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Welcome into the Dean's List,
a brief analysis of news and culture from a biblical worldview. This is the broadcast in which
we seek to faithfully proclaim that the gospel indeed will overcome. It's Tuesday, May 20th, 2014.
I'm Paul Dean. An incredible story out of the
New York Times. More than 10,000, let me repeat
that, 10,000 American toddlers two or three years old are being
medicated for ADHD obviously outside established pediatric
guidelines according to data presented on Friday by an official
at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Now obviously
part of the problem is the fact that we live in a society that
has embraced the medical model of psychology. You've got some
kind of problem, you've got some kind of an issue, doesn't really
matter what it is. You go to the doctor and you
get a prescription. In fact, you can go to the doctor and
you're not even depressed and the doctor can tell you that
you're depressed and will try to put you on, well, psychotropic
medication. Typically speaking, there are
essentially two kinds of problems. There are physiological problems,
something we can test. Heart catheterization can determine
whether or not you have heart disease, for example. there are
physiological problems and then there are spiritual problems
and those spiritual problems of course are issues of the heart
and are dealt with biblically, dealt with by the Holy Spirit,
by the Word of God, by the Gospel. Now if you have a physiological
problem obviously that can affect your thinking but we're talking
about issues of the brain. If you have a brain injury, if
you have retardation, if you have Alzheimer's, these are brain
issues. But what we're doing here with
ADHD We're essentially talking about behavioral problems. We're
talking about concentration problems. We're talking about problems
of personality, spiritual problems. And we're treating them as if
they are brain problems. And the truth of the matter is,
medical professionals and those who prescribe the ADHD medication
that we're talking about really have no idea what they're doing.
Listen to this. The report which found that toddlers
covered by Medicaid are particularly prone to be put on medications
such as Ritalin and Adderall, is among the first efforts to
gauge the diagnosis of ADHD in children below age four. Doctors
at the Georgia Mental Health Forum at the Carter Center in
Atlanta, where the data was presented, as well as several outside experts,
strongly criticized the use of medication in so many children
that young. The American Academy of Pediatrics
standard practice guidelines for ADHD did not even address
the diagnosis in children three and younger, let alone the use
of such stimulant medications because their safety and effectiveness
have barely been explored in that age group. Now again, listen
to this. Anita Zervignon-Haix, a children's
mental health consultant to the Carter Center said this, it's
absolutely shocking and it shouldn't be happening. People are just
feeling around in the dark. We obviously don't have our act
together for little children. Dr. Lawrence H. Diller, a behavioral
pediatrician in Walnut Creek, California, said in a telephone
interview, people prescribing to two-year-olds are just winging
it. It is outside the standard of
care, and they should be subject to malpractice if something goes
wrong with a kid. Now these are insiders. Now let
me remind you of what the insiders, the medical professionals, are
saying. They're saying that we're just feeling around in the dark.
They're saying we're just winging it. They're saying if something
goes wrong, we're talking about malpractice. Now Matt Walsh over
at the Matt Walsh blog speaks with an appropriate amount of
indignation to this issue. He says this, Giving your two-year-old
a Schedule II narcotic in order to control their behavior is
dangerous, immoral, and violent. The doctors who prescribe this
stuff to babies should lose their licenses and be tossed in a cage
alongside the other crack dealers. Crack dealers who, for the most
part, at least have the decency to wait until a kid is out of
diapers before turning him into a lifelong customer. Pause for
a moment, friends, and contemplate this. It's illegal to give a
20-year-old a beer, but legal to give a two-year-old some speed.
Just let that thought marinate. Now, Walsh goes on. He did some
research of his own. He went out to WebMD. Obviously, this is where you
can get medical advice on the web. We've used it ourselves
many, many times. And WebMD has a section dedicated
to ADHD in toddlers. And the section that talks about
early symptoms, early symptoms of ADHD in toddlers, tells us
this, toddlers and preschoolers with ADHD may be unable to sit
still, follow even simple directions or control impulses. They may
become angry for no reason and hit their peers or siblings.
