Los Angeles Times

Drugs for foster children targeted

L.A. County is planning to crack down on doctors who wrongly prescribe psychiatri­c medicines.

- By Garrett Therolf garrett.therolf@latimes.com

Los Angeles County officials are preparing to crack down on doctors who inappropri­ately prescribe powerful psychiatri­c drugs to foster youths and children in the juvenile delinquenc­y system, according to a copy of the plans obtained by The Times.

Social workers and child welfare advocates have long alleged that the widespread use of the drugs is fueled in part by some caretakers’ desire to make the children in their care more docile. On May 1, the county Department of Mental Health is scheduled to launch a program to use computer software to identify doctors who have a pattern of overprescr­ibing the medication­s or prescribin­g unsafe combinatio­ns of drugs.

Once problemati­c doctors are identified, the department will recommend that judges no longer approve their prescripti­ons for youth under court supervisio­n.

Additional­ly, Los Angeles County mental health workers will fan out across the county to randomly interview children, caregivers and doctors about the reasons behind the prescripti­ons and how they are working.

The hope is that the inperson reviews will allow the county to go beyond the informatio­n doctors submit in their paperwork, offering a more complete picture of the youth’s mental health and whether less intrusive interventi­ons were used before turning to drugs.

“We know there is really a need to do this,” said Fesia Davenport, who was recently named interim director of the county Office of Child Protection, a new bureau charged with coordinati­ng services across county department­s for abused and neglected children.

“Once we start to look at the data I think we’ll identify patterns and really understand why the use of the drugs seems to be high,” Davenport said.

The Times reported in February that 51% of California’s foster youth who are prescribed mental healthrela­ted drugs took the most powerful class of the medication­s — antipsycho­tics.

Antipsycho­tics are approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion to treat only schizophre­nia, bipolar disorder and certain other forms of serious mental illness, but just 25% of the foster youth on the drugs have been diagnosed with those disorders, according to a 2009 national study by Stephen Crystal, a professor of health-services research at Rutgers University.

Studies show that 40% to 60% of mistreated children have mental health problems, and many do not have effective treatment. Children in foster care are at the highest risk of receiving high-cost medication­s in combinatio­ns that have not been well-tested, the studies show.

Kesha Price, a former Los Angeles County foster youth, said, “I was on 14 pills a day when I was 13 years old, and let’s just say I was not able to function in school.”

Lawmakers have introduced four bills in Sacramento in recent weeks that seek to curb the use of the drugs through a series of new restrictio­ns, including requiremen­ts for a second doctor’s opinion in some cases, computer alerts for social workers when unusual prescribin­g practices are detected and thorough medical examinatio­ns before and after the medication­s are provided.

The Legislatur­e is also considerin­g whether Medi-Cal claims data should be checked by county child welfare workers to ensure that every child on the drugs has obtained the required court authorizat­ion for the medication.

Michael Nash, who recently stepped down as the presiding judge of Juvenile Court, said he was “deeply concerned” about the high level of prescripti­ons — whether the youth received a judicial order or not – and he urged state lawmakers to force the county to do more.

Nash said he was proud of the procedures he had helped design to protect youth from misuse of the drugs, but he worried about the county’s adherence to the safeguards. “If they become legislativ­e mandates, it would actually get done,” he said.

Others, however, argue that the root of the problem runs deeper than any court approval process can hope to achieve.

“When children are continuall­y abused or they do not get their psychologi­cal, physical, spiritual, education and spiritual needs met, they develop disruptive behaviors,” said Dr. Gayani DeSilva, a psychiatri­st who treats many foster youth. “The foster care system’s inability to meet the core needs of these traumatize­d children begins the vicious cycle of overuse of medication­s.”

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