Guest guest Posted November 19, 2009 Report Share Posted November 19, 2009 I think switching to 1/2 pm and 1/2 am sounds good. As far as the behavior, I am not disagreeing with you ... please understand ... but I went through something similar with my daughter. I wondered at the time and have heard other parents say that their children were always trying so hard to be perfect but in an uptight, anxious way their whole lives. When the medication kicked in and that anxiety was gone (or somewhat gone), that she felt free to act out some. What I learned with her is it was that anxiety that had caused her to behave so perfectly before. Does any of that make sense? Do you see changes at home, as well, or is it just at school? in WA Subject: Vent mode To: Date: Thursday, November 19, 2009, 7:07 PM  Okay, I rarely get discouraged or angry, but I received a call from my daughter's school today. My daughter is 7, recently diagnosed with OCD, been on Zoloft for appx 3 weeks now. I've noticed super hyper in the past couple of weeks. Her meds are administered in the a.m. now vs p.m. due to the fact that she'd be up for 1-4 hours during the middle of the night, therefore, her peak active period is now at school. Anyways, the school calls me today stating that my daughter has been recently deliberately distracting the other kids during class. My daughter kept repeating the teachers name outloud but using a silly last name instead like Mrs. Wall, or Mrs. Homework, or Mrs. Spongebob. The teacher was unable to control these outbursts and sent her to the back of the class, where my daughter continued these outbursts. She was then sent to the school's office where she had to sit until the end of the day when we picked her up. I talked with the teacher, who is fully aware of what is going on with our daughter, including information on the meds she is taking, her present compulsions and obsessions, and her response was " this cannot continue to happen in the classroom, you're going to have to start disciplining her more severely at home " . Apparently, she feels these outbursts are being done for attention. I completely disagree as our daughter has never displayed this type of behavior in the past. The teacher continued to go on to tell me " the timing of these outbursts were very unfortunate as another parent was in the classroom observing the whole thing " . Hello!!! How this looks to another parent is the least of my concerns. I could use some help on how to respond to this teacher. I really feel these outbursts from my daughter is just a new compulsion/obsessio n surfacing. I know it's not being done intentionally. I've put a call into her Psychiatrist asking what we should do next. I'm hoping we can do 1/2 the meds in the a.m. and the other 1/2 at night. I think this would really help with the over hyperness during the school period. I'd appreciate any advice. I'm sticking up for my daughter 100%. This is the disease, not my daughter being disruptive. I would think the teachers would understand that! Ughhh! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 19, 2009 Report Share Posted November 19, 2009 So sorry you are going through this. Does your school have a guidance counselor, nurse, or psychologist who would/could get involved because this teacher clearly does not understand what is going on with your daughter even though you have explained it? I can sympathize with the teacher's concern about disruption in class, but perhaps a more appropriate response would have been to have the school nurse call and speak with you or give your child time to calm down in her office. Just random thoughts, but I hope you find something that works soon. Split dosage might work well if the doc oks it. > > Subject: Vent mode > To: > Date: Thursday, November 19, 2009, 7:07 PM > Okay, I rarely get discouraged or > angry, but I received a call from my daughter's school > today. My daughter is 7, recently diagnosed with OCD, been > on Zoloft for appx 3 weeks now. I've noticed super hyper in > the past couple of weeks. Her meds are administered in the > a.m. now vs p.m. due to the fact that she'd be up for 1-4 > hours during the middle of the night, therefore, her peak > active period is now at school. Anyways, the school calls me > today stating that my daughter has been recently > deliberately distracting the other kids during class. My > daughter kept repeating the teachers name outloud but using > a silly last name instead like Mrs. Wall, or Mrs. Homework, > or Mrs. Spongebob. The teacher was unable to control these > outbursts and sent her to the back of the class, where my > daughter continued these outbursts. She was then sent to the > school's office where she had to sit until the end of > the day when we picked her up. I talked with the teacher, > who is fully aware of what is going > on with our daughter, including information on the meds > she is taking, her present compulsions and obsessions, and > her response was " this cannot continue to happen in the > classroom, you're going to have to start disciplining her > more severely at home " . Apparently, she feels these > outbursts are being done for attention. I completely > disagree as our daughter has never displayed this type of > behavior in the past. The teacher continued to go on to tell > me " the timing of these outbursts were very unfortunate as > another parent was in the classroom observing the whole > thing " . Hello!!! How this looks to another parent