Parents 'need lessons about ADHD' says doctors
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- Manatee_man
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Drugs should be avoided if possible and not given at all to the under-fives, the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) advises.
Teachers would also benefit from training to recognise and help children with this condition, it says.
Any primary school class is likely to have a child with ADHD, experts say.
Most of the estimated 365,000 children in Britain with ADHD receive no treatment at all.
But of those who do, most - about 37,000 - are prescribed stimulants like Ritalin (methylphenidate).
Children with ADHD have extreme difficulty sitting still, learning or concentrating.
At school they may find it hard to keep friends and suffer from bullying because of their behaviour. Looking after affected children can be exhausting for parents.
Parenting classes
The guidelines, which cover England, Wales and Northern Ireland, say parent training and education programmes should be offered as a first-line treatment for ADHD, both for pre-school and school age children.
The programmes teach parents how to create a structured home environment, encourage attentiveness and concentration, and manage misbehaviour better.
Drugs remain a first option for children over five and young people with severe ADHD, say the guidelines, but only as part of a comprehensive treatment plan that includes psychological and behavioural interventions.
Dr Tim Kendall, a consultant psychiatrist from Sheffield who is joint director of the National Collaborating Centre for Mental Health and helped draw up the guidelines, said: "There is an over-reliance on medicines.
"Quite commonly, people tend to revert to offering methylphenidate or atomoxetene. When they do that it's not always because there's a good balance of risk and benefits. It's because the child has got what appears to be ADHD and that's what's available.
"Its easier to prescribe a drug when other options like parent training programmes are not available."
Dr Kendall said it was important to diagnose ADHD correctly, rather than label all bad behaviour as ADHD. The symptoms of ADHD persist in all settings - both at school and at home - and cause real impairment.
Andrea Bilbow, chief executive of the ADHD charity ADDISS, welcomed the NICE recommendations but questioned how helpful the parent training programmes would be to parents.
"Parenting programmes are extremely important, but they need to be specific for ADHD.
"The ones that NICE are recommending were designed for the parents of children with conduct disorder, which is completely different from ADHD," she said.
The Scottish InterCollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN) is rewriting its guidelines on ADHD diagnosis and treatment and will take the NICE guidelines into consideration.
Their new guidance will come out in the first half of 2009.
ADHD symptoms
Easily distracted
Restlessness
Difficulty remaining seated when required
Difficulty awaiting turn in group situations
Difficulty following instructions
Difficulty in playing quietly
Often shift from one incomplete activity to another
Often interrupts others
Often engages in physically dangerous activities without considering the consequences
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ADHD
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Thanks for the post about ADHD
- 3 years ago
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ADHD
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adoregzus
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I agree with cantuc....there is a huge lack of parenting skills in society.
I'm waiting until the kids from the 90's who were dosed with Ritalin want to have families of their own and they have reproductive problems or some other health problems because of the drugs. How will the drug companies respond when an entire generation develops unforeseen complications of drugs given to them when their brains and bodies were still developing?
And we don't even want to add all the chemicals that have been dumped into our bodies....
- 3 years ago
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adoregzus
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cantucwearebrothers
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I think it goes beyond the issue of ADD or ADHD training. Straight across the board parental training is what's needed.
Kids are kids. They display most of the symptoms of these "disorders".
It boils down to money. It makes more money to prescribe more drugs. And that seems to be what the majority of parents want. They want a simple answer to a complex issue.
I see ADD and ADHD kids everyday. Believe me you can tell the ones that are taking medication. You can even tell when they quit and then return to it. Those that are medicated are a shell of themselves. These once bright, energetic, funny, articulate kids look like they are on auto pilot. They have no personality and look vulnerable and sad.
- 3 years ago
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cantucwearebrothers
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Gr8tDad
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right with you man. My wife accused me and my boy (3 years old) of having ADD.
I went to a Dr. and they said that I did not have "it".
My wife took my boy to a "paid by her" psychologist to get a professional opinion and I blocked it since my meeting with the shrink didn't go too well since she had "already met" my boy (illegal since I had not consented yet) and she said he was definitely ADD.
She lost our business, oh well.
My wife's next step was the county pre-school psychologist - after 45 minutes - "No special needs" was their diagnosis.
Whew... the steps women will take to not to have any one else but them spend time with their babies (my 4 y.o. and 6 y.o. kids) and the steps that they will take to not go to work where they belong.
- 3 years ago
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Gr8tDad
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regjoeschmo
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As the Us gives such psycho-tropic drugs to even infants the UK advises against overuse of the drugs..... Gotta love America!!
IT is proven our brains arent fully developed until our mid-twentes. How can we acurately diagnose a need for brain-chemical altering drugs at such a young age?? - 3 years ago
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regjoeschmo
