Background: Bush, by executive order, began the New Freedom Initiative during his first term. Under that umbrella, the New Freedom Commission on Mental Health was formed -- made up mostly of individuals with ties to the pharmaceutical companies. The Commission made its final report which called for mandatory mental health screenings for every American -- suggested beginning with public schools and preschools.
Last November, shortly after the election, the legislation to follow these recommendations was passed. The American people -- the few that had been watching -- were told not to worry, that the mandates were unfunded and, therefore, would not go anywhere. This was a lie. The Appropriations committee, which distributes our tax dollars to the various federal agencies, specifically allotted $20 million in the HHS/Education bill for state programs in support of the New Freedom commission report. These federally-funded state programs will be the precursors of the broader federal program recommended by the commission.
Current: In 2004, Columbia TeenScreen chose Iowa as one of its five target states. A handful of Iowa school districts have contracted with a company known as TeenScreen to complete these mental health screenings. Please note that there is
no parental consent needed.
According to the
TeenScreen Site, TeenScreen is being implemented in four of Iowa’s 12 Area Education Agencies (AEAs), which support the Iowa Department of Education in providing services to multiple school districts within each region. Three additional AEAs are currently developing pilot TeenScreen programs. Altogether, seven school districts are involved in the pilot. It is expected that additional AEAs will implement TeenScreen in Fall 2005.
In March, an
article ran in the Des Moines Register about TeenScreen implementation in Iowa. For those who aren't familiar, here is an
info page on TeenScreen.
My children's school district was not on any of the TeenScreen lists (although a neighboring district was). Since I hadn't found any 2005-06 school year information, I sent an email note to my superintendent. He forwarded my request to the middle school (6-8) principal. The principal told me that the district did not use TeenScreen, but a similar program. The "survey" was done during 8th grade current events class (one of the rotation classes -- PE/Health, Current Events, Computers, etc.).
My daughter is an 8th grader at the middle school. I have received *NOTHING* in the realm of a parental consent form for depression/suicide/mental health screening. I have not even received an informational sheet --
if I had not known enough to seek out the information, I would probably had not known that my child was screened for mental illness (well, until I was handed the bill for psychiatric drugs).