is > the least of my concerns. > I could use some help on how to respond to this teacher. I > really feel these outbursts from my daughter is just a new > compulsion/obsession surfacing. I know it's not being done > intentionally. I've put a call into her Psychiatrist asking > what we should do next. I'm hoping we can do 1/2 the meds in > the a.m. and the other 1/2 at night. I think this would > really help with the over hyperness during the school > period. I'd appreciate any advice. I'm sticking up for my > daughter 100%. This is the disease, not my daughter > being disruptive. I would think the teachers would > understand that! Ughhh! > > > > ------------------------------------ > > Our list archives feature may be accessed at: http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group// > by scrolling down to the archives calendar . Our links > may be accessed at http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group//links > . Our files may be accessed at > http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group//files > . > Our list advisors are Gail B. , Ed.D.(http://www.ocdawareness.com ), Tamar Chansky, Ph.D.( http://www.worrywisekids.org ), and Dan Geller, M.D. > (http://www2.massgeneral.org/pediatricpsych/staff/geller.html > ). You may ask a question of any of these mental health > professionals by inserting the words " Ask Dr.(insert name) " > in the subject line of a post to the list. Our list > moderators are Castle, Judy Chabot, BJ Closner, and > Barb Nesrallah. Subscription issues or > suggestions may be addressed to Louis Harkins, list > administrator, at louisharkins@... > . Our group and related groups are listed > at http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/ocdsupportgroups/links > . OCF treatment providers list may be viewed at http://www.ocfoundation.info/treatment-providers-list.php > . > NLM-NIH Drug Information Portal may be viewed at > http://druginfo.nlm.nih.gov/drugportal/drugportal.jsp?APPLICATION_NAME=drugporta\ l > . OCF recommended reading list may be viewed at http://www.ocfoundation.org/ocd-oc-spectrum-disorders-book-list.html > . > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 19, 2009 Report Share Posted November 19, 2009 Hi and (((hugs)))! What does your daughter say about these recent behaviors, including today, and why she's doing it? If all this began after Zoloft, I would ask the psych to switch her to another med; shouldn't be a problem since she's just started SSRIs. Another thought - and others can comment - since it's only been 3 weeks, what if you skipped a day of giving it to her, see how she behaves, sleeps.... I don't know if you'd see a difference, just skipping a day of it, not sure how long Zoloft stays in the body. Quick thoughts, > > Okay, I rarely get discouraged or angry, but I received a call from my daughter's school today. My daughter is 7, recently diagnosed with OCD, been on Zoloft for appx 3 weeks now. I've noticed super hyper in the past couple of weeks. Her meds are administered in the a.m. now vs p.m. due to the fact that she'd be up for 1-4 hours during the middle of the night, therefore, her peak active period is now at school. Anyways, the school calls me today stating that my daughter has been recently deliberately distracting the other kids during Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 19, 2009 Report Share Posted November 19, 2009 My daughter says she does not know why she's doing it. Then she says she thinks she's doing it because she's trying to be funny. I tend to think she's doing it because she was told she " can't " and now feels she has to do it all the more. That's similar to the pattern we've seen with her. Call is into her Dr, in the meantime, we've set up another meeting with him on Tuesday. Thanks for the input!Peace! Angie in WI Subject: Re: Vent mode To: Date: Thursday, November 19, 2009, 7:49 PM Hi and (((hugs)))! What does your daughter say about these recent behaviors, including today, and why she's doing it? If all this began after Zoloft, I would ask the psych to switch her to another med; shouldn't be a problem since she's just started SSRIs. Another thought - and others can comment - since it's only been 3 weeks, what if you skipped a day of giving it to her, see how she behaves, sleeps.... I don't know if you'd see a difference, just skipping a day of it, not sure how long Zoloft stays in the body. Quick thoughts, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 19, 2009 Report Share Posted November 19, 2009 Thanks ! Unfortunately, there is none of the below referenced sources to help out. It's a very small Parochial school. There's only 11 other children in her class. I'm hopeful the dosage can be given in 1/2 intervals. No word yet but fingers are crossed!Angie in WI Subject: Re: Vent mode To: Date: Thursday, November 19, 2009, 7:49 PM So sorry you are going through this. Does your school have a guidance counselor, nurse, or psychologist who would/could get involved because this teacher clearly does not understand what is going on with your daughter even though you have explained it? I can sympathize with the teacher's concern about disruption in class, but perhaps a more appropriate response would have been to have the school nurse call and speak with you or give your child time to calm down in her office. Just random thoughts, but I hope you find something that works soon. Split dosage might work well if the doc oks