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General Parenting
What to do when my daughter hits me
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<blockquote data-quote="buddy" data-source="post: 517209" data-attributes="member: 12886"><p>Have you noticed it is increasing since the Prozac??????????? SSRI's can do this to some of our difficult child's. (or certain of them depending on the kiddo) My son's impulsive hitting went way down off the paxil he was on....he now still hits but it is when he is extreme anxiety and especially when it is fear based. NOT nearly as frequent anymore. There are many kids here who stopped the medications and if they were aggressive before of course it does not go away but it at least goes way down. </p><p></p><p>My frustration is that all they know is how it feels and no matter if the medications caused the increase, it starts a habit so can be a little hard to break (other kids just stopped, but like for TeDo's son, he was not aggressive much to begin with so off of it, he just didn't do it). </p><p></p><p>Something to think about.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="buddy, post: 517209, member: 12886"] Have you noticed it is increasing since the Prozac??????????? SSRI's can do this to some of our difficult child's. (or certain of them depending on the kiddo) My son's impulsive hitting went way down off the paxil he was on....he now still hits but it is when he is extreme anxiety and especially when it is fear based. NOT nearly as frequent anymore. There are many kids here who stopped the medications and if they were aggressive before of course it does not go away but it at least goes way down. My frustration is that all they know is how it feels and no matter if the medications caused the increase, it starts a habit so can be a little hard to break (other kids just stopped, but like for TeDo's son, he was not aggressive much to begin with so off of it, he just didn't do it). Something to think about. [/QUOTE]
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