DEA Warns of Ritalin® Abuse;
Drug Manufacturer's Contributions to Advocacy
Group Investigated
PRESCRIPTION DRUGS
March 1996
The Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA) is warning that teenagers are
abusing Ritalin®, a drug
used to treat Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) in
children (Laura Sessions
Stepp, "A Wonder Drug's Worst Side Effect,"
Washington Post, February
5,1996, p. A1; Laura Sessions Stepp, "Ritalin: 'In
the Wrong Hands, A
Dangerous Medication,'" Washington Post, February 5, 1996,
p.
C5).
Washington Post reports say students obtain pills for $1 to $5 per
pill from
other teens who have prescriptions for the drug. They then ingest
the pills
or crush them into a powder that they snort. Called "Vitamin R,"
"R-ball," or
"the smart drug," use of the drug by children and teenagers
without ADD
causes short, intense periods of high energy. In large doses,
Ritalin® can
cause seizures, psychosis, or stroke. The DEA attributed
several deaths to
abuse of the drug.
"We have always had some
problems with [methylphenidate] abuse and traffic.
But it has never been
pervasive because there never was much available. ...
That situation [has
begun] to change radically," said Gene Haislip, head of
the Drug Enforcement
Administration's drug diversion unit.
Ritalin®, the brand name of the
drug methylphenidate, is prescribed to about
2.4 million children diagnosed
with attention deficit disorders to help them
concentrate. The drug is
manufactured by the Ciba-Geigy Corporation.
According to the University
of Michigan Monitoring the Future survey,
non-prescription use of
methylphenidate doubled among high school seniors
between 1993 and 1994. The
DEA said there were 1,171 emergency room
admissions attributed to use of
methylphenidate in 1994, a slight increase
from 1993.
Todd Forte, a
spokesperson for Ciba-Geigy, said news accounts have overstated
the problem.
"The reports ... appearing in the media [are] isolated events.
The abuse
speaks more to society's problems than to the medication."
News about
abuse of Ritalin® comes at a time when the relationship between
Ciba-Geigy
and an advocacy group for people with ADD is under investigation
(Karen
Thomas, "Ritalin® Maker's Ties to Advocates Probed," USA Today,
November 16,
1995, p. 14D).
The United Nations and DEA say Ciba-Geigy has contributed
almost $1 million
to Children and Adults with Attention Deficit Disorder
(CHADD) between 1991
and 1994, possibly compromising CHADD's ability to help
those with ADD. In a
document resulting from the year-long probe into
CHADD's finances, DEA warned
that the contributions are "not well-known by
the public, including CHADD
members that have relied upon CHADD for
guidance."
"A lot of people don't know Ritalin® is like cocaine," DEA
diversion control
head Gene Haislip said. "That doesn't mean don't use it.
... It can be very
dangerous and must be treated with respect. Obviously, it
was not under
surveillance." He called the relationship between Ciba-Geigy
and CHADD an
"unhealthy co-mingling of medical and commercial
interests."
Both Ciba-Geigy and CHADD argue there is nothing wrong or
unusual about the
contributions. "We see it as an ethical responsibility to
give back to the
community," said Todd Forte, a spokesperson for
Ciba-Geigy.
CHADD says it does not promote use of Ritalin®, but does
mention it in the
context of treatment options for those with ADD. "In our
literature, you will
not find that CHADD markets methylphenidate or Ritalin®
other than in the
context of overall treatment programs for children with
ADD," said Harvey
Parker, one of the founders of the
organization.
CHADD has petitioned DEA to reschedule Ritalin® from
schedule II to schedule
III in order to make it less expensive and more
available. Parker said that
when that petition was filed, CHADD had not been
aware of abuse of Ritalin®.
Recently, CHADD established a project to examine
the problem of abuse by
children and adults. DEA sent their report about
Ciba-Geigy's contributions
to CHADD to the Department of Health and Human
Services and is waiting for a
response before reclassification decisions are
made.
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