They tend to be impatient, breaking in line on the playground or
interrupting others when they are talking or playing. They
may move constantly, jump from one activity to another and have
a high level of energy and a low sense of danger and perhaps a
high threshold for pain. When shopping, they may refuse
to sit in the shopping cart or stroller. They may take items
from the shelves and open them or throw tantrums if you don't
buy something they want. Now again, that from WebMD and
these are the symptoms, early warning signs of ADHD in toddlers. But let's be honest. Do we not
all have children who act in these ways? Is this not a description
of all toddlers, of all two-year-olds and three-year-olds and the typical
behavior that we see in that particular age group? In his
typical sarcasm, Walsh comments further. He says this, God help
me. My kids are only one, but they're
already beginning to exhibit many of these symptoms. Last
week, my daughter fussed when we put her in the cart at BJ's.
This morning, my son crawled all over the living room and
refused to sit still. I tried to give him some worksheets to
complete before breakfast, but he just tried to eat them. My
wife and I immediately alerted our doctors, but since our doctors
are not insane, they informed us that one-year-olds will often,
and surprisingly, behave like one-year-olds. Again, this brings
us back to one of the major issues that is before us today. It is the issue of a medicated
culture. We're looking for a quick fix
for everything that ails us in this, well, this culture of ease
and this culture of pleasure in which we find ourselves. We're
looking for instant gratification. We're looking for instant gratification
even in the area of dealing with our children. We are averse to
work and we are averse to doing the hard work of, well, training
children to be who and what they should be. And part of this issue
is that We are, as a culture, not treating kids as individuals
created in the image of God. We're treating children in a
cookie-cutter fashion. We want them all to be just like
every other child. But again, that's not reality.
That's not how people are wired. That's not how God has made us.
And again, when we speak of children reflecting the image of God,
we're talking about something wonderful. Yes, there are problems,
there are issues in a fallen world. But at the same time,
we're talking about each person, each child, being created uniquely,
fearfully and wonderfully made. Each child has a unique mix of
personality and talents and gifts and desires and impulses and
anticipations. And certainly, many of those
impulses are sinful, many of those impulses are wrong, and
many of those impulses are problematic. And so we have to deal with those
lovingly, but again, we don't want to, well, we don't want
to simply medicate children and ruin that unique personality
slash gift slash talent mix that God has given each individual.
And what we're talking about here, of course, are so-called
experts who are really not experts at all in this particular area. Obviously, we appreciate the
medical profession. We appreciate those physicians
who have studied long and hard and worked long and hard and
have a measure of expertise in their particular areas. But I
would say that they're no different from the rest of us who have,
well, a certain amount of expertise in the things that we've been
given to do. They just simply happen to be experts in their
particular areas. But at the same time, in this
area, when we're dealing with the mind, when we're dealing
with the personality, Well, no one's an expert there and again
it brings me back to saying that we have fallen into a grievous
error when we think that everything in a fallen world has a fix and
when we think that everything has a quick fix. Again, part
of the reality here is that parents are not taking responsibility
for training their children. One of the Individuals on the
panel at this particular conference, Dr. Visser, said that effective
non-pharmacological treatments, such as teaching parents and
daycare workers to provide more structured environments for children,
were often ignored. Listen to this. Families of toddlers
with behavioral problems are coming to the doctor's office
for help, and the help they're getting too often is a prescription
for a class 2 controlled substance. which has not been established
as safe for that young of a child. It puts these children and their
developing minds at risk and their health is at risk. Well,
Dr. Visser is right, but don't overlook
what she said. Families, listen to this, families
of toddlers with behavioral problems are coming to the doctor's office
for help and the help they're getting too often is a prescription
for a class 2 controlled substance. Again, don't miss what she said
and the larger issue. They come for help, but the help
that they need is help in dealing with their children. They don't
need to medicate their children. They need to train their children.
And this is an issue for the church. Christians so often buy
into this kind of thinking, the medical model psychology. the
quick fix model of the culture in which we find ourselves. And
Christians, quite frankly, these days, they're just as busy as
non-Christians. And in many, many cases, not
only are they just as busy, just as experience and entertainment
oriented, they're just as self-centered at times. And because of these
issues, because of these things, just as neglectful of their children. And that's what we're talking
about. We're talking about giving a pill to our children so they
will behave the way that we want them to behave so that we really
don't have to put a whole lot of effort into training them
or take a whole lot of time in training them. Again, I'm painting
with a broad brush, but these are some of the symptoms, these
are some of the problems, these are some of the issues that a
lot of folk are actually deeming with. We're talking about, well,
not being inconvenienced. We're talking about giving our
children some medication, again, so they don't get in the way
of what it is that we're trying to do. And so often we don't
really see this. I'm reminded of another story
that's in the news these days. New York Mayor Bill de Blasio's
wife, Shirlane McCray, said in an interview with New York Magazine
that she had mixed feelings about balancing career and motherhood.
