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Tips for making sure your child makes a good transition
Writer: Caroline Miller
Clinical Expert: Ron J. Steingard, MD
en EspañolThe most important things when taking a child off medication are to go slow and follow your doctor’s advice. Stopping quickly can sometimes lead to unpleasant side effects. The exception is stimulant medication for ADHD, like Adderall and Ritalin. These medications leave the child’s body quickly, so it’s okay to stop taking them all at once.
There are a few reasons it might make sense to take a child off medication. They might have grown out of the problem the medicine was treating. Or, their symptoms may have improved so much that they might not need meds anymore. A doctor can slowly lower the amount the child takes and see how they do.
Another reason to stop is if your child has taken the medication for a while and isn’t getting better. In that case, your doctor might take them off it to try something else. Or if your child is having a very hard time, a doctor might take them off all their meds to make sure that the meds aren’t causing the problems.
Your child’s doctor can help you figure out when and how to take your child off medication. Talk to the doctor about side effects to look out for and how to tell if your child is getting better. It’s best to stop medication when other things in your kid’s life are stable. Vacations are not a good time because they’re breaks in routine.
Talk to your child about stopping medication, too. Make sure they’ve been taking it as they’re supposed to before you stop, since kids sometimes forget to take their meds. Also explain why you think it makes sense to stop and check in about how they’re feeling as they wean off.
When you’re considering medication for a child with emotional or behavioral problems, how you start is very important. But how you stop is just as important. With most psychoactive medications it’s important to taper off gradually rather than stopping quickly.
This does not mean that your child is addicted to the medication, but that the brain has become used to a stable level of medication and needs time to adjust gradually to functioning without it. If you move too abruptly, it can cause unpleasant or confusing side effects.
“The brain doesn’t like to be pushed or pulled any direction quickly,” observes Ron Steingard, MD, a veteran child and adolescentpsychiatrist.
“So even if there are no known withdrawal symptoms associated with a particular medication, it’s usually not a good idea to stop abruptly.”
There are some exceptions to the go-slow rule — medications that are so fast-acting that they leave your child’s system within hours, rather than building up in the brain to produce the therapeutic effect. Stimulant medications for ADHD, for instance, leave the child’s body overnight, explains Dr. Steingard, rather than accumulating. The child is essentially off the medication when he gets out of bed each morning. But antidepressants, anti-anxiety medication and anti-psychotic medications are designed to accumulate in order to maintain a desirable level in the brain, and those should be reduced gradually.
Not all kids would have unpleasant side effects if they stopped quickly, Dr. Steingard notes, but some might, and there’s no way to know which kids might be affected. The best way to minimize that risk is to go slow.
There are a number of reasons why you and your clinician might decide that your child should stop taking a medication:
The key thing to keep in mind, notes Dr. Steingard, is that you don’t want to turn kids off to medications that can really help them by starting or stopping too abruptly and generating unpleasant side effects.
Things to look out for while taking a child off medication depend on the type of medication involved.
To avoid side effects you want to be very cautious when starting out on a medication, take plenty of time to build the right, effective dose. And you want to be equally cautious when stopping a medication, tapering to avoid discomfort or a negative experience that might, unnecessarily, generate a negative attitude in your child.
You taper off risperidone by reducing the dose gradually over a period of time. If a child stops too quickly, they might get a runny nose, diarrhea, and cramping.
You wean your child off medication with a doctor’s guidance, and using a schedule for tapering the dose. Make sure your doctor has identified side effects that you should look out for and choose a time when other things in your child’s life are stable.
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