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    ADHD: Backlash to the Backlash

    ADHD isn t just kids being kids.

    Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) had a star turn in the recent, of University of Virginia lacrosse star George Huguely. Lawyers for the defense aren t using the condition to explain away their client s presumed violent behavior; rather, they re saying that the woman he s accused of killing may have died from her own, personal battle with ADHD. Amidst their exculpatory evidence was the victim s prescription for Adderall, and they offered that she could have died from a mix of the drug (which is prescribed to treat ADHD) and alcohol. The medical examiner , calling the very low levels of Adderall in the victim s blood within therapeutic range. The cause of her death rather seems to have been a blunt force trauma to the head.

    The idea that ADHD drugs might be killing us and in ways that resemble being bashed in the head represents just one of several ominous storylines associated with the disorder. In recent years, we ve also heard speculation about , and if it is real, whether it s being . And then there are the drugs. A recent opinion piece in the New York Times by psychology professor L. Alan Sroufe argues at great length that attention-deficit drugs over the long term, a conclusion in dispute. The backlash against ADHD which often targets the drugs used to treat it, the people who have it, and the therapists and parents who make treatment decisions has again reached a fever pitch.

    Mental disorders can accompany ADHD/ADHD

    These backlashes against childhood developmental diagnoses seems to every few years, but lately . Part of the reason is a controversy over , a proposed update of the mental illness manual for health professionals. Professionals are over the , and some of those who have been labeled under the existing criteria may suddenly be facing limbo. Overlooked in the noise is the fact that the symptoms underlying the still-current diagnosis of ADHD compose a with limited but effective treatment options.

    Probably the most persistent myth about ADHD is that it has become a catchall label for rowdy children, and one that s a godsend for parents who are too lazy or incompetent to keep their kids under control. Yet there s no reason to think that anyone with diagnosed ADHD merely has , as some have suggested. Rather, the label refers to that go beyond developmental norms. In the last 20 years, I ve taught languages and science to thousands of people from kindergarten to college age, and those with ADHD shared a suite of that distinguished them from their peers in positive and negative ways, . The disorder often has the company of and , too.

    Ritalin

    In fact, the science suggests that ADHD is in the U.S. A of ADHD prevalence studies found no sufficient justification for assertions that ADHD is overdiagnosed, but the authors noted that public perception and news media coverage often don t reflect that. Furthermore, according to a 2012 publication from the U.S. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, the real prevalence of ADHD , and changes in diagnostic rates are consistent with changes in clinical guidelines. In spite of all this, psychologists like Sroufe have sought to reduce ADHD to simple problems in focusing and difficulty with concentration, one that we re too quick to use medications to address.

    Sroufe asks, Are these drugs really helping children? Citing a of the outcomes of using these drugs, Sroufe says that the medications have no benefits in the long term. But he s off the mark. That study of 600 children ages 7 to 9 compared the safety and effectiveness of medication alone, behavioral treatment alone, the two in combination, and routine community care, which was essentially the placebo. Children using medication had reduced ADHD symptoms compared to behavioral treatment or placebo after 14 months, and combined medication and behavioral interventions resulted in even greater improvement. Responses to the different therapies varied, emphasizing how personal any therapeutic effectiveness can be.

    Adderall

    After 14 months, the children continued on for six years having whatever care their families chose for them, including no interventions at all. At eight years, the benefits the researchers found at 14 months had faded, but 64% of the children taking medications at 14 months weren t taking them at 8 years. The authors also looked at safety of the drug and found that 4% of children discontinued for adverse effects such as loss of appetite and sleep problems but cited no more dire effects.

