Dear CAAers,
I recently came across a thread with a posted sign about parenting and Ritalin. I find this some how disturbing. Ritalin is used to treat Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder. ADD is not a matter of parenting, not is Ritalin a substitute for good parenting. I am offended by that post because I was on Ritalin, I have ADD, and my parents did a lot to parent my brother and I well.
At least three out of for members of my immediate family have ADD. I am a medicated ADDer. My mother was a speech and language pathology major, which while off the exact topic, did make her more aware of such things and how they were treated. This was helpful when she did research on ADD for my brother and I.
ADD involves a biochemical difference in the brain. Also, according to a show on PBS a couple of years ago, there is a small part of the brain which acts as a co-processor that is smaller in people with ADD. The greatest problem with ADD is the inability to direct attention as desired for periods of time. As a young ADD child, I struggled with the ability to concentrate enough to do what I genuinely wanted to do. The apparent difficulty staying on task may be caused by other things as well.
Inadequate parenting can be a problem. If a child is never told not to do something or never has boundaries enforce, how can a child know? If this is then mistaken for ADD or AHD, then a child could be put on medication without needing it. This is why diagnosis of it must be carefully done. Another problem is when parents use ADD as an excuse to allow their child to do whatever he wants. This keeps the ADD child from learning how to behave properly. Both of these reflect poorly on those where parenting is adequate and ADD is real. Again, I have ADD and there have been children acting in waiting rooms in ways that my mother (and a darn fine one she is) would never have simply tolerated in my brother or I. The excuse sometimes is that “oh, you have to excuse him. He has ADD. Bull! Bad parenting is bad parenting. ADD is ADD. It is important to both teach an ADD child as well as keeping in mind the struggles that the child may have and how to help the child cope to work around them.
Medicine cannot simply fix ADD, or a least should not be used for that. If there is not real ADD, then a child should not be medicated for it. Medicine should be used to bring the ADD down to a manageable level. At this point it should be easier for a person with ADD to do enough to develop coping skills that will allow him to succeed in spite of the ADD. My medication did a lot to allow me to do just that. ADD is just a behavioral matter, it is a medical matter. I could not choose to simply get my school work done when I was younger. Having the medication allowed me the choice to focus on what I what I wanted to. This is what Ritalin and other medications are for. It is such a shame that our society regards it so lightly.
As another matter of note:
The Feingold diet was at one time thought to help treat ADHD. Online resources will may say that the claim could not be substantiated, but some, especially preschoolers showed some improvement in attention. The Feingold diet reduces some of the excess chemicals that we take in from our lovely American cuisine. This means that the chemical input that the body must process. I am sure that there is research that can be done to link chemicals and attention. Chemicals may have more of an unexpected impact on you than you realize. A study by Cal Tech comparing chemically sensitive people to non-chemically sensitive people revealed that a surprisingly large portion of the control group (non-sensitive) in fact were chemically sensitive. (contact if you want to discuss chemical sensitivities further)
Further matters as previously discussed may be found at
http://parents.berkeley.edu/recommend/medical/add.html
This site should have some information on what ADD and ADHD really are.
http://www.mayoclinic.com/invoke.cfm?objectid=FA1B63E9-643F-486E-B1B10D857F434410&si=2560&WT.srch=1
I apologize if this is overreacting, but I don't think that the attitude that was presented in the picture was right and it happens all to often
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