A.D.H.D. Seen in 11% of U.S. Children as Diagnoses Rise
Nearly one in five high school age boys in the
United States and 11 percent of school-age children over all have
received a medical diagnosis of attention deficit hyperactivity
disorder, according to new data from the federal Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.
These rates reflect a marked rise over the
last decade and could fuel growing concern among many doctors that the
A.D.H.D. diagnosis and its medication are overused in American children.
The figures showed that an estimated 6.4
million children ages 4 through 17 had received an A.D.H.D. diagnosis at
some point in their lives, a 16 percent increase since 2007 and a 53
percent rise in the past decade. About two-thirds of those with a
current diagnosis receive prescriptions for stimulants like Ritalin or
Adderall, which can drastically improve the lives of those with A.D.H.D. but can also lead to addiction, anxiety and occasionally psychosis.
“Those are astronomical numbers. I’m floored,” said Dr. William Graf,
a pediatric neurologist in New Haven and a professor at the Yale School
of Medicine. He added, “Mild symptoms are being diagnosed so readily,
which goes well beyond the disorder and beyond the zone of ambiguity to
pure enhancement of children who are otherwise healthy.”
And even more teenagers are likely to be prescribed medication in the near future because the American Psychiatric Association
plans to change the definition of A.D.H.D. to allow more people to
receive the diagnosis and treatment. A.D.H.D. is described by most
experts as resulting from abnormal chemical levels in the brain that
impair a person’s impulse control and attention skills.
While some doctors and patient advocates have
welcomed rising diagnosis rates as evidence that the disorder is being
better recognized and accepted, others said the new rates suggest that
millions of children may be taking medication merely to calm behavior or
to do better in school. Pills that are shared with or sold to
classmates — diversion long tolerated in college settings and gaining
traction in high-achieving high schools — are particularly dangerous,
doctors say, because of their health risks when abused.
The findings were part of a broader C.D.C. study
of children’s health issues, taken from February 2011 to June 2012. The
agency interviewed more than 76,000 parents nationwide by both
cellphone and landline and is currently compiling its reports. The New
York Times obtained the raw data from the agency and compiled the
results.
A.D.H.D. has historically been estimated to
affect 3 to 7 percent of children. The disorder has no definitive test
and is determined only by speaking extensively with patients, parents
and teachers, and ruling out other possible causes — a subjective
process that is often skipped under time constraints and pressure from
parents. It is considered a chronic condition that is often carried into
adulthood.
The C.D.C. director, Dr. Thomas R. Frieden,
likened the rising rates of stimulant prescriptions among children to
the overuse of pain medications and antibiotics in adults.
“We need to ensure balance,” Dr. Frieden said.
“The right medications for A.D.H.D., given to the right people, can
make a huge difference. Unfortunately, misuse appears to be growing at
an alarming rate.”
Experts cited several factors in the rising
rates. Some doctors are hastily viewing any complaints of inattention as
full-blown A.D.H.D., they said, while pharmaceutical advertising
emphasizes how medication can substantially improve a child’s life.
Moreover, they said, some parents are pressuring doctors to help with
their children’s troublesome behavior and slipping grades.
“There’s a tremendous push where if the kid’s
behavior is thought to be quote-unquote abnormal — if they’re not
sitting quietly at their desk — that’s pathological, instead of just
childhood,” said Dr. Jerome Groopman, a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and the author of “How Doctors Think.”
Fifteen percent of school-age boys have
received an A.D.H.D. diagnosis, the data showed; the rate for girls was 7
percent. Diagnoses among those of high-school age — 14 to 17 — were
particularly high, 10 percent for girls and 19 percent for boys. About
one in 10 high-school boys currently takes A.D.H.D. medication, the data
showed.
Rates by state are less precise but vary
widely. Southern states, like Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, South
Carolina and Tennessee, showed about 23 percent of school-age boys
receiving an A.D.H.D. diagnosis. The rates in Colorado and Nevada were
less than 10 percent.
The medications — primarily Adderall, Ritalin,
Concerta and Vyvanse — often afford those with severe A.D.H.D. the
concentration and impulse control to lead relatively normal lives.
Because the pills can vastly improve focus and drive among those with
perhaps only traces of the disorder, an A.D.H.D. diagnosis has become a
popular shortcut to better grades, some experts said, with many students
unaware of or disregarding the medication’s health risks.
“There’s no way that one in five high-school boys has A.D.H.D.,” said James Swanson,
a professor of psychiatry at Florida International University and one
of the primary A.D.H.D. researchers in the last 20 years. “If we start
treating children who do not have the disorder with stimulants, a
certain percentage are going to have problems that are predictable —
some of them are going to end up with abuse and dependence. And with all
those pills around, how much of that actually goes to friends? Some
studies have said it’s about 30 percent.”
An A.D.H.D. diagnosis often results in a
family’s paying for a child’s repeated visits to doctors for assessments
or prescription renewals. Taxpayers assume this cost for children
covered by Medicaid, who, according to the C.D.C. data, have among the
highest rates of A.D.H.D. diagnoses: 14 percent for school-age children,
about one-third higher than the rest of the population.
Several doctors mentioned that advertising
from the pharmaceutical industry that played off parents’ fears —
showing children struggling in school or left without friends —
encouraged parents and doctors to call even minor symptoms A.D.H.D. and
try stimulant treatment. For example, a pamphlet for Vyvanse from its
manufacturer, Shire, shows a parent looking at her son and saying, “I
want to do all I can to help him succeed.”
Sales of stimulants to treat A.D.H.D. have
more than doubled to $9 billion in 2012 from $4 billion in 2007,
according to the health care information company IMS Health.
Criteria for the proper diagnosis of A.D.H.D.,
to be released next month in the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, have been changed specifically
to allow more adolescents and adults to qualify for a diagnosis,
according to several people involved in the discussions.
The final wording has not been released, but
most proposed changes would lead to higher rates of diagnosis: the
requirement that symptoms appeared before age 12 rather than 7;
illustrations, like repeatedly losing one’s cellphone or losing focus
during paperwork, that emphasize that A.D.H.D. is not just a young
child’s disorder; and the requirement that symptoms merely “impact”
daily activities, rather than cause “impairment.”
An analysis of the proposed changes published
in January by the Journal of Learning Disabilities concluded: “These
wording changes newly diagnose individuals who display symptoms of
A.D.H.D. but continue to function acceptably in their daily lives."Given
that severe A.D.H.D. that goes untreated has been shown to increase a
child’s risk for academic failure and substance abuse, doctors have
historically focused on raising awareness of the disorder and reducing
fears surrounding stimulant medication.
A leading voice has been Dr. Ned Hallowell,
a child psychiatrist and author of best-selling books on the disorder.
But in a recent interview, Dr. Hallowell said that the new C.D.C. data,
combined with recent news reports of young people abusing stimulants,
left him assessing his role.
Whereas Dr. Hallowell for years would reassure skeptical parents by telling them that Adderall and other stimulants were “safer than aspirin,”
he said last week, “I regret the analogy” and he “won’t be saying that
again.” And while he still thinks that many children with A.D.H.D.
continue to go unrecognized and untreated, he said the high rates
demonstrate how the diagnosis is being handed out too freely.
“I think now’s the time to call attention to
the dangers that can be associated with making the diagnosis in a
slipshod fashion,” he said. “That we have kids out there getting these
drugs to use them as mental steroids — that’s dangerous, and I hate to
think I have a hand in creating that problem.”
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And creating a new generation of people not able to carry guns
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