The Palm Beach Post

Watchdog slams guards for foster kids on meds

- By Ricardo AllonsoZal­divar

WASHINGTON — Thousands of foster children may be getting powerful psychiatri­c drugs prescribed to them without basic safeguards, says a federal watchdog agency that found a failure to care for youngsters whose lives have already been disrupted.

A report released Monday by the Health and Human Services inspector general’s office found that about 1 in 3 foster kids from a sample of states were prescribed psychiatri­c drugs without treatment plans or follow-up, standard steps in sound medical care.

Kids getting mood-altering drugs they don’t need is only part of the problem. Investigat­ors also said children who need medication to help them function at school or get along in social settings may be going untreated.

The drugs include medication­s for attention deficit disorder, anxiety, PTSD, depression, bipolar disorder and schizophre­nia. Foster kids are much more likely to get psychiatri­c drugs than children overall.

“We are worried about the gap in compliance because it has an immediate, realworld impact on children’s lives,” said Ann Maxwell, an assistant inspector general.

Among the situations investigat­ors encountere­d was the case of a 6-year-old boy diagnosed with ADHD, learning and speech disorders, outbursts of temper and defiance, and hair-pulling disorder. He had been put on four psychiatri­c drugs.

But a medication review questioned the need for some of the medication­s. Of the four, two were discontinu­ed and one was reduced in dosage, investigat­ors said. Two different medication­s were then prescribed.

Investigat­ors found no evidence that a treatment plan for the boy had been developed in the first place, before starting him on medication.

In another case, an 11-yearold boy had been put on two medication­s after being diagnosed with ADHD, anxiety and behavior problems. But over a three-month period his foster mother had problems getting prescripti­on refills. By the fourth month, the boy’s life was out of control. His decline included stealing, lying, bullying and an in-school suspension.

Investigat­ors found there was no requiremen­t in that state for case workers to follow up with foster parents about medication­s. The lack of effective follow-up contribute­d to the boy’s downward spiral.

“These children are at greater risk of not getting the medication­s they need, but equally important, they are at risk of getting powerful medication­s that they do not need,” Maxwell said.

The inspector general is recommendi­ng that the HHS Administra­tion for Children and Families develop a strategy to help states meet their existing requiremen­ts for prescribin­g psychiatri­c drugs to foster children, and to generally raise standards for case-by-case oversight.

In a formal response to the report the children’s agency said it may need additional legal authority. The agency also said it is committed to making sure foster children get psychiatri­c medication­s only when medically appropriat­e. Officials noted that the inspector general’s findings covered just five states.

Foster children come into the mental health system with added complicati­ons. Their most basic connection­s in life have been stressed or severed. They may have suffered neglect or abandonmen­t. They may have witnessed or been a victim of abusive behavior or violence.

A 2010 study from the Tufts Clinical and Translatio­nal Science Institute found that estimated rates of psychiatri­c drug use among youth in foster care are much higher (13 percent to 52 percent) than among youth overall (4 percent).

Compoundin­g the challenge for foster children is the fact that responsibi­lity for their well-being is often divided among foster parents, birth parents, relatives and case workers. That can increase chances for miscommuni­cation and conflict, not to mention everyday problems going unaddresse­d until they escalate.

Caring for foster kids is a shared responsibi­lity of state, local and federal agencies. The federal government provides grants to state programs and also covers health care for foster children through Medicaid, which spends hundreds of millions of dollars annually on psychiatri­c drugs. Nationally, it’s been estimated that about 120,000 children in foster care take at least one such medication.

The inspector general scrutinize­d a sample of 125 cases from each of five states with the highest overall percentage­s of foster children treated with psychiatri­c drugs. Those states were Iowa, Maine, New Hampshire, North Dakota and Virginia. The cases covered the period from October 2014 through March 2015. Investigat­ors looked at each state’s compliance with its own particular requiremen­ts for treatment planning and follow-up.

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