
Psychiatric News March 18, 2005
Volume 40 Number 6
© 2005 American Psychiatric Association
p. 6
Bill Barring MH Screenings Based on Wrong Assumptions
Christine Lehmann
APA joins the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry to
alert members of Congress about false allegations in a bill barring the use of
federal funds for mandatory mental health screenings.
Federal funds cannot be used for universal, mandatory, or involuntary
mental health screening of children under 18 without their parents' consent if
a new bill in Congress is enacted.
Rep. Ron Paul (R-Tex.) re-introduced the Parental Consent Act (HR 181) in
the House of Representatives in January. He had introduced an identical bill
last year that dozens of his colleagues condemned and then defeated
(Psychiatric News, October 15, 2004).
"The bill protects the fundamental right of parents to direct and
control the upbringing and education of their children," Paul told his
colleagues, according to the January 4 Congressional Record.
Paul argued that the bill is necessary and presented several questionable
findings as factual statements to Congressamong them, that the
President's New Freedom Commission on Mental Health had proposed in its
landmark report that all children undergo mandatory, universal, non-consensual
mental health screening, according to the Congressional Record.
To set the record straight, APA and the American Academy of Child and
Adolescent Psychiatry (AACAP) sent a letter about the bill to members of the
House and Senate last month and called on them to oppose the legislation,
according to Nicholas Meyers, director of the APA Department of Government
Relations,
APA and AACAP stated that the findings included in the legislation make
false allegations about mental health screening, diagnosis, and treatment.
"The bill is based on a false premise," Meyers told
Psychiatric News. "The New Freedom Commission never proposed
universal and mandatory screening for children without parental
consent."
What the commission had stated on the subject in its final report was,
"Quality screening and early intervention should occur in readily
accessible, low-stigma settings, such as primary health care facilities and
schools, and in settings where a high level of risk for mental health problems
exists, such as juvenile justice and child welfare."
The commission also addressed parental consent by stating, "Whenever
`child' or `children' is used in the final report, it is understood that
parents or guardians should be included in the process of making choices and
decisions for minor children."
Paul's legislation also states that psychiatrists make diagnoses
subjectively. "Therefore," the bill reads, "it is all too
easy for a psychiatrist to label a person's disagreement with the
psychiatrist's political beliefs as a mental disorder."
In responding to this argument in the letter to Congress, APA and AACAP
pointed out that "a patient's political beliefs are not included as a
basis for psychiatric diagnostic criteria or in commonly accepted treatment
guidelines for mental disorders."
The two associations emphasized that the letter addresses only a few of the
false allegations in the legislation.
"Taken together, there is ample evidence to oppose the bill, which is
neither accurate nor needed," the two associations wrote. "On
behalf of our members and particularly our patients, including children and
adolescents that we treat, we respectfully urge you to reject this unnecessary
legislation."
The bill had 21 cosponsors in late February and was before subcommittees of
the House committees on Ways and Means, Energy and Commerce, and Education and
the Workforce.
An APA Advocacy Action Alert on the bill is posted online at
<http://capwiz.com/psych/mail/oneclickcompose/?alertid=6952921>.
The alert provides links to the text of HR 181, the APA/AACAP letter to
Congress, and Paul's introductory remarks to the House. The final report of
the New Freedom Commission on Mental Health is posted online at
<www.mentalhealthcommission.gov>.
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