But ADHD kids take meds so they can brush their teeth, not so they can ace the SAT. |
Yes, this. Almost all my friends have ADHD. Like finds like. Also I think that many of DD's friends are on the spectrum because socially awkward kids gravitate toward each other (and no I am not saying that social awkwardness = ASD). |
Also the point is that one way of being sure that adhd is the correct dx is to see if adhd meds make symptoms better. If someone is not symptomatic to begin with then it’s moot. But if they are symptomatic but no adhd med helps then likely adhd is the wrong dx |
- I am not a troll - junk media outlet aside, dr Frances is regularly featured in mainstream media outlets - at least every week on this forum are people expressing the same frustration, none of whom are trolls |
How could you possibly know the medical history of every girl in your daughter’s activities? |
<sigh> You demonstrate a fundamental lack of understanding ADHD and ASD. As a PP noted, kids with ADHD aren't taking medication to ace tests. And, I'll add, people can struggle with sensory processing and social situations and NOT be on the AS. They can also stim and not be on the AS. ADHD medication, whether a stimulant or not, is to improve regulation of attention, not improve concentration. Huge difference. |
| I think there is a flaw in the dx process. The teacher forms ask questions that ask them to compare to other students. As more students are dx they are medicated and they are more focused. Then the kids who aren’t medicated seem off the scale as comparison so they end up getting dx. So more and more kids get dx’d. |
It has the exact opposite effect on people with adhd. |
Screen time? That PP was right, screen time shortens attention span, making more kids (and adults) seem to be ADHD. |
Yes, for just about everyone, ADHD medication lengthens attention, which improves concentration. |
+100 |
More absolute bull shite. |
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Yes, OP. ALL kids have ASD/ADHD. Every kid can get dx and get pills to ace tests. They all watch screens all day long!
That's what you wanted to hear, right? |
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I my circle, solidly half the kids have something like looks at least adhd to me. We moved to a new town 6 years ago so our circle is small. And ds has pretty severe social issues so while I’ve met parents through school, in most cases it’s not because our kids were friends. The three friends that ds has either become natural friends with (or I made friends with the parents and the kids got along at least tolerably) - two for sure have the adhd diagnosis (and parents have hinted at borderline asd) and the other one seems pretty obvious to me as adhd (bouncing off the walls). One couple we’ve recently become friends with, their daughter is on the spectrum. Another couple we’ve recently become friends with, our social group speculates that dad is on the spectrum - and I think son has similar traits. Another good friend of mine - her kid used to always have a hard time at bday parties because he was “emotionally intense” and recently changed schools because he was developing tics. A couple of those families have seconds kids who seem NT. And my closest friend’s kids are all NT. But the rest of that list are my closest friends or ds’s closest friends and all have one SN kid (or I would at least a speculate, being very familiar with the criteria). While the kids who ds is friends with id say there was a like finds like thing, DH and I are both NT and don’t have social issues - so it doesn’t explain why our friends kids are also SN.
Also, ds goes to a gifted school and that place is like half asd on the boys side. At a welcome brunch years ago, the counselor even said as much (essentially saying she ran a lot of social skills groups because with a highly gifted population, a significant number of kids were borderline spectrum at least as relates to social skills). When I’m on campus, this is pretty obvious. |
Jfc - it’s ok for other people to question how diagnoses are formed. Are you the dsm? Let people speak - obv many of us feel this way. |