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Survey: 7 percent of elementary school children diagnosed with ADHD (Stupid Kid Alert)
Atlanta Journal Constitution | 5-22-02 | M.A.J. McKENNA

Posted on 05/22/2002 6:19:33 AM PDT by Lance Romance

Survey: 7 percent of elementary school children diagnosed with ADHD

By M.A.J. McKENNA
Atlanta Journal-Constitution Staff Writer

Nearly 7 percent of elementary-age children in the United States -- more than 1.6 million kids -- have been diagnosed with attention-deficit disorder, according to the first nationwide survey of the problem.

The numbers are higher than expected, the Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Tuesday.

"The American Academy of Pediatrics has estimated an overall rate of 3 to 5 percent of children," said Patricia Pastor, a health statistician and the study's lead author. Regional studies have shown from 4 percent to 12 percent of kids' having ADD. The CDC study also found that 7.7 percent of children -- 1.8 million -- have learning disabilities.

The two disorders overlap: 2.6 million children have either ADD or a learning disability or both. Overall, 3.3 percent of all children in that age group have ADD, 4.2 percent have learning disabilities, and 3.5 percent have both conditions, the agency said. The nationwide survey of 78,041 households was conducted for the CDC by the U.S. Census Bureau in 1997 and 1998. It asked parents if children aged 6-11 in their household had ever been diagnosed with ADD by a doctor or other health care professional, or been diagnosed with a learning disability by a health care professional or school official.

Among the findings:

D ADD is at least twice as common in boys as in girls; learning disabilities are equally common in both genders.

D White children are more likely than blacks or Hispanics to be diagnosed with ADD.

The results of the study suggest that access to health care may have a much greater influence on diagnosis than had been realized, Pastor said. Children whose families had private insurance or Medicaid and could consult a health professional were more likely to be diagnosed with ADD than those without insurance.

The study did not break down the results by state or city.

Georgia has had a reputation as a hotbed for ADD. In 1994, it was ranked No. 1 in the country for cumulative consumption of methylphenidate, an anti-ADD stimulant marketed as Ritalin. By last year, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration, the state was 17th in methylphenidate use.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: educationnews
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To: Lance Romance
If your problem (and attitude) are with the study, then you could have used 'stupid study alert' instead of maligning the kids! I'm the mother of a 17 year-old boy with ADD. He is a very intelligent and interesting kid but has almost no attention span and a lot of problems in school and elsewhere as a result.

And for all the anti-Ritalin busybodies who think they have all the answers, no, he isn't on medication. It's a problem we deal with the best we can, but it does have a major impact on the family life.

21 posted on 05/22/2002 7:35:35 AM PDT by Trust but Verify
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Comment #22 Removed by Moderator

To: gunnedah
Really. And where do you get this information from, Einstein? Is it based in fact or just your 'learned' opinion?
23 posted on 05/22/2002 7:39:34 AM PDT by Trust but Verify
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To: VRWC_minion
If it hasn't occurred to you that there may not be such a thing as ADD, maybe you are not as clever as you think you are.

Retired MD

24 posted on 05/22/2002 7:41:57 AM PDT by B. A. Conservative
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To: GirlyGirl
In most cases, it is quite the opposite. These kids, including my son, are very intelligent. But schools don't want to accept that some children learn in different ways and have tried to forced a square peg into a round hole.
25 posted on 05/22/2002 7:42:09 AM PDT by Trust but Verify
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To: B. A. Conservative
There may or may not be such a thing, but then I live with a child who has attentional problems and has since he was in 1st grade. So whatever you want to call it, it is a problem.
26 posted on 05/22/2002 7:43:38 AM PDT by Trust but Verify
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Comment #27 Removed by Moderator

To: Trust but Verify
I really feel for you, and admire your efforts to persevere. As I said in an earlier post, I have no doubts that some children have this disorder.

My own views on ADD kids are clouded by experiences with two brothers in my son's Cub Scout pack. They are "special cases" who came to us with many excuses and instructions from their mother. The boys' father works out of town, and has face-to-face involvement with the boys on the weekends.

When their mother is present, the boys are holy terrors, and she screeches at them constantly. When the mother is occupied away from the boys, and the leader exerts gentle pressure and non-tolerance for continual disruptions, suddenly their behavior improves dramatically.

