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Psychiatrist prescribed three drugs at child's first session

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Ben Hansen

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Feb 28, 2008, 12:36:03 AM2/28/08
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"Along with Benadryl, which had already been prescribed to help with side
effects of the other medicines, Cheyenne was taking five prescriptions daily
in May 2003. At that time, she was 5 years old."

If only one or two doctors would go to jail for this sort of thing, others
might think twice before prescribing these drugs to toddlers. -- Ben

www.southernstandard.net/
***Psychiatrist testifies he prescribed three drugs at first session*
By James Clark
Southern Standard, McMinnville, Tennessee Feb 27, 2008

Regardless of what killed Cheyenne Delp on June 26, 2004, she was a child
under the influence of heavy medication the day she died.

The medicine Cheyenne was prescribed was so powerful, she had to undergo an
EKG to determine if her heart was healthy enough for her to take Imipramine,
a heavy duty anti-depressant.

Dr. Saran Mudumbi, who said his specialty is child psychiatry, testified
Monday that he prescribed the assortment of drugs for Cheyenne because her
behavior was out of control, according to her guardian, Sherri Mathis.

"She was aggressive to other children and was kicked out of school because
of it," said Dr. Mudumbi, who went on to contend Cheyenne suffered from
paranoia, depression and anxiety. "She was thinking other people were
against her, trying to get her."

However, Dr. Mudumbi later admitted all the information he gathered about
Cheyenne was provided by Mathis, or Cheyenne herself. Dr. Mudumbi indicated
he tried to get other people involved in Cheyenne's life to attend the
appointments, but that never occurred. He said Mathis was the only person
who accompanied Cheyenne to his office.

"I wanted to construct a total picture of how she's doing," said Dr.
Mudumbi, who indicated school teachers and other family members would have
been appropriate to bring.

Dr. Mudumbi said Cheyenne had 13 visits to his office, the first on April 3,
2003, and the last on May 21, 2004, roughly one month before she died.

After her initial visit, Cheyenne was given three types of medication:
Strattera (to control attention deficit disorder), Risperdal (to treat
schizophrenia or severe depression), and Imipramine (to treat severe
depression).

After two weeks, on April 17, 2003, Dr. Mudumbi said he took Cheyenne off
Strattera at the request of Mathis. He testified Mathis wasn't satisfied
with its effectiveness.

So Dr. Mudumbi replaced Strattera with Tenex, the brand name for Guanfacine.
He also doubled Cheyenne's dose of Imipramine to 50 mg daily.

About three weeks later, on May 8, 2003, Dr. Mudumbi said Mathis still
wasn't satisfied with the medication. That's when he added Seroquel to the
mix.

Along with Benadryl, which had already been prescribed to help with side
effects of the other medicines, Cheyenne was taking five prescriptions daily
in May 2003. At that time, she was 5 years old.

Special prosecutor Brian Holmgren questioned Dr. Mudumbi about all the
medication. Dr. Mudumbi said he wouldn't have prescribed so much without the
input from Mathis.

"I still would have prescribed the Tenex, but nothing else," Dr. Mudumbi
said.

Prescriptions drugs Cheyenne was taking

Here's a list of the prescription medication Cheyenne Delp was taking at the
time of her death, according to her psychiatrist Dr. Saran Mudumbi:

Imipramine

Risperdal

Guanfacine

Benadryl

Seroquel

_________________________________________________________________

Psychiatry is to medicine what astrology is to astronomy. -- Leonard Roy
Frank

Bonkers Institute for Nearly Genuine Research
www.bonkersinstitute.org

_________________________________________________________________

Psychiatry is to medicine what astrology is to astronomy. -- Leonard Roy
Frank

Bonkers Institute for Nearly Genuine Research
www.bonkersinstitute.org

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