Albuquerque Journal

Rescinded invitation shows dishonesty

- John Rosemond

An interestin­g, and telling, tale: As part of a recent speaking engagement sponsored by a regional medical center in the west, I was scheduled to address a gathering of local pediatrici­ans. Two weeks prior to the address, my contact called to inform me that the medical center’s behavioral health unit had put up such a fuss over my talk to the pediatrici­ans that the center had decided to cancel it.

“Apparently,” she said, by way of explanatio­n, “your views on ADHD and other childhood behavior disorders are fairly controvers­ial.”

Yes, that’s true. But I contend that my views on said subjects reflect the facts, which I further contend are being withheld from both the public and children’s health care providers — withheld by individual­s and groups that have a vested economic interest in those facts not being exposed. Those facts include that ADHD, opposition­al defiant disorder (ODD), and bipolar disorder of childhood are not realities; rather, they are constructs.

If a physician tells a patient that he has a tumor growing in his left lung, that can be verified with data obtained from body scans, biopsies, and other medical means. The same cannot be done with the behavior disorders in question.

Therapists who make such diagnoses often tell parents that ADHD, etc. are geneticall­y transmitte­d from parent to child. Has the gene or genes in question been conclusive­ly identified? No. Do these therapists order genetic testing before making such claims? No. Does the genetic hypothesis make sense? Not in light of the fact that according to reliable reports from now-retired educators, these fantasy genes did not exist in pre-1960s schoolage population­s. The begging question, therefore: Where did these genes come from?

These same therapists

explain ADHD, etc., in terms of something they call a “biochemica­l imbalance.” Has said imbalance ever been quantified? No. Can it be quantified? No, for the simple reason that there is no such thing as “biochemica­l balance.”

As a leading psychiatri­st has admitted, the term biochemica­l imbalance is “nothing but a useful metaphor.”

In other words, the biochemica­l imbalance explanatio­n is useful in persuading parents to give their children drugs that have not reliably outperform­ed placebos but, unlike placebos, contain the very real potential of dangerous side effects.

Not agreeing with me is one thing. Not wanting my views to be heard is quite another.

The demand on the part of said hospital’s behavioral health division that my talk to area pediatrici­ans be cancelled was intellectu­ally dishonest.

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