    Sroufe points out that there aren t any long-term randomized studies lasting longer than two years that examine the influence of ADHD meds on various outcomes such as academic performance. These studies randomize participants into either a real medication group or a placebo or dummy pill group, and the 2009 study Sroufe cites did randomize children for 14 months of the different interventions. Because these drugs are medically indicated for a diagnosis of ADHD and show benefits, however, an ethics committee is unlikely to approve a study that involves withholding them long-term. As child and adolescent psychiatrist noted in the Huffington Post in a response to Sroufe, you can t put a child on a placebo for his entire adolescence for the purpose of a study. Koplewicz also points out that many therapies, including insulin therapy for diabetes, haven t gone through long-term randomized studies for the same reason.

    Baby having a bath, by Georgios Jakobides.

    As the parent of a child with ADHD, I want to point out something else. In his early schooling, our nine-year-old son experienced daily and persistent public humiliation for his ADHD-related behaviors. In one class in particular, his teacher embarrassed him several times a day by sending him to sit alone in the public hallway as a sort of in the stocks punishment for his behavior. Parents and teachers would walk by and stare, and other students would softly taunt him. His motor tics and compulsive behaviors of handwashing to the point of cracked, bleeding hands, nonstop confessing of every worrying thought, and expressed self-repulsion worsened throughout that school year and then decreased abruptly when the year ended. Only then did we learn the truth about his experiences.

    Because we couldn t magically change his behavior, we decided to home-school him, opting to change his environment instead of medicating him. His neurologist told us that most ADHD medications would exacerbate his tics, and we were already home-schooling his brother. For us, this choice was preferable to leaving him that environment and attempting medications that might worsen his tics and OCD.

    Baby crying in bath. This does not cause ADHD.

    Not every family has that luxury, and not every child with ADHD has tics and OCD that may preclude medication. Because of impulsive and inattentive behaviors, people with ADHD usually find themselves as our son did. Medications can reduce the behaviors that bring on these blows, and thus improve a child s life. They may also help in other ways. According to the that Sroufe cites, ADHD symptoms may interfere with a child s ability to learn social skills, and the study results suggested that medication can reduce the symptoms sufficiently to allow children to acquire these skills.

    Do meds cure ADHD? No. They ease symptoms only when a person is taking them and, as noted, may allow for deeper improvements in behavior. And in environments that require a specific behavioral conformity, they also may offer some real protection. As the study Sroufe cites noted, children experienced a benefit from the medications at 14 months, months that can translate into a break from constant negative inputs. One thing Sroufe glosses over in mentioning that study is that behavioral therapy combined with medication produced even greater benefits. The research doesn t support not using medications, but it does support combination therapies as providing the best outcome.

    Some experts, like psychiatrist Peter Breggin, also , drive the current backlash by accusing parents of using these drugs for children who are just badly or lazily parented, whose parents have parent attention disorder. This idea that parents of children with ADHD turn willy nilly to drugs ignores the real complex and painful calculation of costs and benefits parents do–and the outcome is often not to choose medications. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, at least one-third of children diagnosed with ADHD at all (and that number could be ).

    Parents may be reluctant to turn to medications because of what they ve heard about the related risks and the seeming impossibility of teasing out what the risks really are. ADHD medications do carry risks, as all medical interventions do. A recent controversy about one ADHD medication, Focalin, associates it with , even though the Food and Drug Administration says clinical trials . Strattera, another ADHD medication, has been associated with a risk of suicidal thinking in the first months of therapy in an average of . But has found that early treatment can reduce the risk of suicide attempts among teenagers with ADHD. Other research finds that that drug therapy for children can help to down the road. Again, as with any therapy, effects vary from individual to individual, one probable reason these risks and benefits are so hard to pin down.

    Adderall

    The FDA also warns that people with could be at risk taking Focalin. A 2011 study, however, identified among children and young adults taking various ADHD medications. A just-released study in adults found that increasing drug dose of methylphenidate (e.g., Ritalin) was actually associated with of cardiovascular events, such as stroke or death. Finally, while it s true that these medications may stunt growth for the first year that a child is taking them, patients appear to a few years later. As with any intervention, considerations of the risks of the medication must be balanced against consideration of the benefits of using it.

