Spending Soars on Drugs to Control Children
NewsMax.com Wires
Monday, May 17, 2004
TRENTON, N.J. As more children pop pills for attention
deficit and other behavior disorders, new figures show spending on
those drugs has for the first time edged out the cost of
antibiotics and asthma medications for kids.
A 49 percent rise in the use of attention deficit/hyperactivity
disorder drugs by children under 5 in the last three years
contributed to a 23 percent increase in usage for all children,
according to an annual analysis of drug use trends by Medco Health
Solutions Inc.
"Behavioral medicines have eclipsed the other categories this
year," said Dr. Robert Epstein, Medco's chief medical officer.
"It certainly reflects the concern of parents that their children
do as well as they can."
Antibiotics still top the list of the most commonly used
children's drugs, but parents are paying more for behavioral drugs,
such as stimulants or antidepressants, according to the analysis of
drug use among 300,000 children under 19.
Medco, the nation's largest prescription benefit manager, was to
release the data culled from its customers' usage on Monday.
The most startling change was a 369 percent increase in spending
on attention deficit drugs for children under 5. That's in part
because of the popularity of newer, long-acting medicines under
patent, compared with twice-a-day Ritalin and generic versions
available for years.
But the use of other behavioral drugs also jumped in the last
three years. Use of antidepressant rose 21 percent, and drugs for
autism and other conduct disorders jumped 71 percent, compared to a
4.3 percent rise in antibiotics.
Epstein said 17 percent of total spending on drugs last year for children under 19 was for behavioral medicines, compared
with 16 percent each for antibiotics and asthma drugs, 11 percent
for skin conditions and 6 percent for allergy medicines.
Use of such behavior medicines has been controversial, with some
experts questioning whether parents and school officials are too
eager to medicate disruptive children.
Some experts say no.
"It's not necessarily a bad thing that these medicines are
being used more," said Dr. James McGough, associate professor of
clinical psychiatry at the UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute.
McGough said children on attention-deficit drugs tended to avoid
substance abuse and other problems and do better in school.
However, McGough said increasing adolescent use of
antidepressants was a concern, because there's little proof they
work in young people and evidence they might increase suicidal
tendencies.
Overall, 5.3 percent of children took some type of behavioral
medicine in 2003, including 3.4 percent on attention deficit
medicines and 2.3 percent on antidepressants, according to the
study. Some children are on both types of drugs. That compares with
44 percent who used antibiotics at some point, 13 percent on asthma
medicines and 11 percent who used allergy drugs.
Use of asthma medicines increased 15 percent from 2000 to 2003,
and use of medicines for gastrointestinal problems jumped 28
percent, mainly due to new drugs for the stomach gas that gives
babies colic.
Dr. Richard L. Gorman, director of the American Academy of
Pediatrics' drugs committee, said that though there might be "initial
overprescribing" of attention deficit disorders, the children are
typically taken off the drugs if they don't work.
"Either it's better and everyone's relieved, or nothing
happens, the kid's still wild, and then the parents say to the
school, `We tried this stuff, and it didn't work,"' he said.
New attention-deficit drugs such as Strattera, Adderall and
Concerta require only one morning dose, which helps keep children
on an even keel all day and eliminates having to line up to get an
afternoon dose from busy school nurses or day-care officials.
The side effects are mainly reduced appetite and growth.
Estimates of how many American children have attention deficit
problems vary, from 3 percent to 10 percent. According to the
National Center for Health Statistics, the number of children aged
3 to 17 with the disorder rose from 3.3 million in 1997 to 4.4
million in 2002.
Franklin Lakes, N.J.-based Medco said average monthly spending
per member was still lowest for those 19 and under, $12.31 a month,
compared with $125.58 for those 65 and older.
However, the average cost of a daily dose for one medicine was
much higher for children than for senior citizens, $2.12 a day
versus $1.29 a day, because many more generic drugs are
available for conditions of the elderly.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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