05-09-95 Drug Guideline for Mentally Retarded GUIDES FOR TREATING PEOPLE WITH MENTAL RETARDATION TO BE SET COLUMBUS, Ohio -- More than 300 physicians, scientists, family members and other experts in the field of mental retardation will meet at Ohio State University next month to develop the first-ever guidelines for prescribing psychiatric medications for the mentally retarded. People with mental retardation are among the nation's heaviest consumers of psychoactive drugs, such as anti-depressants and anti-anxiety medications, said Steven Reiss, professor of psychology and psychiatry at Ohio State and director of the Nisonger Center, the university's primary center devoted to teaching and research on mental retardation and developmental disabilities. However, Reiss said, physicians prescribing psychoactive drugs for these patients are often poorly trained about mental retardation. "On any given day, hundreds of thousands of people with mental retardation are given psychiatric medications," Reiss said. "This includes about half of the people in institutions and as many as 40 percent of those in large community agencies. Overmedication and unnecessary sedation are all too common. The drugs can cause physical discomfort, which is a special problem when the patient is nonverbal and cannot alert his or her caregiver." "Plus, the sedation makes it that much more difficult for the person to learn the skills needed to be released from the institution and improve his or her quality of life. The main culprits in all of this are the inadequate training of health professionals and a lack of medical information on which they can base their treatment." The upcoming conference will address these problems. The International Consensus Conference on Psychopharmacology, which will meet June 15 and 16 at Ohio State and will be co-hosted by the Nisonger Center, University of Cincinnati's Cincinnati Center for Developmental Disorders, and Arc of Ohio (formerly known as the Association for Retarded Citizens), will include presentations by 21 working committees on such topics as drug types, past research, ethical issues and issues of best practice. After the conference, the reports of the committees will be compiled into a handbook of consensus expert opinion on the appropriate use of each medication for people with mental retardation. The handbook will be distributed worldwide. "It will be a compendium of current knowledge, best practices, and needs for training and research," Reiss said. "We expect that it will be a major force in providing drug therapy for mentally retarded patients and reducing inappropriate use and overuse of psychoactive drugs." Reiss also expects the conference attendees to call for a greater federal commitment to training psychiatrists about the special needs of mentally retarded patients. "Currently, only a pittance is being spent to improve the situation," he said. "Only 32 psychiatrists are being trained this year in the entire mental retardation/development disability training network, less than one psychiatrist for each state." Reiss also expects the conference attendees to call for a greater emphasis on developing new, non-sedating psychoactive drugs specifically for patients with mental retardation. "About $4.5 billion in taxpayer money is spent each year on services for people who are mentally retarded and suffer from mental illness, yet less than $600,000 of a $55 million federal research program is spent specifically to find better treatments that might cut these costs substantially," he said. "We need to find more effective, cost-saving medicines. Our national policy is penny-wise and pound-foolish." Once developed, new medications will alleviate mentally retarded patients' pain and suffering and make it easier for caregivers to serve them in the community, Reiss said. However, he said, getting new medications developed will be challenging. "There are significant barriers to developing the needed medications," he said. "Few scientists are conducting the needed research. The commercial markets are too small to attract the interest of the pharmaceutical industry, and the pharmaceutical industry has liability concerns about the vulnerability of people with mental retardation." "However, at the conference, leading figures in the field will propose solutions to these barriers, with the hope of hastening the process of getting new medications researched, developed and marketed." The International Consensus Conference on Psychopharmacology is co-sponsored by the Administration on Developmental Disabilities, the American Association on Mental Retardation, the American Association of University Affiliated Programs, the American Psychiatric Association, the American Psychological Association, the European Association on Dual Diagnosis, the National Association on Dual Diagnosis, the National Institute of Mental Health, the President's Committee on Mental Retardation, the U.S. Bureau of Maternal and Child Health, and The Arc of the United States -- the nation's largest family organization for mental retardation. For more information about the conference, call Steven Reiss at the Nisonger Center at (614) 292-8365 or at home at (614) 885-4114. # Contact: Steven Reiss, (614) 292-8365 Written by Kelly Kershner, (614) 292-8308 [Submitted by: Von Reid-Vargas (ereid@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu) Tue, 9 May 1995 16:11:01 -0400] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.