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Title: US survey: 1 in 10 kids has ADHD, awareness cited
Source: AP Medical Writer
URL Source: http://www.physorg.com/news/2010-11 ... kids-adhd-awareness-cited.html
Published: Nov 14, 2010
Author: MIKE STOBBE
Post Date: 2010-11-14 12:42:28 by abraxas
Keywords: None
Views: 1006
Comments: 71

US survey: 1 in 10 kids has ADHD, awareness cited November 10, 2010 By MIKE STOBBE , AP Medical Writer (AP) -- A government survey says 1 in 10 U.S. children has ADHD, a sizable increase from a few years earlier that researchers think might be explained by growing awareness and better screening.

Child ADHD Treatment - 30 day trial - free. Children's ADHD medicine. Save money today. - www.ADHDTreatmentforKids.com

ADHD, or attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, makes it hard for kids to pay attention and control impulsive behavior. It's often treated with drugs, behavioral therapy, or both.

The new study found that about two-thirds of the children who have ADHD are on medication.

The estimate comes from a survey released Wednesday that found an increase in ADHD of about 22 percent from 2003 to the most recent survey in 2007-08. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention interviewed parents of children ages 4 through 17 in both studies.

In the latest survey, 9.5 percent said a doctor or health care provider had told them their child had ADHD. The earlier study found that fewer than 8 percent of kids had been diagnosed with it.

Researchers calculate about 5.4 million kids have been diagnosed with ADHD, which suggests that about 1 million more children have the disorder than a few years earlier.

Scientists don't have clear answers about why there was such a significant increase. Study lead author Susanna Visser of the CDC suggests greater awareness and stepped-up screening efforts as part of the explanation.

"Regardless of what's undergirding this, we know more parents are telling us their children have ADHD," Visser said.

One expert found it hard to believe that so many kids might have ADHD. "It sounds a little high," said Howard Abikoff, a psychologist who is director of the Institute for Attention Deficit Hyperactivity and Behavior Disorders at New York University's Child Study Center.

Other studies have suggested more like 5 percent of kids have ADHD, and there are no known biological reasons for it to be on a recent increase, he added.

Abikoff noted the CDC study is based on parents saying that a health care provider told them their child had ADHD, but it's not known who the health-care provider was or how thorough the assessment was.

ADHD diagnosis is a matter of expert opinion. There's no blood test or brain-imaging exam for the condition. Sometimes reading disabilities or other problems in the classroom cause a teacher or others to mistakenly think a child has ADHD, he said.

The CDC study noted an increase in diagnoses was seen in kids of all races and family income levels, and across all regions of the country except the West. The survey covered 73,000 children.

Of those who had ADHD at the time of the latest survey, about half had a mild form.

The research appears in the CDC publication, Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

More information: APHA: http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 71.

#7. To: abraxas (#0)

It is because public school with mostly women teachers relate to little girls and don't understand why little boys can't whisper, sit still, and act like little girls. After all, the women teachers remember that they could do that as little girls and expect little boys to be the same.

DWornock  posted on  2010-11-14   13:16:55 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: DWornock (#7)

After all, the women teachers remember that they could do that as little girls and expect little boys to be the same.

Balony!! I remember my first grade teacher (female) tying me to a chair with a jump rope. I could never sit still and I'm not the only little girl in the world who had this trouble. One of my girls wants to be the perfect student while the other is a constant bundle of energy who can't sit still or keep quiet.

Actually, female teachers generally relate BETTER to male students than to female students and this is even more prevalent in middle and high school.

Look deeper than blaming teachers and public schools to who benefits from doping kids.........

abraxas  posted on  2010-11-14   13:28:44 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: abraxas (#11)

Look deeper than blaming teachers and public schools to who benefits from doping kids.........

AB, they are the enforcers for twelve long years.

Long before you were born, we had no such problem, never heard of such a malady.

We had a solution for ALL problems. It was called "discipline". It started in first grade, no matter how active you were, you learned damned quick, wise up, it worked every time.

Cynicom  posted on  2010-11-14   13:38:49 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#15. To: Cynicom, abraxas (#13)

Look deeper than blaming teachers and public schools to who benefits from doping kids.........

AB, they are the enforcers for twelve long years.

Long before you were born, we had no such problem, never heard of such a malady.

We had a solution for ALL problems. It was called "discipline". It started in first grade, no matter how active you were, you learned damned quick, wise up, it worked every time.

