Congress
Funds Psychological Tests for Kids
Dave Eberhart, NewsMax.com
Tuesday, Nov. 23, 2004
One of the nation's leading medical groups, the Association of American
Physicians & Surgeons (AAPS), decried a move by the U.S. Senate to
join with the House in funding a federal program AAPS says will lead to
mandatory psychological testing of every child in America – without the
consent of parents.
When the Senate considered an omnibus appropriations bill last week
that included funding for grants to implement universal mental health
screening for almost 60 million children, pregnant women and adults
through schools and pre-schools, it approved $20 million of the $44
million sought, Kathryn Serkes, public affairs counsel for AAPS, told
NewsMax.
This $20 million matches a like amount already approved by the House,
Serkes advised.
While the funding cut of some $24 million was a little good news,
suggested Serkes, whose organization has zealously opposed the the
measure, she said the organization was most worried about the failure of
Congress to include “parental consent” language sought by the AAPS.
Last September, AAPS lifetime member Rep. Ron Paul, M.D., R-Texas,
tried to stop the plan in its tracks by offering an amendment to the
Labor, HHS, and Education Appropriations Act for FY 2005. The amendment
received 95 “yes” votes, but it failed to pass.
According to Serkes, Paul is now mulling offering stand-alone
legislation in the next session to once again try and get a provision for
parental consent.
The federal bill on its face does not require mandatory mental
health testing to be imposed upon states or local schools, explained
Serkes.
However, the HHS appropriations bill contains block grant money that
will likely be used – as is often the case with block funding – by the
various states to implement mandatory psychological testing programs for
all students in the school system.
The spending bill has its roots in the recommendations of the New
Freedom Commission on Mental Health, created by President Bush in 2002 to
propose ways of eliminating waste and improve efficiency and effectiveness
of the mental health care delivery system.
Although the report does not specifically recommend screening all
students, it does suggest that “schools are in a key position to
identify the mental health problems early and to provide a link to
appropriate services.”
The bottom line, explained Serkes, is that a state receiving money
under this appropriation will likely make its mental testing of kids
mandatory – and not be out of synch with the federal enactment.
The other telling point, said Serkes, is that although the relatively
minimal funding at this point is certainly not enough to fund mandatory
mental testing for kids countrywide, it’s an ominous start:
“Once it’s established and has funding, a program exhibits the
nettlesome property of being self-sustaining – it gets a life of its
own. More funding follows.”
Officials of the AAPS decry in the measure what they see as “a
dangerous scheme that will heap even more coercive pressure on parents to
medicate children with potentially dangerous side effects.”
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