🧒 Psychiatric Medications in Children: Special Considerations, Safety & Best Practices

Treating mental health conditions in children is different from adults—not just medically, but developmentally, ethically, and emotionally. Parents often fear psychiatric medications for children due to myths like “It will change their personality”, “They will get addicted”, or “They will outgrow it.”

While counselling and behavioural therapy are always first-line, medication becomes necessary when symptoms affect learning, behaviour, sleep, safety, or family functioning.

🌟 Why Children Need Special Care in Psychiatric Prescribing

Children are not small adults—their brains, liver, kidneys, hormones, and emotional development are still evolving. Therefore:

Factor Why it matters
Brain is still developing Medicines can affect neurodevelopment → must use only when benefit outweighs risk
Higher metabolism Children may need weight-based dosing; some drugs clear faster than in adults
Communication limitations Children may not express side effects clearly
School & family ecosystem Teachers, parents, caregivers must be part of treatment
Long-term impact Need to monitor growth, hormones, learning, appetite, sleep

🧠 Common Psychiatric Conditions Where Medicines Are Used in Children

Condition When is medication considered?
ADHD When behavioural therapy alone is not enough
Autism For irritability, aggression, hyperactivity, self-harm
Depression Moderate to severe cases, suicidal thoughts
Anxiety/OCD When counselling & ERP alone do not help
Bipolar disorder Severe mood swings, aggression
Psychosis/Schizophrenia Hallucinations, delusions
Tourette’s/Tics Severe tics interfering with social/school life

💊 Common Psychiatric Medications in Children & Key Precautions

Medication Group Example Special Considerations in Children
Stimulants (ADHD) Methylphenidate, Amphetamines Monitor appetite, weight, BP, heart rate
Non-Stimulant ADHD meds Atomoxetine, Guanfacine Liver enzymes, sleep quality
SSRIs (Depression, Anxiety, OCD) Fluoxetine, Sertraline, Escitalopram Start low, monitor for increased anxiety or rare suicidal thoughts initially
Antipsychotics Risperidone, Aripiprazole Weight gain, blood sugar, prolactin levels, extrapyramidal symptoms
Mood Stabilizers Valproate, Lithium, Carbamazepine, Lamotrigine Liver, kidney, thyroid tests, hydration, blood levels
Sleep Medications (rarely used) Melatonin Short-term use; ensure sleep hygiene first

General Principles Before Prescribing

✔ Detailed diagnosis – using history, school reports, rating scales
✔ Rule out medical causes – thyroid issues, seizures, anemia, nutritional deficits
✔ Psychoeducation to parents and (age-appropriate) child
✔ Involve teachers/school when necessary
✔ Start low and increase slowly (weight-based dosing)
✔ Monitor growth, appetite, sleep, mood changes, vitals
✔ Avoid polypharmacy unless absolutely needed

⚠️ Risks & Side Effects Parents Should Know

Drug Class Possible Side Effects
Stimulants Loss of appetite, headaches, irritability, delayed sleep
Antipsychotics Weight gain, sedation, high prolactin, diabetes risk
SSRIs Nausea, anxiety at start, rare suicidal thoughts in teens
Mood Stabilizers Tremors, weight gain, liver/kidney impact (rare)

However — untreated illness can be more harmful than side effects:

  • Depression → suicide, academic decline

  • ADHD → school failure, accidents, low self-esteem

  • Autism aggression → self-injury, family burnout

  • Psychosis → permanent cognitive damage if delayed

👪 Counselling Parents – Key Points

  • Medicine is not a punishment or sedative

  • It does not change the child’s personality if used correctly

  • Combine with therapy, parenting strategies, school integration

  • Stop only under medical supervision — sudden withdrawal is harmful

  • Regular follow-ups are essential

🎯 When to Seek Urgent Medical Attention

  • Child becomes very drowsy or agitated

  • New suicidal thoughts or self-harm behaviour

  • High fever, neck stiffness (Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome)

  • Sudden facial movements, tongue rolling (Tardive Dyskinesia)

  • Severe rash (Stevens-Johnson Syndrome with Lamotrigine)

🌟 The Goal of Treatment

The aim is not to sedate children—but to help them:
✔ Focus better in school
✔ Control anger or impulsiveness
✔ Reduce panic, fear, or depressive thoughts
✔ Build healthy relationships
✔ Develop into independent, emotionally strong adults

👨‍⚕️ About the Author

Dr. Srinivas Rajkumar T
Consultant Psychiatrist – Child, Adolescent & Family Mental Health
Mind & Memory Clinic – Apollo Clinic (Opp. Phoenix MarketCity), Velachery, Chennai
📞 +91-8595155808 | 🌐 www.srinivasaiims.com

Expert in ADHD, autism spectrum disorders, childhood anxiety, school refusal, behavioural issues, adolescent depression and safe psychiatric medication practices in children.

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