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- <text id=89TT0200>
- <title>
- Jan. 16, 1989: Worries About Overactive Kids
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Jan. 16, 1989 Donald Trump
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BEHAVIOR, Page 65
- Worries About Overactive Kids
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Are too many youngsters being misdiagnosed and medicated?
- </p>
- <p> They are Dennis the Menace come to life, half-pint hellions
- who drive parents and teachers to distraction with their
- disruptive antics. At home they clamber on kitchen counters,
- unscrew light bulbs and mess up the simplest tasks, from
- hanging up their clothes to making the bed. In school they
- throw erasers, kick desks, shove classmates and are so busy
- making nuisances of themselves that they fail to absorb their
- lessons. One bedeviled mother speaks for many when she says, "I
- would have given the kid away."
- </p>
- <p> Such hyperactivity has emerged within the past decade as the
- most common -- and controversial -- childhood behavioral
- disorder. According to the National Institutes of Health, as
- many as 1 out of 10 U.S. youngsters -- mostly boys -- may
- suffer from the baffling syndrome. Doctors disagree about what
- causes hyperactivity, or attention deficit hyperactivity
- disorder (ADHD), as it is now known. Everything from brain
- damage to stress, food allergies or radiation from TV sets has
- been suggested. The NIH says the problem is probably a
- combination of as yet elusive genetic, environmental,
- neurological or biochemical factors. Diagnosis is difficult,
- since there is no laboratory test for the disorder, and the
- symptoms are vague and confusing. "Hyperactivity is in the eyes
- of the beholder," notes James Kavanagh, an NIH behavioral
- scientist.
- </p>
- <p> Treatment for hyperactivity includes psychological
- counseling, special diets that restrict artificial flavorings
- and preservatives and, most typically, medication with such
- amphetamines as Ritalin and Dexedrine. For unexplained reasons,
- these drugs, which usually act as stimulants, dampen impulsive
- behavior in hyperactive youngsters and enable them to
- concentrate longer. Up to 750,000 American children now take
- drugs to control ADHD; that figure is expected to reach 1
- million by the early 1990s.
- </p>
- <p> But within the medical field and among parents concern is
- growing that too many youngsters are being incorrectly labeled
- and improperly medicated. Hyperactivity has become a convenient
- diagnostic wastebasket into which doctors and impatient parents,
- teachers and school administrators toss too many hard-to-handle
- children. Says pediatrician Martin Baren of Orange, Calif.:
- "Kids get diagnosed with this when the problem is something
- else, like a language or learning disability." Or they may be
- simply rambunctious. A recent study revealed that of 200
- children brought to the University of Chicago's ADHD clinic, 40%
- did not suffer from hyperactivity.
- </p>
- <p> The alarming fact is that many children whose symptoms have
- been misdiagnosed are being given Ritalin and other powerful
- drugs. Since 1987, parents around the country have filed more
- than a dozen Ritalin-related lawsuits against doctors, teachers
- and school districts. In one such suit, a Washington woman
- claimed that the drug led her six-year-old son to attempt
- suicide. Complaints about depression, listlessness and insomnia
- in medicated children are common. Valerie Jesson, of Derry,
- N.H., says her son Casey, 10, became a zombie while on Ritalin:
- "It knocked him into next week. His eyes would glaze, and he
- would just sit staring." Jesson is currently locked in a legal
- battle with New Hampshire's department of education over
- whether her son's public school can demand that he take Ritalin
- to attend regular classes.
- </p>
- <p> Many physicians defend the use of Ritalin, citing studies
- indicating that the drug is generally safe and is effective in
- about 80% of cases of hyperactive children. Adverse effects are
- usually limited to temporary appetite loss and insomnia.
- "Ritalin is not a panacea," says researcher Howard Abikoff of
- the Long Island Jewish Medical Center, "but without medication
- we'd be up against the wall."
- </p>
- <p> Yet some medical experts acknowledge that Ritalin is being
- overprescribed. In Georgia, Michigan, Utah and Maryland use of
- the drug is two or three times the national average. Says
- Andrew Watry, executive director of Georgia's medical board:
- "It's seen by some as a quick fix for behavior problems." The
- blame belongs not only to doctors, who sometimes give little
- more than cursory examinations before reaching for the
- prescription pad, and teachers, who want their classrooms to be
- peaceful. It also rests on parents, who often expect their
- children to be stellar performers. ADHD is most commonly
- diagnosed in prosperous suburbs, where the pressures to achieve
- are frequently greatest.
- </p>
- <p> Doctors emphasize that drugs should be a last, not a first,
- resort. Minor interventions, such as moving a child to the front
- row in class or allowing him more time to complete tasks, can
- lead to improvement. Rewards -- extra television or a favorite
- snack -- can help reinforce good behavior. And psychological
- therapy can bolster a child's flagging self-esteem and aaddress
- social problems, like a lack of friends, that contribute to his
- distress. Only when these remedies fail should parents try
- medication on their overly active youngsters.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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