My elementary school refused to let me go to school unless I took meth-in-a-pill, can I sue for that?

The Hankerchief asked:


Now, before everyone goes OMG horrible WTF?!? on me, allow me to explain. It was October 1998, I was in the beginning of first grade and I had just moved into a big city (well, as far as Oregon goes) from the country. Back in the country, we’d always have these hands-on projects, so when we started elementary school and the teacher (she was young and had just started teaching the previous year) just stood up there and talked, I got bored and my attention wandered elsewhere. A few weeks later, my teacher got so fed up with me that at the parent teacher conferences, she brought the principal, who promptly told my poor mother that I could not come back to school unless my attention problem was resolved. They told my mom to ask about a drug called Ritalin, which was supposed to make you focus more. They even took the liberty of referring her to a doctor who treated these problem kids with Ritaln with successful results. Mom agreed.

That was the start of a twice-a-day, 350mg prescription of Ritalin for nearly four years, from October 1998 until the middle of my fifth-grade year in 2003, when my dad (divorced from my mother) actually got a judge to issue a court order to stop the presciptions. I now know why. I would get really irritable when I didn’t get my twice-daily pill (for example, at Dad’s house, where he refused to give it to me, saying ‘it was for my own good’.), and go into fits of rage over not getting it. I was like a drug junkie. It was horrible.

A few months after the court order was issued, I completely was over the drug (withdrawal sucked, however), and I never did understand why I was taken off of it. Then, I recently learned Ritalin was, in a nutshell, meth in a pill. And I believe it’s affected my health greatly: while I was on it, I always was gasping for air after any sort of exercise, I had mood swings, and I believe it may have even stunted my growth. (I am relatively short for my family; I just barely break six foot, while most of the males in my family clear 6′4 easily). My life got messed up because the school district bullied my mother into giving me a low-dose form of meth. Would that be enough grounds to sue upon?
Girzie: I call bull. Did you have to take it as a kid? Would you feel safe giving it to your kids? That’s the million dollar question, isn’t it?
Julia: If it’s bad enough to have a judge issue a court order to terminate my prescription, I highly doubt it’d be considered frivolous.

Angelina

This entry was posted on Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010 at 6:24 pm and is filed under Child Bullies. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

4 Responses to “My elementary school refused to let me go to school unless I took meth-in-a-pill, can I sue for that?”

  1. Angelina Says:

    Nevaeh

    I don’t think so. This was the recognized drug prescribed for children with perceived Attention Deficit Disorder and until it is proven to have a serious side effect, nothing will be served by suing.

    As for height, 6ft tall is fairly adequate in a male. Most of the males in my family are well over 6ft but all three of my sons are 5ft 10. That’s life. Now that you can cope with life, maybe you should just get on and enjoy it. Your mother was doing what she thought was best for you at the time.

  2. Aidan Says:

    Vanessa

    fuck them. they did the same shit to me. except I got stuck on adderall. I’ve been on both ritalin and adderall over the course, adderall is worse. And by worse, I mean much stronger effects. Ritalin is like being surronded by a dome, adderall is like having tunnel vision. I can’t lie. I fucking love adderall. I’m hooked on it. but rationally i know that i shouldn’t take it. I really do need it though. I can’t focus without it. but goddamn this shit fucks with me

  3. Miguel Says:

    Carter

    No. I don’t think so. A judge would likely toss it out as frivolous, especially since so much time has passed.

  4. Angel Says:

    Xavier

    In a nutshell No you cannot sue the school. They did not force your mother to give it to you. And just because you believe it affected your health does not mean it did. You would have to prove that. Also being shorter than your family is also not grounds. A few inches shorter is not unusual. Also the court order was needed because your mother had primary custody and your father did not. And as such he could not make the decision.