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By
MedHelp
It's
a dilemma no parent wants to face: Put your child on daily medication
or abstain and risk missing out on essential treatment that can
control your child's symptoms.
What helps any parent in this predicament is feeling confident your child has received the correct diagnosis for ADD/ADHD (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder). Yet a 2003 study by the United States Centers for Disease Control (CDC) reported wide variations in the rate of ADHD diagnosis and use of ADHD medication by state, suggesting a lack of uniform testing, diagnosis and treatment standards.
But
you can help prevent unnecessary worry and medications by knowing how
to avoid these five ADD/ADHD misdiagnosis mistakes.
Mistake
#1: Your child
only shows symptoms at home.
To
receive an official ADHD diagnosis, ADHD symptoms must be present in at least two
settings such as home and school. If
your child is only acting out at home, take a closer look at your
home situation. Do you need to be stricter in your discipline? Did
your child recent experience a big life change such as a new school
or new sibling that could be causing this behavior?
If
the problems are only present at school, work with your child's
teacher to figure out what's going on. Perhaps your child needs to
be more challenged in the classroom, or maybe he has a learning
problem like dyslexia.
Your child's physician is also a good resource and can check for
physical problems that might explain your child's behavior, such as hearing problems.
Mistake
#2: Another
parent gave you a few Ritalin to see if it improved your child's
symptoms and it worked.
Gauging
your child's response to an ADHD "drug trial" is not an
accurate way to diagnose ADHD. Often children and adults without ADHD will experience a similar response to the ADHD medication as do those who actually do have
the condition.
A
proper ADHD diagnosis should be founded in evaluating a child's
behavior in several settings (home, school, socially) over a period
of time (at least six months).
Mistake
#3: Your
over-achieving teenager claims she suddenly developed ADHD.
This
may be hard to hear, but your child may be lying to you. Sadly, abuse
of ADHD drugs like Ritalin and Adderall is on the rise. While
there are those who abuse these prescription
drugs just to get high, many others use them to gain a competitive
edge in response to increasing academic pressure, or simply to
compensate for lack of studying. ADHD drugs like Ritalin and Adderall
can help kids stay focused and alert while studying — replacing
caffeine as the new aid for last-minute cramming.
Savvy
of the common ADHD symptoms, many teens know exactly what to say to
extract a prescription from a gullible or careless doctor. Worse,
some parents pressure their children to take ADHD drugs in hopes of
boosting their child's grades.
Remember,
signs of childhood ADHD usually appear before age seven.
Mistake #4: Your
child's behavior started right after a traumatic event such as you
and your spouse getting separated.
If
the first signs of trouble sprouted only after you and your spouse
separated, a more likely explanation for his behavior is stress or
anxiety caused by this event. Significant changes to your child's
life, such as divorce or moving can cause emotional disturbances that
lead your child to act out.
Talk
to you child about what's going on and work with your pediatrician
or a counselor if you need more help.
Mistake #5: Your
child displays a few of the symptoms of ADHD but so do many of the
kids in his class.
To be
correctly diagnosed with ADHD, a child must show at least six symptoms
of attention problems or six signs of impulsivity and they must be more
severe than in other kids of the same age. And these behaviors must
occur in and negatively affect at least two areas of your child's
life, such as day-care and home.
(Reference:
Mental Health in the United States: Prevalence of Diagnosis and
Medication Treatment for Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder -
United States, 2003. MMWR Weekly, September 2, 2005 /
54(34);842-847.)