No, I'm not a doctor. But my layman's diagnosis is that they need more discipline, and their problems are behavioral, and not medical.

28 posted on 05/22/2002 7:48:31 AM PDT by TontoKowalski
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Comment #29 Removed by Moderator

To: VRWC_minion;Lance Romance;all
As an adult with ADD my IQ is a bit over the stupid range and as a CPA my performance is a tad above average.

I am also an adult with ADD, and I can assure all FReepers I am extremely intelligent. My 26 year-old son also has ADD and graduated maxima cum laude from a very good university with a degree in finance. After taking just one accounting class in college, scored a 366 out of 400 on the CPA exam, already has his CFP, and will have his MBA by next spring. And, by the way, was recently a speaker at a very large national financial planning conference a month or so ago.

Those people who only have ADD are generally very intelligent and once they set thier mind on a goal, they never, ever quit. We also have a great sense of humor' and we also tend to not be very tolerant with people suffering from terminatal stupidity.

30 posted on 05/22/2002 7:49:04 AM PDT by connectthedots
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To: VRWC_minion
ADD and ADHD are misdiagnosed to a high degree. In fact, a lot of medical authorities are questioning the legitmacy of this 'illness' entirely. Except for the drug companies and the doctors and schools that are in their sway, there is a LOT of evidence that ADD and ADHD are not illnesses at all, but rather a 'catch-all' (and convenient) disease with which to avoid the hard work of taming unruly and hyperactive children. I suggest you take a look at the following book.

http://www.outlookcities.com/children/

http://www.thomasarmstrong.com/articles/add_myth.htm

31 posted on 05/22/2002 7:52:44 AM PDT by fogarty
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To: Lance Romance
The use of Ritalin has drawn attention to quite a few factors: 1) Attention Deficit Disorder usually occurs when one of the biological parents was a drug addict when the child was conceived. My first question to the parents who have a child on Ritalin would be, "Which of you was the addict?" 2) When children ingest Ritalin over a number of years, their brains start to shrink at about the age of 20. 3) More boys than girls are on Ritalin, because teachers are not allowed to insist on well-mannered behavior in our classrooms. Therefore, the boys are drugged so that they will act more like docile girls. 4) When a student is diagnosed as having ADD, the parents are eligible to receive disability payments for the child. 5)What have I forgotten?
32 posted on 05/22/2002 7:53:24 AM PDT by abclily
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To: TontoKowalski
You nailed it Tonto! 75% of these cases are simple situations of a hysterical mother raising hysterical kids. I see it every day.

Hell, just go to a walmart and watch.

33 posted on 05/22/2002 7:54:19 AM PDT by Cold Heat
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To: Movemout
Your kid doesn't have ADD, so the subject of this article doesn't really apply to your kid. Short-term memory isn't the same as an inability to pay attention or the ability to sit still for long periods of time.

If I were going through school these days (thank God I'm not), I would certainly have been diagnosed as an ADD kid: I was diagnosed as being hyperactive by the Univeristy of Washington when I was three years old. I somehow made it through school anyway (barely).

I thought the added subtitle was funny.

Tuor

34 posted on 05/22/2002 7:58:00 AM PDT by Tuor
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To: B. A. Conservative
If it hasn't occurred to you that there may not be such a thing as ADD, maybe you are not as clever as you think you are.

Actually yes I did. I initially thought it was all total bull $hit. I was convinced by my wife to have my daughter tested for learning disabilities when she was in second grade. Her reading was about a year behind the next slowest student and the special help she was getting all year wasn't working

One of the things they tested for was ADD using those subjective tests they give the teachers, parents etc. The interesting thing is the classroom teacher who filled it out thought the ADD was a waste of time but completed the questionaires anyways. The results of the scaling was that my daughter tested 3 standard deviations above the mean.

Even so, I was still unconvinced and still thought this was all a bunck of mumbo jumbo BS. But I relented and went along with a trail dosage of ritalin to see what happened. I felt that a few weeks to a month shouldn't hurt much and that I owed it to my daughter to put aside my bias and see what happened.

Here is what happened; In three weeks she went from being a year behind the next slowest student to being the top reader in the class. She is now 15 and a sophomoe in school, she mantains honors while she keeps a full schedule of extra-currucilar activities that include acting in 3 to 4 plays per year, singing in 3 choruses and cheerleading.