The other thing that cannot be overlooked is diet. When you were a kid most of the food you ate was relatively wholesome - none of the sugar, fat, and chemical loaded, pardon the expression, shit that the average American diet now consists of. What we today call "Organic" was pretty much the normal way of producing food.

I recall a study released by the USDA a couple of years ago which tried to assert that the food value calculations of the 1950's must have been wrong because they got much lower readings today. I had to laugh, sadly, because in the 1950's the petro-chemical way of farming was just then becoming in vogue and the norm. Whereas before farmers had used, along with modern equipment, much the same way of raising crops unchanged since 1776. The change the FDA measured was real but is accounted for by soil depletion as a result of petrochemical farming using artificially high nitrogen chemical fertilizers devoid of most trace elements. Which is why I grow my own or buy organic.

Original_Intent  posted on  2010-11-14   13:56:40 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#16. To: Original_Intent (#15)

When you were a kid most of the food you ate

Home grown potatoes and home made bread.

There was NO obesity, not among the unwashed, none, nada.

Cynicom  posted on  2010-11-14   13:59:44 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#18. To: Cynicom (#16)

When you were a kid most of the food you ate

Home grown potatoes and home made bread.

There was NO obesity, not among the unwashed, none, nada.

And I would be willing to be the only corn syrup was the old Karo used occasionally in baking, no sugar loaded breakfast cereals, and a bottle of pop was maybe a once or twice a week treat - not an everyday beverage.

I can remember weeks on end when we had no pop, but we always had plenty of milk, water, and occasionally Kool-Aid in the summer.

Original_Intent  posted on  2010-11-14   14:02:28 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#21. To: Original_Intent, All (#18)

breakfast cereals, and a bottle of pop

OI, are you kidding Son??????

Cereal, what the hell was that. Milk, saw that at school, a few kids had a nickle for milk.

We drank....WATER... From out of the ground, put there by Mother Nature, nothing added, just good olde water.

Cynicom  posted on  2010-11-14   14:11:39 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#25. To: Cynicom (#21)

breakfast cereals, and a bottle of pop

OI, are you kidding Son??????

Cereal, what the hell was that. Milk, saw that at school, a few kids had a nickle for milk.

We drank....WATER... From out of the ground, put there by Mother Nature, nothing added, just good olde water.

A whole nickel? When I was in first grade it was 2¢ and my mom squawked like crazy when it went up to 3¢ (Chocolate milk was 3¢ starting out and she would not pay the extra penny). Shucks it was 15¢ for a whole week - that was 3 Milky Ways - which were then made from real sugar, caramel, chocolate, nougat, and nothing else. I recall her disappointment when they went up to 7¢.

Original_Intent  posted on  2010-11-14   14:17:43 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#30. To: Original_Intent (#25)

A whole nickel?

Ask me why it was a nickle?????

Well, back then the school had no refrigeration , imagine that???????

So each day at noon time, some man from somewhere would arrive with a case of small bottles of milk on ice. Thus the nickle.

Cynicom  posted on  2010-11-14   14:42:25 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#39. To: Cynicom (#30)

A whole nickel?

Ask me why it was a nickle?????

Well, back then the school had no refrigeration , imagine that???????

So each day at noon time, some man from somewhere would arrive with a case of small bottles of milk on ice. Thus the nickle.

Ours was much the same, but being 15 or 20 years younger by then it came in the little 8 ounce cartons we're all familiar with today. And my first school had no lunchroom, except for the teachers, it was a real novelty when we moved "up town" and the school actually had a lunch room for the students. I forget what it was but 15¢ for lunch seems to ring a bell. And seconds were a little gravy, "Food Service mix", on a slice of bread. Although most of the way through grade school I was a brown bagger. Having enough extra to actually "buy" lunch was a real luxury.

Original_Intent  posted on  2010-11-14   15:14:16 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#42. To: Original_Intent, Lod (#39)

Our local factory (skool) is a monster.

It has a kitchen that would be the envy of most elite large restaurants. A dining hall to match, nothing too good for the precious little kiddies.

Next to the principals office is a door marked..."PROBATION OFFICER"..

Next to that is office that says..."Truant officers"...

Cynicom  posted on  2010-11-14   15:22:11 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#45. To: Cynicom (#42)

Our local factory (skool) is a monster.

It has a kitchen that would be the envy of most elite large restaurants. A dining hall to match, nothing too good for the precious little kiddies.

Next to the principals office is a door marked..."PROBATION OFFICER"..

Next to that is office that says..."Truant officers"...

Where I went to school the Truant Officer was the County Sheriff, and as long as you didn't go fishing too often nobody bothered you. If you needed a "Probation Officer" you did not go to the regular school but to the "other one", "Vocational Village" was the name as I recall - which translated as "LOSER".

