Doctor Says Psychiatrist is Responsible for Child's Death
      [Note: Neither Dr. Biederman nor the child's psychiatrist have been charged with anything. The responsibility aspect refers to the practice of prescribing multiple strong psychiatric drugs—including some not approved for children—to a young child. Also, Dr. Biederman has received research funding from 15 drug companies and serves as a paid speaker or adviser to seven of them, including Eli Lilly.]
This doctor deserves an acknowledgment for his courage. Thank you, Dr. Diller!
"As a doctor, I did the nearly unthinkable at a recent conference on bipoloar disorder in children. I charged another doctor with moral responsibility in the death last December of Rebecca Riley, a 4-year-old girl from Hull. Naming names in medicine is just not done very often — and I knew the personal and professional risks I was taking. Yet I felt compelled to name Joseph Biederman, head of the Massachusetts General Hospital's Pediatric Psychopharmacology clinic, as morally culpable in providing the "science" that allowed Rebecca to die.
...
"Finally, it's sad but true — the field of child psychiatry is afraid of Biederman....academic researchers in child psychiatry risk losing their funding if they criticize this darling of the pharmaceutical industry, which provides most of the money these days for psychiatric research."
Dr. Lawrence Diller practices behavioral/developmental pediatrics in Walnut Creek, Calif., and is the author of "The Last Normal Child: Essays on the Intersection of Kids, Culture and Psychiatric Drugs."
    This doctor deserves an acknowledgment for his courage. Thank you, Dr. Diller!
"As a doctor, I did the nearly unthinkable at a recent conference on bipoloar disorder in children. I charged another doctor with moral responsibility in the death last December of Rebecca Riley, a 4-year-old girl from Hull. Naming names in medicine is just not done very often — and I knew the personal and professional risks I was taking. Yet I felt compelled to name Joseph Biederman, head of the Massachusetts General Hospital's Pediatric Psychopharmacology clinic, as morally culpable in providing the "science" that allowed Rebecca to die.
...
"Finally, it's sad but true — the field of child psychiatry is afraid of Biederman....academic researchers in child psychiatry risk losing their funding if they criticize this darling of the pharmaceutical industry, which provides most of the money these days for psychiatric research."
—by Dr. Lawrence Diller, "Misguided Standards of Care," June 19, 2007, The Boston Globe, boston.com
Dr. Lawrence Diller practices behavioral/developmental pediatrics in Walnut Creek, Calif., and is the author of "The Last Normal Child: Essays on the Intersection of Kids, Culture and Psychiatric Drugs."

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