Looking for a safe haven, resource center, and support network when faced with issues surrounding subjective psychiatric labels assigned, and drug “treatment” prescribed, to your child?
Feeding the symptoms and not the cause is most prevalent in how our medical industrial complex treats our children
There are at least 33% of our children on ADHD drugs by the time they are in the 2nd and 3rd grade…
Does that sound like a successful medical treatment?
Or more like a revenue stream for Big Pharma?
Since 2003, there has been an organization to turn to when you have questions about the treatment and medicines being given to your child.
About AbleChild
Parents for Label and Drug Free Education is a nationally recognized Non-Profit Organization (501c3) dedicated to parents, caregivers, and children’s rights alike. Incorporated in New York in November 2003, Ablechild is steadily moving toward ensuring that all caregivers are provided with a safe haven, resource center, and support network when faced with issues surrounding subjective psychiatric labels assigned and drug “treatment” prescribed to our nation’s vulnerable children.
AbleChild, a national parents’ rights organization, is dedicated to protecting full informed consent and the right to refuse psychiatric services.
Their Petition
Call for Federal Hearings
The FDA requires many commonly prescribed psychotropic drugs to carry Blackbox Warnings. These warnings include possible addiction, aggression, and suicidal and homicidal ideation.
Yet federal and state agencies have not incorporated Blackbox Warning drugs into the way they collect data from fatality review reports. They do not include the use of Black Box Warning drugs in their suicide and homicide surveys or presentations before legislatures while obtaining funding for mental health programs. In the absence of critical data, legislatures are recklessly funneling untold millions into increasing access to "mental healthcare," which will lead to more prescriptions of Black Box warning drugs and an increase in violent, tragic consequences.
The dangers of these drugs have been known for decades. Inaction has taken far too many lives. Congress must hold hearings now and take action to stop prescription-driven violence.
SEE Violence Report (prepared by the Citizens Commission on Human Rights, CCHR) and sign the petition below [ archive ].
Tell Congress to hold hearings on the link between psychotropic drugs, suicides, and mass shootings.
The people have the right to know the mental health treatments that were involved in all mass murders. We demand equal access to the lawmaking process.
We thank you for your support!
My own experience concerning unnecessary drugs for children - my former, an RN, had our son diagnosed by a doctor, and he determined our son had ADHD. I knew the diet of both my children was mostly takeout - she had a top-end stove that was hardly ever used. On the first month-long visitation with me after he started on the drugs for ADHD, I asked him to give me his drugs and told both of them we would be eating 3 proper meals a day for the entire visitation. NO processed foods, NO soda, NO fast food, and definitely NO take-out. Vegetables and meats were bought from local farmers and ranchers. My daughter mentioned she noticed a difference in her brother in THREE days... by the end of the first week, he was sleeping through the night, his hands ceased shaking, he stopped biting his nails, and he stopped his consistent knee bouncing when sitting down. We went for walks once, sometimes twice, a day - even played some sports during the week. At the end of the visitation, he got his meds back, and he buried them in his luggage. After they got home, I got a phone call from my former, lambasting me for what I did and how "dangerous" it was... She was never very good at seeing what she was looking at, which scared the heck out of me as she worked in the neonatal ICU... Meanwhile, my son would take his daily dosage - and spit it into the toilet... He learned to cook and bought his own groceries (he took up a part-time job after school), a pattern that continued until his next exam, when the doctor was apparently baffled by his progress. Imagine that...