Public schools now pharmaceutical PRISONS as 8-year-old boy strapped to gurney and forcibly
injected with powerful drugs
The first day of school can be a nerve-wracking time for many kids and their parents, but
normally the day goes off without a hitch.
Some unlucky kids might be seated next to a classmate they don�t like or get lost
going to the bathroom, but most kids find that all those jitters were ultimately unwarranted.
That was not the case for a Toronto-area boy, however, as his first day of school this year
ended with him being carted off in a police car to a hospital and being forcibly injected
with drugs.
Debbie Kiroff told CBC Toronto that her eight-year-old son is a normal boy in many ways; he enjoys
playing with Legos, cooking and swimming.
However, he also has some behavioral issues and a serious learning disability.
She wasn�t terribly surprised when the principal of Holland Landing Public School called her
on the first day of school on September 5 to report that his behavior was �escalating.�
He likes to run to release energy, she says, and he�s fond of escaping to a frog pond
on the school grounds.
However, she was shocked by what happened next.
Following an argument with another student over who could use a computer, the principal
said he ran around and began climbing unspecified structures while holding a ruler.
The principal asked her to come pick her son up, but Kiroff couldn�t leave work immediately
and sent her adult daughter to pick him up instead.
By the time her daughter arrived, the boy was in the back of a police car.
He was brought to Southlake Regional Health Centre, where Kiroff was forced to wait for
15 to 20 minutes before she could even go inside and see her son.
Before being allowed to enter, she says that a woman working at the hospital came to tell
her that her son was out of control and that they had to restrain him and inject him with
a sedative.
Kiroff said that she tried to remain calm despite seething inside and asked if they
needed her consent for that.
She was told that parental consent was not needed if the hospital felt there was an extreme
safety concern.
She asked what he was doing that prompted them to take such an extreme measure and was
told that he was �kicking, screaming and yelling.� While these behaviors certainly
have all the markings of a temper tantrum and are not pleasant to witness, it�s hardly
an emergency situation worthy of needles and pharmaceuticals.
Her son later told her that hospital workers said they�d take his restraints off of him
one at a time if he calmed down, but they ended up injecting him instead.
He was kept for around an hour and a half in restraints before being released, and he
stumbled back to the car.
He was not allowed to go back to school until after his mother could meet with the principal
on September 15.
Kiroff said the incident has left her son emotionally scarred.
Could this happen to your child?
It�s hard to believe that a school or a hospital would allow such a young boy to be
forcibly injected with a powerful sedative, particularly when his behavior does not seem
much worse than an extreme temper tantrum.
The fact that it was done without parental consent only makes the situation even more
infuriating.
A statement by the hospital said: �No one wants to use restraints; it is a last measure
and is done only in dire situations deemed an �emergency.� In an �emergency�
situation, our concern for our patient determines how long a restraint is used.�
It�s too bad their concern for the patient didn�t extend to his long-term emotional
well-being.
For an eight-year-old-boy, being removed from school by police, brought to the hospital,
strapped to a gurney and injected with drugs is pretty much the worst possible first day
imaginable and something he is unlikely to ever forget.
The experience could well affect him for the rest of his life and cause him to act out
even more in the future.
It�s hard to imagine how any of the adults involved believed this was the best way to
handle the situation, and all parents who send their children to public schools need
to be aware that this could happen to their child without their consent.
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