Her recent doctor suggested she try and see what would happen if she went off medication and my daughter was livid with her doctor. She knows by experience from the times she forgets her medication how hard school is and wasn't about to try and screw up her successful track record. She not only convinced her DR to drop the subject her DR prescribed some longer acting drugs.

As far as your medical degree and ability to diagnose, I personally hold MD's in low regard. You folks were taught that young children could not get asthma. This widely held belief among DR's could have caused th death of one of my children if it were not for my independent research.

36 posted on 05/22/2002 8:00:34 AM PDT by VRWC_minion
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To: kcrack
ADD is at least twice as common in boys as in girls; learning disabilities are equally common in both genders.

Except maybe in very extreme cases, I don't consider this to be a disease at all. Kid's *aren't supposed* to be stuck in school all day when they're that young. Kids are active and need to be allowed to run around *alot*.

I think we send kids to school while they are way too young. I honestly don't think they should be attending formal classes until they are at least seven years old. Until then, they should play and enjoy life while they can, while having some lessons and especially some chores to do, just not *too* many. Eventually, yes, they will need to be put into formal classroom instruction, but even then they should have lots of play time.

I just don't understand why people are suprised that boys don't take well to being cooped up all day long. Get them away from computers, video games, and classrooms, and onto the playgrounds and fields.

Tuor

37 posted on 05/22/2002 8:05:56 AM PDT by Tuor
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To: Orangedog;VRWC_minion
Funny, they will put adults in jail for using drugs anf threaten to take away their kids if they don't give them grugs. Hmmmmmmm.

I asked my doctor why ADD medications are catergorized as a Class-B narcotic. He told me that thr 60 mg of Adderall I take each day is enough to keep 5-10 'normal people' wired all day. The brain chemistry of people with ADD is different than those who do not have ADD. The fact that people with ADD are not 'wired' is evidence that ADD does indeed exist.

Most people do not realize that there are some advantages to having ADD, when not complicated by other factors. People with ADD are excelent performers in situations requiring quick thinking and analyzing a great deal of information immediately and making a good decision in a hurry. Good careers for people with ADD are sales, emergency service work such as firefighters, police, emergency medical type careers, pilots, trial lawyers, and really most careers that offer variety in work activities.

If you are in a situation where everyone is running around with their heads cut off, the calm guy in the middle of the storm who comes up with a solution to the situation could very well have ADD. Something else that people don't realize about those of us who have ADD is that we are able to 'hyperfocus' in situations where there is a need or an interest. The distraction part of ADD can also be a plus because we notice things going on around us that may be very important which escape the attention of 'normal people'.

Athletes who seem to perform extremely well on a consistent basis, especially in imortant events may very well have ADD. When others 'tighten up' in big games or in front of large noisy crowds, an ADDer would likely not even notice it because they are so focused.

And Orangedog, just for your information; When a person with ADD decides to take on a task or challenge, you can normally take it to the bank that they will accomplish that goal, because they will never, ever give up. That's good if they are on your side, but if you go against them, you will be in for the battle of your life. All you have to do to confirm this is to look at the posts of those with ADD on this thread who will not let misinformed uneducated idiots like you get away with your stereotypical garbage about ADD.

BTW, ADDers do not generally use a lot of 'tact', especially in the face of stupidity. Honest ignorance about ADD is O.K., because ignorance is curable through education, but obstinent stupidity is terminate and deserves no mercy.

You would be surprised at the number of Freepers that have ADD. Some of them are amonst the most popular, articulate, and VERY FUNNY posters on FR. I would even speculate that ADD amongst FReepers would be noticably higher than the general population. A reason for this possibility is that people with ADD tend to become really involved in those activities they choose. Many of the careers that Freepers have tend to attract thos with ADD. Lets face it, Freepers and ADDers are not nearly as likely to have careers where they punch a clock every day or have routine, boring jobs.

38 posted on 05/22/2002 8:37:33 AM PDT by connectthedots
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To: connectthedots
Ooooh Ooooh. Sign me up for ADD.
39 posted on 05/22/2002 8:44:53 AM PDT by Lance Romance
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To: *education News
Check the Bump List folders for articles related to and descriptions of the above topic(s) or for other topics of interest.
40 posted on 05/22/2002 9:02:34 AM PDT by Free the USA
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