Sainsbury
Backs Tom Cruise
Sun
Jul 17, 7:39 PM ET
UNITED
NEWSPAPERS
John Mappin
(PRWEB) July 15, 2005 — Following Tom Cruise's campaign over the past two
weeks, Sebastian Sainsbury of the prestigious Sainsbury family issues a strong
warning in Britain and an alert to all UK parents.
Speaking
to United National Newspapers today, Sebastian Sainsbury stated the following
this morning.
"As
a parent of two young children, I hold an inherently responsible position for
the welfare of my children. Following some of the recent media and speaking with
other parents, I feel the need to extend that responsibility to encompass a
wider sphere by informing parents of a situation that could potentially affect
all children."
"I've
come across recent FDA warnings that I have found quite chilling. Ritalin, an
amphetamine classified in the same category as cocaine, has been used for over
four decades by psychiatrists and doctors, over much controversy and now the FDA
comes up with black-box labels warning parents of side effects that include
suicidal tendencies, hallucinations, aggression, violent actions, heart failure.
The FDA has also recently issued black-box warnings on all anti-depressants both
for children as well as adults."
"We
have all witnessed children being somewhat argumentative, perhaps a little
boisterous and even disruptive at times. This would be described as poor
behaviour, just as it has been described for centuries. However, these
behavioural characteristics have been redefined by today's psychiatrist as a
mental disorder called Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder or ADHD."
"ADHD
was literally voted into existence eighteen years ago when the American
Psychiatric Association (APA) by a show of hands. A show of hands was enough to
see ADHD enshrined in the psychiatric textbook, the Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM). They also created 'Reading Disorder',
'Oppositional Defiance Disorder', 'Expressive Language Disorder', 'Mathematics
Disorder' and a litany of similarly ridiculous disorders by the same show of
hands. The treatment for these disorders are drugs."
"Psychiatrists
are telling parents, whose children may be displaying poor behaviour, that their
child has so-called ADHD due to a 'chemical imbalance' in the brain. A parent
would be prudent to ask the psychiatrist for evidence to support the claim of a
'chemical imbalance'. If they did ask however, they'd find that the evidence
would not be forthcoming – as it doesn't exist."
Psychiatrist
David Kaiser said, "Patients [have] been diagnosed with 'chemical
imbalances' despite the fact that no test exists to support such a claim, and
… there is no real conception of what a correct chemical balance would look
like." The words of the President of the APA should also be noted. Mr
Steven Sharfstein said, "We do not have a clean-cut lab test [to detect
chemical imbalances in the brain]." How then would the psychiatrist know
when the child has recovered?
"Poor
behaviour is empirical, but the purported cause for such behaviour is usurping
the inherent rights of both the child and the parent. Environmental factors of
the child need to be addressed rather than prescribing powerful psychiatric
drugs on the basis of a subjective decision that is entirely unsubstantiated.
Current figures from the Prescription Pricing Authority for England and Wales
reveal that in 1991, the number of prescription items for psychiatric drugs
commonly prescribed for children labelled with ADHD were 2000. In 2004, that
figure had risen astronomically to 359,100. Remember, this is for a so-called 'disorder'that
has never been scientifically validated."
"As
with all problems in life, we pursue the avenues of knowledge open to us to find
the solution. As far as poor childhood behaviour goes, parents want only the
best for their child, a corollary of being a responsible parent, and will look
high and low for those solutions. Consider this: a study carried out last year
by Professor John Warner, Professor of Child Health at the University of
Southampton, revealed the adverse reactions that food additives were having on
behaviour. The incredibly talented Jamie Oliver has demonstrated through his
series Jamie's School Dinners that changing a child's diet can bring about a
desired change in behaviour. And educational psychologist Dr. Madeleine Portwood
has demonstrated that essential fatty acids, a natural organic product, produced
improvements not only in childhood behaviour but in academic performance as
well."
"We
are in the 21st Century, full of technological advancements that defy science.
If however we consider the psychiatrist to be the custodian of poor behaviour,
we are bowing to a profession that masquerades as technically advanced, but
which in reality could be called nothing more than a pseudoscience at the behest
of the pharmaceutical industry."
"The
ramifications of being a poorly behaved child in this contemporary society are
too gruesome to comprehend."
That
Sainsbury family of which Sebastian Sainsbury is a member is one of Britain's
wealthiest and most respected families known for it patronage of the arts, and
its commercial and political influence.