it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 20, 2009 Report Share Posted November 20, 2009 First of all, I would be concerned about her behavior. SSRI's can be " activating " in children. Regardless of what you want to call it, if you can relate it to the start of meds, then the pdoc should change them. Secondly, I have had this similar experience at school. I told the principal that since my son (he was 6 & 7 at the time) was under the care of a physician and on meds, I expect that any new behavior they saw not be addressed in a punitive manner unless they consulted the physician to determine it's cause. That let them know that he couldn't help it and that they shouldn't treat him as if he could. That is the one thing I have struggled with over the years. Even now when my son's emotions are in check, he has executive function issues and they want to say that he is manipulative or lazy!!!! It infuriates me. I have learned to talk the talk though and they realize at this point that I will not tolerate any discrimination. There can be no disciplinary action taken in children with disorders or disabilities unless they do what is called a manifestation determination meaning they determine whether or not the behavior is a consequence of a diagnosis or disability. Your pdoc should know what is happening at school so that they understand the severity of the problem as they too sometimes blame the parent-child dynamics for abnormal behavior. Good Luck, Bonnie > > Okay, I rarely get discouraged or angry, but I received a call from my daughter's school today. My daughter is 7, recently diagnosed with OCD, been on Zoloft for appx 3 weeks now. I've noticed super hyper in the past couple of weeks. Her meds are administered in the a.m. now vs p.m. due to the fact that she'd be up for 1-4 hours during the middle of the night, therefore, her peak active period is now at school. Anyways, the school calls me today stating that my daughter has been recently deliberately distracting the other kids during class. My daughter kept repeating the teachers name outloud but using a silly last name instead like Mrs. Wall, or Mrs. Homework, or Mrs. Spongebob. The teacher was unable to control these outbursts and sent her to the back of the class, where my daughter continued these outbursts. She was then sent to the school's office where she had to sit until the end of the day when we picked her up. I talked with the teacher, who is fully aware of what is going on with our daughter, including information on the meds she is taking, her present compulsions and obsessions, and her response was " this cannot continue to happen in the classroom, you're going to have to start disciplining her more severely at home " . Apparently, she feels these outbursts are being done for attention. I completely disagree as our daughter has never displayed this type of behavior in the past. The teacher continued to go on to tell me " the timing of these outbursts were very unfortunate as another parent was in the classroom observing the whole thing " . Hello!!! How this looks to another parent is the least of my concerns. > I could use some help on how to respond to this teacher. I really feel these outbursts from my daughter is just a new compulsion/obsession surfacing. I know it's not being done intentionally. I've put a call into her Psychiatrist asking what we should do next. I'm hoping we can do 1/2 the meds in the a.m. and the other 1/2 at night. I think this would really help with the over hyperness during the school period. I'd appreciate any advice. I'm sticking up for my daughter 100%. This is the disease, not my daughter being disruptive. I would think the teachers would understand that! Ughhh! > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 20, 2009 Report Share Posted November 20, 2009 Bonnie, I totally agree with your viewpoint on this. Just this morning my dd is sleeping because her meds are so off she woke up in the night and couldn't get back to sleep and now is sleeping. Everything is " off " ... her anxiety was returning, ocd symptoms, etc. Right now I am at the point of letting her teachers know (no one this year had been told yet, because it wasn't affecting her) but now it is. So I am facing the same thing. This is really hard! As to the Zoloft: when my dd went on at age 13 we did see some goofiness. I think she was just so relieved to not feel so worried all the time. But it is definitely something to watch and inform the dr. about. Tina > > > > Okay, I rarely get discouraged or angry, but I received a call from my daughter's school today. My daughter is 7, recently diagnosed with OCD, been on Zoloft for appx 3 weeks now. I've noticed super hyper in the past couple of weeks. Her meds are administered in the a.m. now vs p.m. due to the fact that she'd be up for 1-4 hours during the middle of the night, therefore, her peak active period is now at school. Anyways, the school calls me today stating that my daughter has been recently deliberately distracting the other kids during class. My daughter kept repeating the teachers name outloud but using a silly last name instead like Mrs. Wall, or Mrs. Homework, or Mrs. Spongebob. The teacher was unable to control these outbursts and sent her to the back of the class, where my daughter continued these outbursts. She was then sent to the school's office where she had to sit until the end of the day when we picked her up. I talked with the teacher, who is fully aware of what is