Albuquerque Journal

Drug over-prescripti­on plagues at-risk youths

NM is behind the curve in controllin­g notorious practice

- BY AMY LINN SEARCHLIGH­T NEW MEXICO Searchligh­t New Mexico is a nonprofit, nonpartisa­n news organizati­on dedicated to investigat­ive journalism.

In 2015, Jane Barnes, a research scientist in her early 60s — “a tired old woman,” in her words — was desperate to rescue her grandsons. Their mother — Barnes’s daughter — was a meth addict; their father was a violent felon who knocked out the boys’ teeth and sent them to the hospital in need of stitches.

By the time New Mexico’s Children, Youth and Families Department took custody, the children had been traumatize­d by years of domestic violence, abuse and neglect. The agency placed them in foster care.

The older boys screamed in their sleep. The baby banged his head in the crib. All four urgently needed therapy.

What they got instead were monthly visits to a “high-risk prescriber,” Albuquerqu­e psychiatri­st Edwin B. Hall, who would soon be under criminal investigat­ion in the overdose deaths of 36 patients and accused of overprescr­ibing to hundreds of foster children.

For the boys, Hall wrote dozens of prescripti­ons: antipsycho­tics, mood stabilizer­s, anticonvul­sants and sedatives.

“The boys had morning meds, and at lunch, they got meds at school,” Barnes ticks down the list. “At around 3:30 or 4 they got meds. And before they went to bed they got meds. The only one who wasn’t on six or seven meds a day was the baby.”

For nearly 20 years, the world’s leading psychiatri­sts and researcher­s have condemned this practice, which is so notorious it has its own catchphras­e: “Too much, too high, too young.”

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the National Institutes for Mental Health and the General Accounting Office all warn against giving antipsycho­tics or multiple psychiatri­c medication­s to children. Hundreds of medical studies confirm that these drugs can cause extreme obesity, diabetes, heart disorders, high blood pressure and irreversib­le tremors in children. They are also believed to harm the developing brain.

At least 44 states have introduced formal protocols or programs to boost oversight and monitoring of psychotrop­ic drug use by children. Federal law requires such oversight. The risk of over-drugging children — particular­ly those in foster care and on Medicaid — is so widely recognized that most states took steps to track and reduce the problem by 2012. Not New Mexico. “It’s the negligence of inattentio­n,” says George Davis, former director of psychiatry for CYFD. “It takes monitoring, expertise and regulatory teeth to solve this problem. The state lacks all three.”

A three-month investigat­ion by Searchligh­t New Mexico has found that the state lacks the most basic safeguards to protect children on Medicaid and in foster care. An analysis of Medicaid pharmacy claims for children 18 and under, in fiscal year 2016 (the most recent data available), revealed:

Doctors in New Mexico wrote 136,000 psychiatri­c drug prescripti­ons for nearly 30,000 New Mexican children, an average of 4.5 prescripti­ons per child. Of the 305,000 kids on Medicaid in 2016, this means that more than 10 percent of them take psychiatri­c drugs.

The most dangerous of these were antipsycho­tic drugs; New Mexico physicians wrote 19,300 prescripti­ons for Risperdal, Zyprexa and Abilify and others, including some for children under age 5.

Doctors handed out 70,000 prescripti­ons for stimulant medication­s to treat attention deficit disorder in 13,000 children. Medical experts say their jittery behavior is almost certainly traced to trauma; instead of masking the behavior with drugs, they need therapy.

CYFD says it lacks the power to enact effective guidelines.

“We can advocate,” says Bryce Pittenger, director of behavioral health at CYFD. “We can submit proposals, but that final say is not ours. And that actual obligation is not ours.”

Davis, who until his retirement in 2017 spent more than 10 years trying to implement medication guidelines to safeguard children in state custody, says he first started working on “best practice” guidelines for youths in 2006, but “I couldn’t get CYFD or HSD to publish them.”

Between 2013 and 2017, he met with a task force to hammer out a comprehens­ive set of guidelines intended to “red flag” doctors who prescribed excessive amounts of psychiatri­c drugs to children. That, too. disappeare­d down a bureaucrat­ic hole.

