medications, the youngest being 18 months old (Vanderbilt University,
2006).
(B) More than 2.2 million children are receiving more than one psychotropic
drug at one time with no scientific evidence of safety or effectiveness
(Medco Health Solutions, 2006).
(C) More money was spent on psychiatric drugs for children than on antibiotics
or asthma medication in 2003 (Medco Trends, 2004).
(10) A September 2004 Food and Drug Administration hearing found that more
than two-thirds of studies of antidepressants given to depressed children
showed that they were no more effective than placebo, or sugar pills, and
that only the positive trials were published by the pharmaceutical industry.
The lack of effectiveness of antidepressants has been known by the Food
and Drug Administration since at least 2000 when, according to the Food
and Drug Administration Background Comments on Pediatric Depression, Robert
Temple of the Food and Drug Administration Office of Drug Evaluation acknowledged
the `preponderance of negative studies of antidepressants in pediatric populations'.
The Surgeon General's report said of stimulant medication like Ritalin,
`However, psychostimulants do not appear to achieve long-term changes in
outcomes such as peer relationships, social or academic skills, or school
achievement.'.
(11) The Food and Drug Administration finally acknowledged by issuing its
most severe Black Box Warnings in September 2004, that the newer antidepressants
are related to suicidal thoughts and actions in children and that this data
was hidden for years. A confirmatory review of that data published in 2006
by Columbia University's department of psychiatry, which is also the originator
of the TeenScreen instrument, found that `in children and adolescents (aged
6-18 years), antidepressant drug treatment was significantly associated
with suicide attempts . . . and suicide deaths. . . .'. The Food and Drug
Administration had over 2,000 reports of completed suicides from 1987 to
1995 for the drug Prozac alone, which by the agency's own calculations represent
but a fraction of the suicides. Prozac is the only such drug approved by
the Food and Drug Administration for use in children.
(12) Other possible side effects of psychiatric medication used in children
include mania, violence, dependence, weight gain, and insomnia from the
newer antidepressants; cardiac toxicity including lethal arrhythmias from
the older antidepressants; growth suppression, psychosis, and violence from
stimulants; and diabetes from the newer anti-psychotic medications.
(13) Parents are already being coerced to put their children on psychiatric
medications and some children are dying because of it. Universal or mandatory
mental health screening and the accompanying treatments recommended by the
New Freedom Commission on Mental Health will only increase that problem.
Across the country, Patricia Weathers, the Carroll Family, the Johnston
Family, and the Salazar Family were all charged or threatened with child
abuse charges for refusing or taking their children off of psychiatric medications.
(14) The United States Supreme Court in Pierce versus Society of Sisters
(268 U.S. 510 (1925)) held that parents have a right to direct the education
and upbringing of their children.
(15) Universal or mandatory mental health screening violates the right of
parents to direct and control the upbringing of their children.
(16) Federal funds should never be used to support programs that could lead
to the increased over-medication of children, the stigmatization of children
and adults as mentally disturbed based on their political or other beliefs,
or the violation of the liberty and privacy of Americans by subjecting them
to invasive `mental health screening' (the results of which are placed in
medical records which are available to government officials and special
interests without the patient's consent).
SEC. 3. PROHIBITION AGAINST FEDERAL FUNDING OF UNIVERSAL OR MANDATORY MENTAL
HEALTH SCREENING.
(a) Universal or Mandatory Mental Health Screening Program- No Federal funds
may be used to establish or implement any universal or mandatory mental health,
psychiatric, or socioemotional screening program.
(b) Refusal To Consent as Basis of a Charge of Child Abuse or Education Neglect-
No Federal education funds may be paid to any local educational agency or
other instrument of government that uses the refusal of a parent or legal
guardian to provide express, written, voluntary, informed consent to mental
health screening for his or her child as the basis of a charge of child abuse,
child neglect, medical neglect, or education neglect until the agency or instrument
demonstrates that it is no longer using such refusal as a basis of such a
charge.
(c) Definition- For purposes of this Act, the term `universal or mandatory
mental health, psychiatric, or socioemotional screening program'--
(1) means any mental health screening program in which a set of individuals
(other than members of the Armed Forces or individuals serving a sentence
resulting from conviction for a criminal offense) is automatically screened
without regard to whether there was a prior indication of a need for mental
health treatment; and
(A) any program of State incentive grants for transformation to implement
recommendations in the July 2003 report of the New Freedom Commission
on Mental Health, the State Early Childhood Comprehensive System, grants
for TeenScreen, and the Foundations for Learning Grants; and
(B) any student mental health screening program that allows mental health
screening of individuals under 18 years of age without the express, written,
voluntary, informed consent of the parent or legal guardian of the individual
involved.
END