    In his piece, Sroufe also encompasses parents in blame, saying that parents may be responsible for ADHD and that drugs get everyone, including parents, off the hook. He has a point: Research indicates that drugs combined with behavioral therapy may be the best route for ADHD treatment. But Sroufe asserts that early childhood environment is the real cause of ADHD. In addition to stressors like domestic violence, lack of social support, and frequent moves, he cites parental intrusiveness and gives the improbable-seeming examples of a parent who ridicules her three-year-old for poor problem-solving or suddenly grabs an infant for a plunge into a bath.

    Psychiatrist Breggin that the idea that American children are somehow genetically or even culturally predisposed has no scientific or common sense basis. Yet, as seven board members of the American Professional Society of ADHD and Related Disorders noted , research indicates that ADHD is highly heritable (about [PDF]) and environment is thus only part of the equation. Indeed, thanks to the of and to ADHD, researchers have that either lack an identified gene or carry mutations of it. These mice show behaviors that look like the rodent version of ADHD, without any history of parental intrusiveness.

    This latest backlash against ADHD relies on recycled diagnosis du jour tropes of subpar parenting and doped-up, misbehaving kids, but it makes no mention of the abundant science showing what really underlies and helps with this disorder. Worse, the perpetuation of myths about ADHD encourages the perception that children like mine, with their , might be diagnostic frauds. That s a potential harm that deserves a backlash of its own.

    Images:

    Adderall, by ; More adderall, by ; Ritalin, by ; Baby crying in bath – This does not cause ADHD, by ; Baby having a bath, by ; Baby vs. Bathwater, by ; Mental disorders can accompany ADHD/ADHD, by ; ADHD isn t just kids being kids. , by .