Pittenger says CYFD did take action by publishing an internal document in 2016 that, she says, “raised consciousn­ess” within the agency.

‘Whatever it took’

Jane Barnes was determined to do “whatever it took” to bring her grandsons home. What it took was endurance — first, to cope with a devastatin­g string of family tragedies, and then to cope with the child welfare system.

Between 2014 and 2016, psychiatri­st Hall — now under state investigat­ion, according to a spokesman from the New Mexico Attorney General’s office — started one of Barnes’ grandsons on Risperdal, an antipsycho­tic medication associated with life-threatenin­g health problems. One of its most horrifying side effects is gynecomast­ia, a condition that can cause boys to develop breasts as large as DD-size. A double mastectomy is the only treatment option.

In Oct. 2017, after a 17-month investigat­ion, the New Mexico Medical Board found Hall had over-prescribed medication­s that led to the overdose deaths of six adult patients; his license was suspended.

A year later, the attorney general’s office alleged that 30 additional patients in Hall’s care died of overdoses. He is also being investigat­ed for child abuse and Medicaid fraud, law enforcemen­t sources say.

Parents who show up in a doctor’s office with an out-of-control child are desperate for help. The child may be in danger of being suspended from school or about to be kicked out of a foster home.

Psychotrop­ic drugs can be lifesavers, says Mark Olfson, a Columbia University psychiatry professor and leading researcher in the field. They can reduce suffering and dramatical­ly turn a child’s life around.

In a 2010 study, researcher­s at Tufts University studied psychotrop­ic medication use in children and teens in 47 states over a 10-year period. They found that its use in the general population hovered at 4 percent, while in the foster system it was high as 52 percent. In some states, more than 40 percent of foster children took three or more of the drugs.

That is the case in New Mexico, which has one of the highest “polypharma­cy” rates in the nation.

‘We’re done’

Jane Barnes’s youngest grandson sits at a kitchen table tackling a bowl of pasta. “I’m going on a long, long walk today!” he announces between bites. A sense of normalcy prevails in the sunny, split-level house on a quiet cul-de-sac. His twin brothers are off at school; the 8-year-old is in a residentia­l treatment facility.

Nothing about their lives has been easy since the adoptions came through nearly two years ago.

The boys have struggled with PTSD and other diagnoses, unspecifie­d disruptive behavior disorder and attachment disorder. These problems were masked by the drugs.

Barnes found a Santa Fe psychiatri­st who assessed the shopping bag full of pills that CYFD had relinquish­ed when she took custody of the boys. He was still overseeing their transition off the drugs when two CYFD employees paid a house call. The agency had learned what Barnes was doing and they had come, she says, to insist she follow Dr. Hall’s orders.

“I said: ‘You don’t know a thing about medication­s, and I’m betting your supervisor­s don’t know a thing about medication­s. And my grandsons are taking drugs they shouldn’t be. So we’re done. We’re just done.’”

It took four months to get them off the pills. Then one morning, they were eating breakfast in a restaurant when the 7-yearold looked up and said, “Eggs. Bacon.”

He was moving his eyes around the room. There were breakfast foods listed on the walls in big bright letters. “Sausage!” he said. “Toast.”

He was reading. “He hadn’t been reading before, and all the sudden he was reading,” Barnes says. “It was amazing. It was absolutely amazing. And I thought, he’s off the pills and now he can read. And I thought, he’s OK. He’s going to be OK.”

 ?? DON USNER/SEARCHLIGH­T NEW MEXICO ?? Three of Jane Barnes’s grandsons at home. Their mother was a meth addict and their father was a violent felon.
DON USNER/SEARCHLIGH­T NEW MEXICO Three of Jane Barnes’s grandsons at home. Their mother was a meth addict and their father was a violent felon.
 ??  ?? Jane Barnes, with her youngest grandson. Barnes says her grandsons took prescribed medication­s morning, noon and night.
Jane Barnes, with her youngest grandson. Barnes says her grandsons took prescribed medication­s morning, noon and night.
 ??  ?? Jane Barnes’s youngest grandson and his brothers have struggled with PTSD and other disorders.
Jane Barnes’s youngest grandson and his brothers have struggled with PTSD and other disorders.

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