going on with our daughter, including information on the meds she is taking, her present compulsions and obsessions, and her response was " this cannot continue to happen in the classroom, you're going to have to start disciplining her more severely at home " . Apparently, she feels these outbursts are being done for attention. I completely disagree as our daughter has never displayed this type of behavior in the past. The teacher continued to go on to tell me " the timing of these outbursts were very unfortunate as another parent was in the classroom observing the whole thing " . Hello!!! How this looks to another parent is the least of my concerns. > > I could use some help on how to respond to this teacher. I really feel these outbursts from my daughter is just a new compulsion/obsession surfacing. I know it's not being done intentionally. I've put a call into her Psychiatrist asking what we should do next. I'm hoping we can do 1/2 the meds in the a.m. and the other 1/2 at night. I think this would really help with the over hyperness during the school period. I'd appreciate any advice. I'm sticking up for my daughter 100%. This is the disease, not my daughter being disruptive. I would think the teachers would understand that! Ughhh! > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 20, 2009 Report Share Posted November 20, 2009 Just wanted to jump in here and say that when my DD was put on Prozac at age 7 and it got to a therapeutic dose for her, she was disinhibited for awhile as well. She was annoying and silly. It settled down after awhile and it's been a really great med. for her for the long haul. Dina Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 20, 2009 Report Share Posted November 20, 2009 I have a comment. I agree wholeheartedly with you that the teacher was wrong about disciplining more fully at home. We all know that she doesn't get it and that's frustrating. However, if your daughter is disrupting the class to the point of the other children not learning, shouldn't she be asked to leave? How is it helpful for anyone if she stays? The teacher will be angry, your daughter won't be learning anything and neither will the others. Not that she should be punished, but maybe she should have an aide where she can go do her work in a quiet place. It sounds to me like you should be able to meet with the teacher and the principal, explain what is happening and agree how it should be handled to everyone's benefit in the future while med. adjustments are being made. Just throwing it out there that it's got to be a frustrating situation for the teacher as well. Take care, Dina Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 20, 2009 Report Share Posted November 20, 2009 We ran in to a similar issue with our son's teacher last year - our son became very confrontational with her as she really had no interest in working with him or us on resolving the issues she felt were disrupting her system in the classroom. It got ugly for a few weeks, as everything seemed to be breaking down between them and we felt like we had no way to impact the situation since the teacher is the leader in the classroom. The school's counselor was brought in to the discussion, and I believe she really made an impact with the teacher and encouraged her to open her mind to alternatives to punishment when faced with our son's outbursts in class. Since you say there is no resource like this at your daughter's school, maybe a meeting with the principal to address the teacher's uncompromising approach could help; or requesting some additional input/direction from your daughter's psychiatrist directly to the teacher? I know in my experience (personal OCD issues and our son has been dealing with OCD for three years now) the hard-nosed, confrontational approach it sounds like your daughter's teacher is taking does nothing but cause more problems. I applaud you for standing up for your daughter and pursuing a resolution - the best thing we can do for our children is to work as their biggest advocate! Thank you for sharing and I hope you will keep us posted. > > Okay, I rarely get discouraged or angry, but I received a call from my daughter's school today. My daughter is 7, recently diagnosed with OCD, been on Zoloft for appx 3 weeks now. I've noticed super hyper in the past couple of weeks. Her meds are administered in the a.m. now vs p.m. due to the fact that she'd be up for 1-4 hours during the middle of the night, therefore, her peak active period is now at school. Anyways, the school calls me today stating that my daughter has been recently deliberately distracting the other kids during class. My daughter kept repeating the teachers name outloud but using a silly last name instead like Mrs. Wall, or Mrs. Homework, or Mrs. Spongebob. The teacher was unable to control these outbursts and sent her to the back of the class, where my daughter continued these outbursts. She was then sent to the school's office where she had to sit until the end of the day when we picked her up. I talked with the teacher, who is fully aware of what is going on with our daughter, including information on the meds she is taking, her present compulsions and obsessions, and her response was " this cannot continue to happen in the classroom, you're going to have to start disciplining her more severely at home " . Apparently, she feels these outbursts are being done for attention. I completely disagree as our daughter has never displayed