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EDITORIAL: HOPE FOR THE "HOPELESS"
Society shies away from biological explanations for criminality and
disordered behavior because people tend to believe that "biological"
equals "hopeless." Yet nothing could be further from the truth.
In this issue of Crime Times
alone, we present research showing
that:
- Omega-3 fatty acid therapy can reduce hostility, as well as
disruptive or oppositional behavior.
Click here to read article.
- Treatment with quetiapine, an antipsychotic drug, can decrease
rage reactions, aggression, hostility, and impulsive behavior in antisocial
individuals.
Click here to read article.
- Zinc supplements can dramatically reduce ADHD symptoms in
many children.
Click here to read article.
Past issues of Crime Times
also highlight research showing that good
diets drastically reduce antisocial behavior in prison populations
(Crime Times, 2002, Vol. 8, No. 2, Pages 1 & 2),
that nutritional supplements can decrease
delinquent behaviors in at-risk children and dramatically improve
learning-disabled students' academic performance and behavior
(Crime Times, 2000, Vol. 6, No. 2, Page 3 & 6 and Crime Times, 2000, Vol. 6, No. 3, Pages 1 & 3.),
and that an enhanced diet can markedly
increase IQ scores
(Crime Times, 2000, Vol. 6, No. 1, Page 5 & 6).
Indeed, this is just a
very small sampling of dozens of articles Crime Times
has published,
since its inception in 1995, showing that biological interventions can
change the lives of troubled or criminal individuals for the better.
This is true even when dysfunctional behavior stems from genetic
defects, because we are learning how to correct the problems caused by
once-untreatable gene flaws. For example, researchers have identified
some children whose aberrant and dangerous behavior appears to stem
from an excess of heavy metals caused by a genetic glitch that impairs
the body's ability to detoxify itself. By lowering these children's toxic
levels of lead or other heavy metals, and correcting associated nutrient
deficiencies, clinicians can often bring about dramatic improvement.
This is being done successfully every day at the Pfeiffer Treatment
Center in Illinois, where William Walsh and his colleagues have an
astonishing success rate in treating troubled, delinquent, and even
psychopathic children.
Biologically-oriented professionals are also making huge strides in
preventing brain dysfunction. One of these experts is
Crime Times
Professional Advisory Board member Ann Streissguth, whose pioneering
research played a huge role in revealing the link between pregnant
women's drinking and the costs to their children in the form of brain
damage, learning disabilities, disruptive behavior, criminality, and ruined
lives.
Translating this knowledge into action, Streissguth and colleague
Ruth Little formed the Seattle Pregnancy and Health Program, a project
combining public education and active intervention for at-risk pregnant
women. As a result of their intervention, the program's organizers report,
"Three-fourths of women who were drinking moderately to heavily were
able to either stop or significantly reduce their alcohol intake after a brief
intervention [and] 86 percent were judged by independent raters to have
improved." Dr. Streissguth and her colleagues are now involved in
another project, the Parent-Child Assistance Program, which helps drug-
or alcohol-abusing mothers break their addictions, protecting their future
children from the ravages of prenatal alcohol or drug exposure. The
direct result of these efforts: fewer infants born with irreparable brain
damage, and more babies who have the potential for a bright future.
Dr. Walsh, Dr. Streissguth, and others like them are helping to usher in a
new era in which we identify and treat-or, even better, prevent-the
brain dysfunctions that cause millions of people to become delinquents,
criminals, or tragic failures. Walsh's center is currently salvaging the
lives of hundreds of children who otherwise would have been written off
as irredeemably "evil." Streissguth's interventions are directly
responsible for hundreds of babies being born whole and healthy, rather
than brain-damaged. And both are proving that greater knowledge about
the biological causes of aberrant or criminal behavior will bring hope to
millions of people we now consider "hopeless."
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