Dealing with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)
What is ADHD?
ADHD is a disorder that affects 5% to 7% of children.
Children with ADHD have problems with attention span,
hyperactivity, and impulsive behavior. ADHD is the term now
used for ADD (Attention Deficit Disorder). ADHD is more
common in boys than in girls.
A normal attention span is 3 to 5 minutes per year of a
child's age. Therefore, a 2-year-old should be able to
concentrate on a particular task for at least 6 minutes, and
a child entering kindergarten should be able to concentrate
for at least 15 minutes. (Note: A child's attention span
while watching TV is not an accurate measure of his or her
attention span.)
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A child with ADHD has trouble listening when someone
talks, waiting his turn, completing a task, or returning
to a task if interrupted. (These can be normal
characteristics of children less than 3 or 4 years old.)
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80% of boys and 50% of girls with attention problems are
also hyperactive. A child who has symptoms of hyperactivity
is restless, impulsive, and in a hurry.
50% of children also have a learning disability. The
most common learning disability is an auditory processing
deficit. This means they have difficulty remembering verbal
directions. However, the intelligence of most children
with ADHD is usually normal.
If you suspect that your child has a short attention span,
ask another adult (a teacher or day care provider, for
example) if they have observed this also.
What causes ADHD?
Current theory suggests that ADHD (like other learning
disabilities) is probably due to small differences in brain
chemistry and function. ADHD sometimes runs in the family.
Changes in daily routine (such as not getting enough sleep or
a good breakfast) can make the symptoms of ADHD worse. ADHD
is not caused by poor parenting.
What can I do to help my child?
Medicine alone is not the answer. Because ADHD is an ongoing
condition, your child also needs special interventions at home
and school to help with impulsive behaviors, work on structuring
your child's home life and improving discipline. Behavior
problems can be addressed at any time after 1 year of age. If
your child also has a poor attention span, you can do activities
to help him learn to listen and complete tasks.
Accept your child's limitations.
Accept the fact that your child is active and energetic and
possibly always will be. The hyperactivity is not
intentional. Don't expect to eliminate the hyperactivity
but merely to bring it under reasonable control. Any
criticism or other attempt to change an energetic child
into a quiet or model child will cause more harm than good.
Nothing helps a hyperactive child more than having a
tolerant, patient, low-keyed parent.
Provide an outlet for excess energy.
Daily outdoor activities such as running, sports, and long
walks are good outlets for excess energy. In bad weather
your child needs a room where he can play as he pleases
with minimal restrictions and supervision. Your child
should not have too many toys. This can cause him to be
more easily distracted from playing with any one toy. The
toys should be safe and relatively unbreakable. Encourage
your child to play with one toy at a time.
Although the expression of hyperactivity is allowed in
these ways, it should not be needlessly encouraged.
Don't initiate roughhousing with your child. Forbid
siblings to say, "Chase me, chase me," or to instigate
other noisy play. Encouraging hyperactive behavior can
lead to its becoming your child's main style of interacting
with people.
Follow a structured daily routine.
Household routines help the hyperactive child to accept
order. Keep the times for wake-up, meals, snacks,
chores, naps, and bed as regular as possible. Try to
keep your environment relatively quiet because this
encourages thinking, listening, and reading at home. In
general, leave the radio and TV off. Predictable daily
events help your child's responses become more
predictable. ADHD symptoms are made worse by sleep
deprivation and hunger. Be sure your child has an early
bedtime and a big breakfast on school days.
Try not to let your child become overexhausted.
When a hyperactive child becomes overtired, his
self-control often breaks down and the hyperactivity
becomes worse. Try to have your child sleep or rest
when he is exhausted. If he can't seem to "turn off his
motor," hold and rock him in a rocking chair.
For children who have trouble slowing down at bedtime,
night lights and background music are often helpful.
Avoid taking young children to formal gatherings.
Except for special occasions, avoid places where
hyperactivity would be extremely inappropriate (such as
churches or restaurants). You also may wish to reduce
the number of times your child goes with you to stores
and supermarkets. After your child becomes older and
develops adequate self-control at home, he can gradually
be introduced to these situations.
Maintain firm discipline.
These children are usually difficult to manage. They
need more carefully planned discipline than the average child.
Rules should be made mainly to prevent harm to your child and
to others. Aggressive behavior, such as biting, hitting, and
pushing, should be no more accepted from the hyperactive child
than any other child. Try to stop such aggressive behaviors,
but avoid unnecessary or impossible rules. For example, don't
expect your child to keep his hands and feet still.
Hyperactive children tolerate fewer rules than the normal
child. Enforce a few clear, consistent, important rules and
add other rules at your child's pace. Avoid constant negative
comments like "Don't do this," and "Stop that." Develop a set
of hand signals and use them rather than telling your child to
calm down or slow down.
