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Attention Deficit Disorder
Description
Also called ADD, ADHD, or hyperactivity, a short attention span occurs
in 3% to 5% of children, most of them males.
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.)
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.
- Characteristics
- A child hasn't learned to listen when someone talks, wait his turn,
complete a task, or return to a task if interrupted. (These can be
normal characteristics of children less than 3 or 4 years old.)
- 80% of boys and 50% of girls 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 (that is, they
have difficulty remembering verbal directions). However, the intelligence
of most children with ADD is usually normal.
- Similar conditions
Disruptive children, children who don't mind, and aggressive children
are sometimes included under the broad category of hyperactivity. Many
problem 2-year-olds are considered "hyperactive." These children should
be looked upon as children with behavior problems and approached with
appropriate discipline techniques.
- Causes
Attention deficit disorder (ADD) is the most common developmental
disability. "Developmental" means that the disability is caused by delayed
brain development (immaturity). This delay results in poor self-control,
requiring external controls by the parents for a longer period of time.
Often this type of temperament and short attention span is hereditary.
A small percentage of children with ADD are reacting to chaotic home
environments, but in most cases the parents' style of child-rearing
has not caused the disability. Minor brain damage has not been proven
to be a cause of ADD but scientists are conducting research into this
area.
- Expected course
Children with ADD on a developmental basis can improve significantly
if parents and teachers provide understanding and direction and preserve
the child's self-esteem. When these children become adults, many of
them have good attention spans but remain restless, have to keep busy,
and, in a sense, have not entirely outgrown the problem. However, not
only does society learn to tolerate such traits in adults, but in some
settings the person with endless energy is prized. Children with severe
ADD may need vocational counseling as adults.
Call Your Child's Physician for Referral to a Child Psychiatrist or
Psychologist If:
- Your child shows unprovoked aggression and destructiveness.
- Your child has repeated accidents.
- Your child has been suspended or expelled from school.
- Your child can't make or keep any friends.
- You have "given up" hope of improving your child.
- You can't stop using physical punishment on your child.
- You are at your wit's end.
Living with a Child Who Has Attention Deficit Disorder
Attention deficit disorder is a chronic condition that needs special
parenting and school intervention. If your child seems to have a poor
attention span and is over 3 years of age, these recommendations may
assist you in helping your child. Your main obligations involve organizing
your child's home life and improving discipline. Only after your child's
behavior has improved will you know for certain if your child also
has a short attention span. If he does, specific interventions to
help him learn to listen and complete tasks ("stretch" his attention
span) can be initiated. Even though you can't be sure about poor attention
span until your child is 3 or 4 years of age, you can detect and improve
behavior problems at any time after 8 months of age.
- Accept your child's limitations.
Accept the fact that your child is intrinsically 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 the release of excess energy.
This energy can't be bottled up and stored. Daily outdoor activities
such as running, sports, and long walks are good outlets. A fenced
yard helps. In bad weather your child needs a recreational room
where he can play as he pleases with minimal restrictions and supervision.
If no large room is available, a garage will sometimes suffice.
Your child should not have too many toys, for 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.
- Keep your home well organized.
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. ADD 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 fatigued.
When a hyperactive child becomes exhausted, his self-control often
breaks down and the hyperactivity becomes worse. Try to have your
child sleep or rest when he is fatigued. If he can't seem to "turn
off his motor," hold and rock him in a rocking chair.
- Avoid taking your child to formal gatherings.
Except for special occasions, avoid places where hyperactivity
would be extremely inappropriate and embarrassing (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 develops adequate self-control at home, he can gradually be
introduced to these situations. Be sure to praise your child when
he plays independently rather than interrupting you when you are
talking to guests or are on the telephone.
- Maintain firm discipline.
These children are unquestionably difficult to manage. They need more
carefully planned discipline than the average child. Rules should
be formulated mainly to prevent harm to your child and to others.
Aggressive behavior, such as biting, hitting, and pushing, should
be no more accepted in the hyperactive child than in the normal child.
Try to eliminate such aggressive behaviors, but avoid unnecessary
or unattainable rules; that is, 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."
- 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.
Encouraging attentive (nonhyperactive) behavior is the key to preparing
your child for school. Increased attention span and persistence with
tasks can be taught at home. Don't wait until your child is of school
age and expect the teacher to change him. By age 5 he needs at least
a 25-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 span. Later,
consequence games such as checkers or tic-tac-toe can be introduced.
When your child becomes restless, stop and return for another session
later. Praise your child for attentive behavior. This process is
slow but invaluable in preparing your child for school.
- Buffer your child against any overreaction by neighbors.
Ask neighbors with whom your child has contact 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 hyperactive
behavior. If just the father works outside the home, he should try
to look after the child when he comes home, not only to give his
wife a deserved break but also to 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 rejuvenate themselves so that they can continue
to meet their child's extra needs.
- Utilize 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 ADD are smaller
class size, isolated study space, spaced learning techniques, and
inclusion of the 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.
If you think your child has ADD and he has not been tested by
the school's special education team, you can request an evaluation.
Usually you can obtain 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.
- Medications are sometimes helpful.
Some stimulant drugs can improve a child's ability to concentrate.
You may want to discuss the use of drugs with your child's physician.
In general, medications should not be prescribed before school age.
They should also not be prescribed until after your child has been
evaluated by a doctor and a school psychologist or special education
teacher, an individualized educational plan (I.E.P.) is in effect
at school, and you have followed the suggestions in this handout.
Medications without special education and home management programs
have no long-term benefit. They need to be part of a broader treatment
program.
Recommended Reading
Barbara Ingersoll, Your Hyperactive Child (New York: Doubleday,
1988).
Melvin D. Levine, Keeping a Head in School: A Student's Book About
Learning Abilities and Learning Disorders (Cambridge, MA: Educators
Publishing Service, 1990).
See also: Attention
Deficit Disorder: Book List
Written by B.D. Schmitt, M.D., author of "Your Child's
Health," Bantam Books.
Copyright 1999 HBO & Company
Information found on these pages is meant for educational use
only. Clinical Reference
Systems is not providing medical advice or counsel. Please consult
with a doctor before deciding on medical action.
Clinical Reference
Systems, a business unit of McKessonHBOC,
Inc., is a leading publisher of consumer health information
for the healthcare community. The company, founded in 1982, is located
in Broomfield, CO.
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