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    51 comments

    • Chary  •  Cedar Rapids, Iowa  •  3 mths ago
      All we hear about is the kids. The kids grow up. Aren't there any adults dealing with their ADHD?
      • Kirstin 3 mths ago
        You are right! And as an adult with ADD, I'll speak up now. ;-) Adult ADHD does not get enough attention. It exists, and nobody outgrows the condition. If you have it as a kid, you'll always have it. However, most of us learn how to get by in life, and since society expects us to be normal, we do a very good job of acting normal. But we're not; we need to manage our ADD too. It can be possible to do it without medication, and I'd generally consider that ideal. But we need to not deceive ourselves; if we actually do need medication, we should seek it.
      • Kirstin 3 mths ago
        I manage my adult ADD without medication; the key for me is having lots of external things keeping me on track. Smartphones are awesome for this.
      • QQ 2 mths ago
        Yes, tons of them. Some more successfully than others.
    • Fox Girl  •  Riverside, California  •  2 mths ago
      People with ADHD have functional differences in their brains, they tend to have faster electrical impulses then the average person and this causes them to be unable to focus or to be overstimulated. This is a real disorder that causes the sufferer to be socially riduculed and causes many other problems for their health. The person must show signs before the age of 7 for the diagnosis to be made, but they can suffer from it through the duration of their life. Why mental disorders are given this stigma is mind-boggling, you can not see the effects of Type 1 Diabetes but no one would ever assume to question whether someone actually had it, and yet this is how many treat those with a mental disorder.
      • John 2 mths ago
        My $0.02- Humans can't observe mental illness visually (though, we're really good at 'seeing' it when we want to see it), and since an unhealthy mind actually can spread to others, it is human nature to fear it, usually without even realizing it. It's the same reason (most) humans don't like to be around corpses. Your brain tries to protect you, even if your mind/conciousness/sould/whatever doesn't register a threat.
      • John 2 mths ago
        Also, never forget genuine, good ol' fashioned bigotry. Hatred, fear, selfishness, and ignorance do not die when defeated, they just come back a little more subtly next time.
      • Sam 2 mths ago
        It's very real. I have it. Thank Goodness for medication. Now I can live a normal, calm, focused life. I'm 50 and have taken medication for over 30 years. I feel sorry for children that don't get put on medication if they have ADD or ADHD. It's a horrible affliction.
    • Sam  •  2 mths ago
      I am an adult that has ADD....the hyperactivity was there when I was a child. Without my medication I am a completely different person. My medication helps me to focus, stay calm and to be logical all the time. Without my medication I am scattered, forgetful and can't even read a story and remember what I read. It's really a horrible brain problem.
      • Kashmir, coffeegod 2 mths ago
        Amen, brother! Before my diagnosis, I job hopped, raged and suffered depression. I've been at my present job for 5 years and still like what I'm doing. I seldom rage and my depression is mostly gone. I love Focalin.
    • Suzanne  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  2 mths ago
      If you think your child could be ADHD, then by all means take the child to a specialist, which means a child psychologist, a NEUROLOGIST and an internist. Do NOT just go to a pediatrician, who is not a specialist, and perhaps will dispense medication based on a teacher's complaint. PS A teacher is not a specialist, either.
      • Keri 2 mths ago
        PPS a pediatrician is a specialist. An internist is a specialist for adults, and a pediatrician is a specialist for children. It's true, look it up.
      • Kirstin 2 mths ago
        Well, a teacher *is* a specialist, but not a medical specialist. ;-)
    • OuterLimits  •  2 mths ago
      The part about the humiliation the author's son had to deal with in school rings a bell. I'm way old now, but I've had to deal for years with the repercussions of the negativity and rejection that I got from others when I was younger. Kids don't know they're different in any way, all they know is that other kids don't like them and are mean to them; their teachers can't stand them and can be mean to them; even their own siblings and parents really seem to hate them sometimes. It's a hard row for a little kid to hoe. And it can last a lifetime.
    • Jeffrey  •  2 mths ago
      As an adult diagnosed with ADHD and one who is prescribed Adderall, I am appalled that there is always some controversy where people question whether the disorder is real, or if the medication makes us drug addicts. To the critics out there, until you have actually walked in the shoes of a person who suffers with ADHD (which has made us victims of discrimination and bullying among other things), please do some research!
      • carolyn 2 mths ago