I recall when we moved to Seattle the lunch room was a lot more deluxe than my hick school in Montana, although I was a good year to year and a half ahead of the big city school. That really annoyed my socialite 4th grade teacher (we moved in the middle of the school year) as it did not set with her assessment of the "lower orders", and my clothes, Montgomery Ward Catalog, did not fit her definition of "appropriate" style. She even sent a note to my mother to discuss it with her, but my Mom checked in through the office and found out that the administration knew nothing about it. The teacher, Mrs. Kornfeld from Newark, New Jersey, caught hell over it. Which amused my mother to no end.

Original_Intent  posted on  2010-11-14   15:34:54 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#58. To: Original_Intent (#45)

I recall when we moved to Seattle the lunch room was a lot more deluxe than my hick school in Montana, although I was a good year to year and a half ahead of the big city school. That really annoyed my socialite 4th grade teacher (we moved in the middle of the school year) as it did not set with her assessment of the "lower orders", and my clothes, Montgomery Ward Catalog, did not fit her definition of "appropriate" style.

Been there.

One elementary teacher knew full well from my patched out sized clothes that I was stupid, she could just knew it. Back then we were given daily grades and test grades every six weeks, averaged together.

I averaged 60 for daily grades, which depended upon her opinion, no paper records. Then in testing, paper evidence, I would get 90-95 every time.

That told her I must be cheating. I could not win. As a result in two years I went straight A to caring less about school. To hell with it.

Cynicom  posted on  2010-11-14   18:10:56 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#59. To: Cynicom (#58)

One elementary teacher knew full well from my patched out sized clothes that I was stupid, she could just knew it. Back then we were given daily grades and test grades every six weeks, averaged together.

I averaged 60 for daily grades, which depended upon her opinion, no paper records. Then in testing, paper evidence, I would get 90-95 every time.

That told her I must be cheating. I could not win. As a result in two years I went straight A to caring less about school. To hell with it.

Understood. I had exactly 2 pair of "school pants" both from the Monkey Wards catalog - same style - 1 gray pair, and 1 blue pair, and I wore work boots because they were durable, and practical in Montana, and my mom only had to buy me one pair a year at the beginning of the school year (too big at the beginning of the year and worn out and getting small by the end of the school year).

My experience was not too dissimilar with good old Mrs. Kornflakes - I was a fast reader and she did not believe it. However, my mom had bought a home speed reading course for herself and I thought it was a neat game to see how fast I could go. So, I spent all winter more or less in third grade playing with it (except for the month I was out from German Measles). In any event I recall one day where she assigned us all a story in our readers and I was playing a game - I wanted to see if I could read the entire story before anyone else got through the first page - almost made it too. In any event I went up and told her, like I was supposed to, that I had finished the story. She didn't believe me and accused me of lying. After all we "lower orders" were not supposed to be that bright. So, rather than checking me out on the story she said, "well, go back and read it again". Needless to say that did not do a lot for my desire to excel in school.

Original_Intent  posted on  2010-11-14   19:48:31 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#62. To: Original_Intent (#59)

In any event I recall one day where she assigned us all a story in our readers and I was playing a game - I wanted to see if I could read the entire story before anyone else got through the first page - almost made it too. In any event I went up and told her, like I was supposed to, that I had finished the story. She didn't believe me and accused me of lying.

Similar, one of the earliest memories I have of school is this.

We were to read a short story about a man that had three outstanding traits.

As we read each trait and recognized we were to go to her desk and tell her what each was. There would be an award later. I was first on all three, there was no award.

To this day I recall two of the traits...Two men were in a rowboat on a small lake or pond. There was something on the bottom in the middle they wanted to retrieve. One man had vision that allowed him to see to the bottom, that was first trait. He also had arms so long he could reach down and retrieve the wanted object. I have never been unable to recall the third trait.

Maybe you or someone else might???

Cynicom  posted on  2010-11-14   19:59:49 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#71. To: Cynicom (#62)

To this day I recall two of the traits...Two men were in a rowboat on a small lake or pond. There was something on the bottom in the middle they wanted to retrieve. One man had vision that allowed him to see to the bottom, that was first trait. He also had arms so long he could reach down and retrieve the wanted object. I have never been unable to recall the third trait.

Maybe you or someone else might???

He was a "Coasty" - it was shallow enough to wade back to shore. ;-)

Original_Intent  posted on  2010-11-14   21:43:30 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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