this type of behavior in the past. The teacher continued to go on to tell me " the timing of these outbursts were very unfortunate as another parent was in the classroom observing the whole thing " . Hello!!! How this looks to another parent is the least of my concerns. > I could use some help on how to respond to this teacher. I really feel these outbursts from my daughter is just a new compulsion/obsession surfacing. I know it's not being done intentionally. I've put a call into her Psychiatrist asking what we should do next. I'm hoping we can do 1/2 the meds in the a.m. and the other 1/2 at night. I think this would really help with the over hyperness during the school period. I'd appreciate any advice. I'm sticking up for my daughter 100%. This is the disease, not my daughter being disruptive. I would think the teachers would understand that! Ughhh! > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 20, 2009 Report Share Posted November 20, 2009 Thanks to everyone for the advise and support! Your experiences provide me with some excellent leverage on how to deal with any future situations like this. I will keep you posted on our Monday meeting with the Dr.My brother was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia over 10 years ago. I saw him struggle for 9 years with pills & the side effects and society labeling him as crazy, lazy and incompetent instead of really looking at the disease & how it affected him. I often wondered why this was happening to him and our family. I think I know now. All those struggles have prepared me for what we're going through with our own daughter. There's always good to be found in the bad. Peace out!Angie in WI Subject: Re: Vent mode To: Date: Friday, November 20, 2009, 11:51 AM  We ran in to a similar issue with our son's teacher last year - our son became very confrontational with her as she really had no interest in working with him or us on resolving the issues she felt were disrupting her system in the classroom. It got ugly for a few weeks, as everything seemed to be breaking down between them and we felt like we had no way to impact the situation since the teacher is the leader in the classroom. The school's counselor was brought in to the discussion, and I believe she really made an impact with the teacher and encouraged her to open her mind to alternatives to punishment when faced with our son's outbursts in class. Since you say there is no resource like this at your daughter's school, maybe a meeting with the principal to address the teacher's uncompromising approach could help; or requesting some additional input/direction from your daughter's psychiatrist directly to the teacher? I know in my experience (personal OCD issues and our son has been dealing with OCD for three years now) the hard-nosed, confrontational approach it sounds like your daughter's teacher is taking does nothing but cause more problems. I applaud you for standing up for your daughter and pursuing a resolution - the best thing we can do for our children is to work as their biggest advocate! Thank you for sharing and I hope you will keep us posted. > > Okay, I rarely get discouraged or angry, but I received a call from my daughter's school today. My daughter is 7, recently diagnosed with OCD, been on Zoloft for appx 3 weeks now. I've noticed super hyper in the past couple of weeks. Her meds are administered in the a.m. now vs p.m. due to the fact that she'd be up for 1-4 hours during the middle of the night, therefore, her peak active period is now at school. Anyways, the school calls me today stating that my daughter has been recently deliberately distracting the other kids during class. My daughter kept repeating the teachers name outloud but using a silly last name instead like Mrs. Wall, or Mrs. Homework, or Mrs. Spongebob. The teacher was unable to control these outbursts and sent her to the back of the class, where my daughter continued these outbursts. She was then sent to the school's office where she had to sit until the end of the day when we picked her up. I talked with the teacher, who is fully aware of what is going on with our daughter, including information on the meds she is taking, her present compulsions and obsessions, and her response was " this cannot continue to happen in the classroom, you're going to have to start disciplining her more severely at home " . Apparently, she feels these outbursts are being done for attention. I completely disagree as our daughter has never displayed this type of behavior in the past. The teacher continued to go on to tell me " the timing of these outbursts were very unfortunate as another parent was in the classroom observing the whole thing " . Hello!!! How this looks to another parent is the least of my concerns. > I could use some help on how to respond to this teacher. I really feel these outbursts from my daughter is just a new compulsion/obsessio n surfacing. I know it's not being done intentionally. I've put a call into her Psychiatrist asking what we should do next. I'm hoping we can do 1/2 the meds in the a.m. and the other 1/2 at night. I think this would really help with the over hyperness during the school period. I'd appreciate any advice. I'm sticking up for my daughter 100%. This is the disease, not my daughter being disruptive. I would think the teachers would understand that! Ughhh! > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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