        Think often of the "walk a mile in my shoes", when I hear people talk down ADHD disorder with kids and adults, have mixed type myself, I would not wish this on anybody. It can be extremely frustrating especially when someone has the best of intentions to succeed, seems as though it has been for me at least always taking 1 step forward, 2 steps back, or stuck with lateral moves in the work-a-day world, I was not afforded the career choice option as my effects were that disabling, ended with a lot of maladaptive traits. I wish I had learned of my ADHD in my childhood NOT my 50'S. Both kids and adults often times suffer at great lengths inwardly, which more often than not just adds more fuel to the self-doubt. I would encourage parents to seek both behavorial and pharm therapy if that's what it will take for their child at an early age to believe in themself and that their happiness and success in life is Very Very important.
      • Kirstin 2 mths ago
        Hear, hear! ADHD is real, and it's sad that after all this time, it's still got a stigma. Only now it's the "oh, you've got a FAKE disorder" stigma.
      • A Yahoo! User 2 mths ago
        well it is real to the pharmaceutical companies and physiologists who make money off you. just like they invented restless leg syndrome in order to sell a low volume diabetic drug which the side effect was to stop active leg movement. its normal if you get distracted at work. work for the most part is boring. people do get bored. I was diagnosed with ADHD, but matter of fact is that people get bored. why do you think that they invented the internet and the TV for general population use
    • Ellen  •  Agoura Hills, California  •  2 mths ago
      Thank you very much for this article. I have an adult son with ADHD for whom Ritilan was the key to a a normal life (he is now a successful attorney, married and the father of two beautiful daughters) and a grandson whose ADHD is part of a constellation of autism spectrum disorders who also receives medication along with behavioral therapy. Three of my four children suffered from learning disabilities that can accompany ADHD and as to the question of whether there are adults with ADHD the answer is yes. It is not a problem that is outgrown, but adults may develop coping mechanisms that allow them to cope - though many still require medication to permit normal functioning. Medication is a critical component of an overall therapudic regime for a very real set of neuological disorders that manifest in behavior, among other things. All of my children had teachers who understood and worked with their disorders - and teachers who did not. I can tell you first hand about the damage the latter group can and did do to my son, who suffered acutely from childhood depression, developed acute panic disorder as an adult and who continues in therapy to this day. My grandson suffers daily assaults to his self esteem that add to the already heavy burden he already carries with extraordinary fortitude. And I cannot tell you the number of times that I was accused of bad parenting by others due to my son's behavior by others, including my own parents. They simply had no idea. The extent of people's willful ignorance even today is astonishing and heartbreaking. Please continue to publish articles like this one, and consider other neurological/behavior manifesting issues that tend to appear in clusters like you're son's comorbid OCD or Aspergers/PDD NOS, and BiPolar NOS. The more education the better - for the children and for their besieged parents.
    • Jennifer  •  3 mths ago
      Oh boy, this subject is definitely going to open up a big can of worms. I cannot speak for other families, since I don't know their situations or their stories. All I can do is speak for my own. My son was diagnosed with Asperger's and ADHD when he was 5 years old. His hyperactive, disruptive, sometimes bizarre and quirky behavior made it pretty much impossible for him to develop the social skills necessary to blend in with his peers. He had verbal "tics", where he would blurt out nonsensical words or phrases (though the doctors said he did not have Tourette's). This made him the subject of ridicule from his classmates, and he was constantly getting into trouble with his teachers. No amount of discipline at home or school seemed to have any effect on his behavior, and he was starting to ask questions like "Why do I act bad all the time?" After starting him on a mild dose of ADHD medication, the verbal tics diminished greatly, and he was able to calm down enough to be receptive to social skills training. He is now 14, and though he still has some symptoms of Asperger's, he has learned how to make friends, and he doesn't need the medication to control his behavior anymore. He is extremely bright, funny, makes excellent grades, and he's now a self-motivated kid who does his homework without having to be told. I consider his to be a success story on how ADHD medication can be used to improve a child's life.
    • tracie  •  Houston, Texas  •  2 mths ago
      Most people have this disorder as kids and it follows them into adult hood. Most parents will not accept that their kids have the disorder. Due to the backlash from others and labeling of the their kids. How in a parents mind is not seeking help for your child is better than being labeled? So when they are adults they have problems to the extreme.
    • Suzanne  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  2 mths ago
      To Kerrie, who thinks a pediatrician is a specialist in ADHD. You are incorrect. A pediatrician is a specialist in general health issues. An internist is a specialist in medications and interreactions of medications. Only a neurologist is a specialist trained to treat abberations of brain activity, which is the cause of ADHD. ADHD is not a behavioral problem, but a problem of brain activity which SOMETIMES may exhibit with behavioral problems. Don't believe it, look it up.
    • wolfpack  •  2 mths ago
