ADHD, Drugs, and If You Knew Then…

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If you had it to do over again, would you still give ADHD drugs to your child? About half of parents (52 percent) felt strongly that they would, according to a July 2010 survey of the parents of almost a thousand kids by Consumer Reports Health. About half (44 percent) strongly wished that there was another way to help their child besides the medication.

More parents were highly satisfied with the medication (41 percent) than felt strongly that they were concerned by the side effects of the medication (32 percent).But clearly this is a balancing act between benefits and costs.

What other strategies did parents report helped a lot?

  • Changing schools to one better suited to help with ADHD (45 percent)
  • Giving one instruction at a time (39 percent)
  • Using a tutor or learning specialist (37 percent)
  • Providing structure and schedules (35 percent)
  • And seven other strategies, from changing class seats to taking fish-oil pills (12 to 27 percent)

An important key to managing ADHD is to set specific, measurable goals at home and at school. Then, when you try an intervention you can monitor progress, evaluate the treatment, and readjust the plan.

If you are considering ADHD medications, read this important brief post about long-term success and permanent side effects.

To me, the role of medications is not to “solve” ADHD, but rather one possible way to provide a window of relief and focus for a year or two in which to pursue lifestyle changes that can make a long-term difference. These might include changes in nutrition, in physical activity, in sleep, in chemical exposures, in peer groups, in study strategies, in parenting strategies, and in school environments.

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Comments

Anonymous's picture

ADHD meds and safety

5
ADHD meds or letting your child get hit by a car because he runs into traffic without looking. It was a no-brainer for us. We had to medicate him at age 4 because we feared he wouldn't live to be 5.
Anonymous's picture

Adult who took Ritalin as a child

I have a very strong opinion on this subject. I took Ritalin from the 1st grade until 7th grade. In the 7th grade the medication no longer provided the same result so they took me off. We tried a few others but the side effects were to great. During those 7 years I never had to study. My comprehension was so great as a result of the meds. So when I came off medication for my "ADHD" I did not know how to study, or cope with this "illness" I struggled great through the rest of my education. I believe ADHD is a learning disorder (I really prefer difference) and should be handled as such. We can see as adults that everyone learns differently, and I think that our education system needs to have programs in place that identify how a child learns and establish there classrooms accordingly. We also need to look at the role of nutrition and sleep in a child's classroom behavior.
Anonymous's picture

I am a massage therapist and

I am a massage therapist and reflexologist. I believe very strongly in the body's innate ability to heal and I also believe very strongly in working with lifestyle and "natural" treatments as a first line of defense and change. I am personally the kind of person who will try to treat a headache with reflexology and cold compresses before taking an excedrin. That being said, as someone who wasn't diagnosed until the age of 31, there is nothing that I wish more than that I'd been diagnosed and treated earlier. Medication has changed my life - it has literally changed the way I feel and experience time. From there, changing habits has been difficult but far from insurmountable. If my own children (I have four) exhibit signs of ADHD I wouldn't hesitate to consider medication as therapy for them. All of the things that can help to alleviate ADHD symptoms (increased exercise, protein intake, reduction in artificial colorings/flavorings, etc.) have been - in my experience - nearly unattainable because of my inability to make a plan and consistently follow through. Once beginning medication, however, this is no longer the case.