Enforce rules with nonphysical punishment.
Physical punishment suggests to your child that
physically aggressive behavior is OK. We want to teach
hyperactive children to be less aggressive. Your child
needs adult models of control and calmness. Try to use
a friendly, matter-of-fact tone of voice when you
discipline your child. If you yell, your child will be
quick to imitate you.
Punish your child for misbehavior immediately. When
your child breaks a rule, isolate him in a chair or
time-out room if a show of disapproval doesn't work. The
time-out should last about 1 minute per year of your
child's age. Without a time-out system, overall success
is unlikely.
Stretch your child's attention span.
While the attention span may never be normal, it can
usually be improved. Encouraging an increased attention
span and persistence with tasks is helpful for preparing
your child for school. Increased attention span and
persistence with tasks can be taught at home. Don't wait
and expect the teacher suddenly change him. By age 5 he needs
at least a 15-minute attention span to perform adequately in
school.
Set aside several brief periods each day to teach your
child listening skills by reading to him. Start with
picture books, and gradually progress to reading
stories. Coloring pictures can be encouraged and
praised. Teach games to your child, gradually
increasing the difficulty by starting with building
blocks and progressing to puzzles, dominoes, card games,
and dice games. Matching pictures is an excellent way
to build your child's memory and concentration. Later,
consequence games such as checkers or tic-tac-toe can be
introduced. When your child becomes restless, stop and return
for to the game later. Praise your child for attentive
behavior. This process is slow but invaluable in preparing
your child for school.
Plan to have your child do homework and other tasks that
require concentration in short blocks of time with breaks
in between. Try having your child study with low-level
background sound such as white noise or instrumental
music. Do homework and studying away from the sounds
of television, radio, or others talking but where adults
can watch.
Buffer your child against any overreaction by neighbors.
Ask neighbors that your child knows to be helpers. If your
child is labeled by some adults as a "bad" kid, it is
important that this image of your child doesn't carry over
into your home life. At home the attitude that must prevail
is that your child is a good child with excess energy. It is
extremely important that you not give up on him. Your child
must always feel loved and accepted within the family. As
long as a child has this acceptance, his self-esteem will
survive. If your child has trouble doing well in school, help
him gain a sense of success through a hobby in an area of
strength.
From time to time, get away from it all.
Exposure to some of these children for 24 hours a day
would make anyone a wreck. Periodic breaks help parents
to tolerate hyper behavior. If just the father works outside
the home, he should try to look after the child when he comes
home. This not only gives his wife a deserved break but also
helps him understand better what she must contend with during
the day. A baby sitter one afternoon each week and an
occasional evening out can provide much-needed breaks for an
exhausted mother. Preschool is another helpful option.
Parents need a chance to renew themselves so that they can
continue to meet their child's extra needs.
Use special programs at school.
Try to start your child in preschool by age 3 to help
him learn to organize his thoughts and develop his
ability to focus. However, you should consider
enrolling your child in kindergarten a year late (that
is, at age 6 rather than 5) because the added maturity
may help him fit in better with his classmates.
Once your child enters grade school, the school is
responsible for providing appropriate programs for your
child's attention deficit disorder and any learning
disability he might have. Some standard approaches that
teachers use to help children with ADHD are smaller class
size, and a isolated study space. They may also include your
child in tasks like erasing the blackboard or passing out
books (as outlets for excessive energy). Many of these
children spend part of their day with a teacher specializing
in learning disabilities who helps improve their skills and
confidence.
Seek a classroom for your child that has individual desks
rather than one where students are seated in groups at
tables or with clusters of desks.
If you think your child has ADHD and he has not been
tested by the school's special education team, you can
request an evaluation. Usually you can get the help your
child needs with schoolwork by working closely with the
school staff through parent-teacher conferences and special
meetings. Your main job is to continue to help your child
improve his attention span, self-discipline, and
friendships at home.
Medicine is usually helpful.
Stimulant drugs can improve a child's ability to
concentrate. If you and your child's teacher both feel that
your child's short attention span is interfering with
school performance, discuss the use of medicine with your
child's health care provider. In general, medicine should
not be prescribed before school age. It should also not
be prescribed until after your child has been evaluated by
a doctor, the school education team, you have a individualized
education plan (IEP) at school, and you have followed the
suggestions in this handout. While medicine is helpful, it
needs to be part of a broader treatment plan including special
education and behavioral management.
When should I call my child's health care provider?
Call your child's health care provider for referral to a
child psychiatrist or psychologist if:
Your child shows unprovoked aggression and
destructiveness.
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Your child has repeated accidents.
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Your child has been suspended or expelled from school.
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Your child can't make or keep any friends.
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You have "given up" hope of improving your child.
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You can't stop using physical punishment on your child.
You are at your wit's end.
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