She said this, I was 40 years old, I had a life, The truth
is, I could not spend every day with my daughter. I didn't want
to do that. I looked for all kinds of reasons
not to do it. It took a long time for me to
get into, I'm taking care of kids and what that means. She admitted to feeling guilty
about her experience with her daughter. She basically says,
I'm a bad mom. Well, I appreciate her honesty. And I appreciate the fact that
she feels guilty. But here's the reality. It's not to attack
her in any way, shape, or form. It's to say there is an answer
for guilt. And that answer, of course, is
the Lord Jesus Christ. It is repentance. It is changing. It is moving in a different direction.
And it is by grace. And it is through faith in the
Lord Jesus Christ. But how many Christian parents
put career ahead of their children? How many Christian parents put
free time ahead of their children? How many Christian parents put
the things that they want to pursue ahead of their children? They think they're doing what
is required of them by taking them to Sunday school, perhaps,
by dropping them off at school, perhaps, but spending very little
time actually training their children. Again, if there is
this sense of guilt, there is hope, there is forgiveness, there
is grace in the Lord Jesus Christ. But what if you're in the middle
of it? And what if you just realized? The Bible is very clear. Deuteronomy
6 tells us, well, something very simple. It says you need to train
your children. And you do this when you get up. You do it when
you walk in the way. You do it when you're sitting
at the table. You do it when you go to bed. In short, children
are part of your lives and you're training them all of the time.
You're dialoguing with them about everything under the sun from
a Christian worldview. That's what it means to train
your children. Obviously, there are details, but we're talking
about saturation. We're talking about engaging
them. We're talking about spending
time with them. And the reality, of course, is
that life is tough. And we have to sacrifice. We
have to sacrifice our time. We have to sacrifice, perhaps,
certain goals that we had. We have to sacrifice for our
children and for the glory of God. They have to sacrifice for
the advance of the kingdom. And if a child has behavior problems,
well, this is going to take a lot of patience. It's going to take
a lot of prayer. It's going to take a lot of training. It's
going to take a lot of love. And medication, quite frankly,
in these particular issues, we're talking especially about toddlers,
two- and three-year-olds, medication is a cop-out. It says, I don't
care. It says, I just want peace. When
we're talking about medicating toddlers for ADHD, There's a
very real sense in which we're talking about abuse. But again,
the answer is the gospel, the gospel of the grace of the Lord
Jesus Christ. And if you have children who
are not submitting to the Lord Jesus Christ and for years and
years have not and will not submit to the Lord Jesus Christ, the
answer is still the gospel for them and for you. If there is
need of repentance, God is gracious to forgive. But if you've done
everything you know how to do, If you poured yourself into your
children, if you trained your children, again, there is grace,
there is peace, there is the comfort of God, there is hope,
hope for the future, and there is rest in the Lord, even if
there is no possible future, there is rest in the Lord, for
He does that which is right. Sometimes when we look at long-term
issues, sometimes we look at the future, well, we have an
option. we have a choice either we can
complain because there is no God but it really amounts to
nothing it's a false complaint as it were or we can trust that
there is a God and in that case we don't complain because we
know that which he does is right we know he's good we know he's
full of grace and mercy and so what we do is We rest. Oh, there are times when we cry
out. There are times when our hearts are broken. There are
times when we lament. But in the end, and through it
all, we trust in His sovereign grace. And that gives us hope. That gives us peace. And that
gives us the focus that we need. So the answer, of course, as
always, is the Gospel. You've been listening to The
Dean's List, a brief analysis of views and culture of a biblical
worldview. Sign up to receive The Dean's
List via email along with other items of interest at TheDean'sListCommentary
at gmail.com or simply go to our website www.TrueWorldView.net
where you'll find other helpful resources. I'm Paul Dean. Join me next time for The Dean's
List.
ADHD Meds for Toddlers
Series Dean's List News Commentary
Medicating Toddlers for ADHD
| Sermon ID | 520141544592 |
| Duration | 18:53 |
| Date | |
| Category | Current Events |
| Language | English |
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