      Anyone who has studied ADHD and read up on the research knows the combination of medication and treatment gives best results. Regarding medication alone, stimulants are your best bet. Like the article says, medication doesn't cure ADHD, but it definitely helps decrease symptoms. I still believe it is greatly overdiagnosed though. Anyone knowing the symptoms can go in, talk to a doctor, and come out with a diagnosis.
    • elisa  •  Scranton, Pennsylvania  •  2 mths ago
      There is not much discussion, for the public, about the executive function issues and impairments that often go along with ADHD. Retraining or repairing SOME of these, is a lot like telling a person with no arms, to grow some. Neuropsych testing shows direct correlations between memory, processing, and appropriate levels of medication. If it is possible, I would suggest standard testing for Sensory Processing Dysfunction and applications of occupational therapy to repair dysfunction AND to help kids and adults to know how their own motor is running and to make corrections and to be able to notice when symptoms are in their way. Having ADHD is a lot like being on a merry mixer carnival ride, hearing all of the sounds of the park whirling around and not being able to stop and to key in on what someone is saying. It's impossible! It isn't all about what things look-like on the outside and appearances of things.
    • Debyduz  •  Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  •  2 mths ago
      ADHD is real. ADHD meds don't work on rowdy kids they just make them rowdier. Most the meds are out of the system in 4 to 12 hours depending on the type of dosing. I have 18 years of experience with an extreme ADHD child. We did the first 6yrs. without meds. Everyone hated him treated him like an animal. The first day we tried the meds he sat and colored for hours. He could sit and listen to a whole book being read to him. We hurt him by not starting medication sooner. His life changed for the better. I have seen enough kids who have behavior problems and not ADHD the medication doesn't work on them.
    • Reality Chuck  •  2 mths ago
      How often do you see kids with HDTV with normal parents? It has become a catch all for self indulged parenting....Maybe the teacher's union can help with Master's degrees in Special Ed or drug companies with medical treatment, or.....when an industry and bureaucracy take over a issue you better watch out....
    • iamfree  •  2 mths ago
      It does exist I have suffered with this for 37 years wouldnt wish it on any one. The medication is horrible too as a person who took aderal and ritalin I have to say they often cause more problems than they solve.
    • Bob  •  2 mths ago
      theres no such thing. Its all bad parenting. Looking for a babysitter in PILL form , so the parents can do what they want. As older people, young adults, are just weak and lazy and need a 'mama's ' lil helper pill just to deal with life. Bi-polar....Right, your just crazy as a loon. Be an adult and deal with it. How did society function before this? They were more responsible. Thats all.
    • omnia mutantur nihil inte ...  •  2 mths ago
      whats with all the baby bath pics?
    • AJ  •  2 mths ago
      The problem isn't if ADHD is real or not, the problem is you do have some cases where the child really does have ADHD and you do have some cases where the parents are lazy. How do you tell the difference so you give the kid who really needs it the propers treatment and the kid who does not have it off drugs he does not need.
    • Kirstin  •  3 mths ago
      This was a beautiful article, and very true. I'm appalled that the defense in that murder case is trying to claim she died of a drug interaction rather than what the medical examiner found, which was blunt-force trauma to the head. It is possible to die of an overdose of stimulant medication, but the results do not look anything like blunt-force trauma. They've taken blame-the-victim to the next level here. I mean, we've got a history of abuse, a known attempt by the victim to break off the relationship, a death threat by the accused against the victim, and a medical examiner's finding that she died of blunt force trauma to the head. They're not attempting to claim there was another killer; they are not trying to claim he didn't hit her. They're just trying to claim the hit wasn't what killed her. In other words, they know he's gonna get convicted, and this is the best they can come up with. But it's preposterous. Ritalin doesn't bash in your head. It also doesn't have known interactions with alcohol; it's a stimulant, for cryin' out loud. It's not like mixing alcohol and oxycodone.
    • Shelly  •  Joshua, Texas  •  2 mths ago
      When my nephew was diagnoised in the 1970's they said at the time that ADHD is out grown by age 13. His "ADHD" was controlled by Ritalin. He couldn't take it in the summers. I think ADHD is a made up disease by people whom do not wish to deal with people with brains and high activity levels. Namely teachers, doctors whom get a drug company kickback, and over worked parents! Boys are more prone to it. Why? Boys are more active people! Take the kids to the park, get them OUTSIDE! With all the media hoopla of child predators you'd think there is one in every bush. There wasn't when my generation was young and ran all over the neighborhoods and there aren't now, they are the anomaly not the norm; But if your so worried about it, have an adult on guard duty, but get those kids off the TV, video, radio, phone, games...and get some fresh air.
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