And warning signs that you should be concerned about the care your child is getting
Clinical Expert: Ron J. Steingard, MD
en EspañolThere are a few reasons a doctor would put your child on more than one medication. The child might have several mental health problems that can’t be treated with the same medication. They might have one problem, but one medication isn’t helping enough by itself. Or your child might be having bad side effects. In that case, a doctor might lower the dose of that medicine and add a second one to help. Or they might use a second medicine to treat the side effect.
There isn’t much research on combining medications in kids. If your doctor recommends this, it’s important that they have training and experience prescribing for children. Combining medications can cause worse side effects than one on its own. Before adding a second medication, you and your doctor should talk through all other treatment options.
Make sure only one person is prescribing for your child. If there need to be two doctors, one of them should take the lead and they should work together. If a doctor wants to add a new medication, they should explain why. Here are some things to ask the doctor: What do they expect it to do? What side effects should you watch for? How will you know if your kid is having a bad reaction?
If a medicine doesn’t work, that can be a sign that your child might have a different issue than their doctor first thought. A doctor should not start or change more than one medication at the same time. If you’re worried about your doctor prescribing too many meds, ask for a second opinion.
It’s important to only start or change medications when other things in your child’s life are stable — not during a school vacation or a big move. Keep everyone who takes care of your child in the loop, like teachers and babysitters. If your child has a reaction when you’re not there, you want to hear about it.
Making decisions about medication for a child with emotional or behavioral problems can be daunting and fraught with worry, especially when more than one medication is involved. Studies show that the number of children taking several psychoactive medications is soaring. Here are some guidelines to help you understand why your doctor might recommend multiple medications for your child, and whether you should have concerns about this treatment.
There are several reasons why a psychiatrist or pediatrician might prescribe more than one medication for a child’s emotional or behavioral issues
There is very little scientific evidence about the safety and effectiveness of multiple medications in children. Clinical evidence suggests that medication “cocktails” can be safe and effective when prescribed by a doctor who is very well informed about the medications and has extensive experience prescribing them and monitoring the responses of children to them. That’s because children, whose nervous systems are still maturing, don’t always respond to medication the same way adults do.
But adding medications shouldn’t be done in lieu of safer behavioral treatments that have been shown to be effective for kids with many issues, including ADHD, anxiety and depression. The combination of a single medication and behavioral treatment should be carefully considered before more meds are added.
The risk in combining medications is that they may interact in a way that increases uncomfortable or harmful side effects. For instance, explains Ron Steingard, MD, a child and adolescent psychiatrist, you can get overlapping side effects. If one medication causes mild sedation and the second does the same thing, the result can be so much sedation that the child isn’t herself and can’t stay awake.
There’s another type of interaction that can be problematic, Dr. Steingard adds: If two medications use the same metabolic pathway—the mechanism in the body that breaks them down and delivers them to the target—they can overwhelm that pathway and create a buildup of medication, causing the kind of side effects you’d see with a much higher dose of one of the meds.
Dr. Steingard recommends that your first step should be to go to your prescribing doctor with your concerns, and talk about getting a second opinion. It’s your right, and it’s common in other areas of medicine. A good doctor will be supportive, and may be able to help you find another clinician to review your child’s case.
The children most at risk for taking multiple medications that could be harmful are those with disruptive or dangerous behavior. When kids are unmanageable at home and at school, a primary care physician or psychiatrist is, understandably, likely to try whatever pharmaceutical tools are available to help them. If one medication helps a little, but not enough, doctors may add medications to try to get a better outcome. And another. And so on.
Dr. Steingard, who’s seen children on as many as a dozen meds, recommends a cautious and thoughtful approach to medication. Behavioral supports should be explored fully before multiple medications are used. If a child has a learning or attention disorder and is frustrated at school, they should have supports there. If they are out of control at home, parent training can be very helpful. Anxiety and depression, which might also be causing aggression, both respond well to behavioral treatments. Thinking beyond medication is an important part of the solution to complex problems that’s often overlooked.
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