Tag Archives: ADHD

New guidelines on ADHD

New guidelines for ADHD treatment emphasize the need for ongoing medical care and coordination within the school and community. (Courtesy Spectrum Health Beat)

By Serena Gordon, HealthDay


Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder is in the news a lot and now newer research has prompted a leading pediatricians’ group to update its guidelines for diagnosing and treating the disorder for the first time since 2011.


Dr. Mark Wolraich, lead author of the guidelines, noted that there weren’t any dramatic differences between these and previous guidelines.


But, he said, these latest updates keep the American Academy of Pediatrics guidelines in sync with the same diagnostic and treatment criteria used by child and adolescent psychiatrists.


ADHD “is not a ‘new’ diagnosis. It’s a real diagnosis that needs treatment,” Wolraich said.


“There are two forms of treatment effective for ADHD: medications, especially stimulant medications, and behavioral treatments. Neither treatment is curative,” he said, but they can help manage the symptoms.


Wolraich is an emeritus professor at the University of Oklahoma, in Oklahoma City.


More than 9% of U.S. children between the ages of 2 and 17 have been diagnosed with ADHD, according to the guideline authors.


Boys are more than twice as likely as girls to be diagnosed with the disorder. Kids with ADHD often have symptoms of another mental disorder—such as depression or anxiety—and they may also have learning and language problems.

Updates to the guidelines include:

  • Changing the age at which symptoms need to have first started. Previously, symptoms needed to begin before age 7. That’s now been raised to age 12.
  • In patients older than 17, fewer problem behaviors are needed to make an ADHD diagnosis. Wolraich said as children get older, symptoms can change and behaviors such as hyperactivity usually diminish.
  • Emphasizing the need to rule out other causes of ADHD-like symptoms and to identify other conditions that may occur with ADHD, such as depression, anxiety, substance use, autism or trauma.
  • Highlighting the need for ongoing medical care and coordination within the school and community.
  • Recommending parent training in behavior management as a first-line treatment for preschoolers. Wolraich said behavior modification is an effective treatment that generally has two phases of treatment. The positive phase rewards a child for appropriate behavior—and the reward may just be praising, such as, “Johnny, I like the way you’re sitting in your chair.” The second phase includes consequences, such as “time-out.” But, he said, if you don’t have the positive side of treatment, time-out isn’t as helpful.

While the guidelines didn’t specifically recommend behavior management training for teachers and parents in high school students with ADHD, they noted that studies have found some value in this treatment for older kids.


Dr. Victor Fornari, vice chair of child and adolescent psychiatry at Zucker Hillside Hospital in Glen Oaks, N.Y., said it’s important for pediatricians to be familiar with the up-to-date guidelines, because “as many as 10% of all kids meet the criteria for ADHD and many children with mild to moderate symptoms can be evaluated and treated by their pediatrician.”


Fornari said if treatment doesn’t go smoothly or there are ongoing behavior problems or other mental health concerns, pediatricians can often collaborate with a child and adolescent psychiatrist to get additional guidance.


Both Wolraich and Fornari said pediatricians play a vital role in ADHD diagnosis and treatment because they already have an established relationship with the child and family.


“People may not fully appreciate that ADHD that’s untreated can lead to adverse outcomes. Failing to treat can lead to academic and conduct disturbances, and earlier substance use disorders. Children who are identified earlier and treated are more successful,” Fornari said.


The new guidelines were published online recently in the journal Pediatrics.


Reprinted with permission from Spectrum Health Beat.



ADHD Treatment Beyond Medication

Courtesy of Cherry Health

By Dr. Nancy A. Pattison, FAAP, Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist, Heart of the City Pediatrics and Westside Health Center

 

Parents need to understand the behaviors they see are not on purpose. Their kids aren’t acting “bad” on purpose. All kids are born “people pleasers” and are trying to do the best they can. When they are not acting the way you think is healthy, please find out why they are acting this way and what you can do to help them. A good child therapist can help if you need to change how you parent your child in order to get the best out of them. Without being rude, I would ask you to consider how dogs are taught to not potty in the house. You train them with kindness and attention to let you know when they need to go outside. The same goes for kids in many ways. As kids don’t come with an instruction manual at birth, getting “training” advice may be helpful! Here are some ways to keep your child healthy:

  • Make sure they get 8-10 hours of good sleep (if your child snores talk to their primary care doctor and get that fixed!).
  • Eat food that is pulled off a tree, off a bush or out of the ground – not out of a box. Processed foods (food out of a box like cereal and mac and cheese) are bad for the brain.
  • Eat good protein (eggs, nuts, beans, chicken, turkey and some fish) and good fat.
  • Avoid fast food.
  • Help them go out and play in a green space (and away from video games and TV).

If medication is prescribed, know that it will work better if you do all of these things listed! Enjoy your talented, think outside the box, creative child!

 

Reprinted with permission from Cherry Health.