Posted on 03/10/2007 11:28:14 AM PST by Stoat
Have hyperactive kids been misdiagnosed with ADD?
The psychiatrist who identified attention deficit disorder - the condition blamed for the bad behaviour of hundreds of thousands of children - has admitted that many may not really be ill.
Dr Robert Spitzer said that up to 30 per cent of youngsters classified as suffering from disruptive and hyperactive conditions could have been misdiagnosed.
They may simply be showing perfectly normal signs of being happy or sad, he said.
'Many of these conditions might be normal reactions which are not really disorders,' he continued.
Dr Spitzer developed the bible of mental disorder classification in the 1970s and 1980s, which identified dozens of new conditions including ADD and obsessive-compulsive disorder.
Since then hundreds of thousands of children have been diagnosed with ADD, a behavioural disorder linked to poor attention span, and ADHD, which adds an element of hyperactivity.
The disorders describe disruptive and restless behaviour that results in children having difficulty focusing their attention on specific tasks. ADHD is most commonly noticed at the age of five, and as many as one in 30 British children is said to have it.
It is often treated with drugs, with Ritalin being the most commonly prescribed.
Some scientists say ADHD is a genetic disorder that does not disappear with adulthood.
But sceptics believe the diagnosis is a 'biobabble' label, which has evolved from a soundbite culture that is too prepared to medicalise anti-social human traits.
Dr Spitzer, professor of psychiatry at Columbia University in New York, now says the classification led to many people being diagnosed as medically disordered when their mood swings and behaviour were simply normal feelings of happiness and sadness.
In a BBC2 documentary series The Trap, which begins on Sunday, he says that between 20 and 30 per cent of mental disorder diagnoses may be incorrect.
His admission comes as figures show that the amount spent by the Health Service on drugs to treat ADHD and similar disorders in children trebled to £12 million in just five years, from 1999-2003.
Almost 400,000 British children aged between five and 19 are believed to be on the drugs - despite doctors' fears about side-effects.
That is the equivalent of every child in Britain each taking more than four doses of the drugs every year.
NHS guidelines recommend drug treatment for the most severely affected, although there have been reports of cardiovascular disorders, hallucinations and even suicidal thoughts.
There have been at least nine deaths reported to the UK's Medicinesand Healthcare products Regulatory Agency since Ritalin became available in the early 1990s.
But Dr Spitzer, who chaired the taskforce that compiled the international Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, said he is less concerned by wrong diagnoses and possible side-effects from drugs, than failing to prescribe them where needed.
'By and large the treatments for these disorders don't have serious side effects,' he told the Times Educational Supplement.
'I mean, some do, but they're not that serious, whereas the failure to treat can often be very hard on the child and on the family.'
He acknowledged that some parents put pressure on doctors to diagnose ADHD and obsessive-compulsive disorder, and prescribe drugs.
'We don't know to what extent that's been happening inappropriately,' he added.
Ian Graham, headmaster of Slindon College, an independent boys' boarding school near Arundel, West Sussex, has 20 out of 100 pupils diagnosed with attention deficit disorder and a few more with related diagnoses such as oppositional-defiant disorder.
About 17 of the boys are prescribed drugs including Ritalin, while the remainder have their condition controlled through diets that exclude chocolate, sweets or gluten.
The school also employs therapy techniques, and the old-fashioned tactic of getting pupils to run off their energy in outdoor activities.
Mr Graham said: 'I've never met a parent who is happy with the medication. They would all prefer not to use them, but to a man and woman, they all say they can't believe the change in their sons' ability to concentrate in lessons.'
Just another label for the 'professional educators' to use for categorization purposes. Zee leetle vons must remain unter our control! Zey must be medicated!
And don't forget the kids that were continually being sent to the principal's office, or to stand in a corner :)
All children are home-schooled from the beginning. When a parent brings a 2, 3, or 4 year old to the doctor with attentional concerns, the parent is the concerned 'teacher' not the public schools.
Your link does not say what she was being treated for and what medications were used. Any ideas?
You better take that back!
I got NO family in common with Michael Moore!
At some point, SOME of us have a common grandma.
;^)
"It didn't exist in my large parochial school classes of the 1950s and 60s."
Oh it existed all right.
Our daughter, who has ADHD was born not breathing and blue. Her APGAR scores were 0. Her brain was without oxygen for a period of time. She did start breathing and had no symptoms until she was supposed to be reading.
In 2nd grade she was in remedial reading and in danger of being placed in special education classes because she was unable to meet minimal reading required for her grade.
We suspected ADD in spite of the fact her behavior was exemplary. One month after she began medication, her reading skills were two years ahead of her age. She continued medication and finished HS with honors and was inducted into the honor society. We never needed to remind her to take her med's. She knew the difference had too dramatic an effect. In fact, her friends and teachers never understood how profoundly she is affected by ADD until they experience being around her on a day she does forget.
Was it Brain damage, hereditary or some other cause? Who knows. Is it real and does medication work? Absolutely.
"I cannot wait to read the clueless ignorance that this thread will attract of folks who think this article is proof ADD doesn't exist and doesn't devastate many who suffer from it."
Haven't been disappointed, have you?
An issue you and I are in complete agreement on.
typos:
...an airplane with 100 passengers would have 30 die before their destination.
and
..this is not only incompetence, this is culpable negligence.
sorry to the spelling nazis.
parents of kids who are legitimately diagnosed and medicated for ADD cannot help but reel from the sheer ignorance on these threads.
the point is that many doc's are over eager to pills as the answer and dont consider environment.
its common throughout our society to look for quick easy fixes.
"parents of kids who are legitimately diagnosed and medicated for ADD cannot help but reel from the sheer ignorance on these threads."
Indeed.
So far it appears that 1) I did not spank my daughter enough; 2) I'm a bad parent; 3) Our school system FORCED us to put her on drugs; 4) My daughter's teachers just wanted a roomful of drugged children; 5) Our pediatrician was in cahoots with the drug companies; (Strange thing that those same teachers and doctors never demanded that my son take medications); 6) My daughter (5'7", 107 pounds, 12 high school letters for running) would have been thinner, more active, and better behaved if she had been homeschooled; and 7) There were no people with ADD in the 1960s or none took Ritalin, which means I must not actually have existed back when I was supposed to have been in 3rd through 7th grades.
I'm sure there are kids out there with 'real' problems, just as I'm sure that the majority of ADD/ADHD etc diagnoses is just cop-outs for bad or absent parenting or teacher who fail to realize that children are children, not machines.
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