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Kids With Special Needs and Disabilities
Reply to "My child is the only one with ADD, not on meds."
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]"Oh, and you can be sure that several posters will criticize what I wrote here. They will say THEIR child needed meds, that it was the ONLY thing that helped, and that their child's life was wonderfully assisted by them. Good for them. The data simply does not support their illusion." FWIW - we use meds not because of my son's behavior issues associated with the ADHD, but because he's also dyslexic, and he can't focus enough to read without them. I do, in fact, have data points that shows the difference in his performance with and without meds. [/quote] Similarly, my son's writing is pretty much illegible off meds and, although far from perfect, much, much improved when on.[/quote] Are you seriously noting your child's improved handwriting as evidence that meds work? For the billionth time, meds will show an increase in the ability to sustain attention on repetitive tasks (school work). This is a temporary effect, lasting only a few years. Stimulant meds will do this for ANYONE, you don't need to have adhd. It's why college students routinely abuse them to help them study for tests. They are not "fixing" any brain imbalances in the adhd child. Multiple posters on this thread are claiming OP is in denial, that her son is headed for a lifetime of academic failure and horrible self esteem. This simply isn't true. A child with adhd is at risk for academic failure and low self esteem. That is a fact. They are different in a way that makes it difficult for them to function within the framework of our society. But medication does not change this reality. It may improve their focus and behavior in a temporary way, but it will not last. They cannot maintain themselves on medicine for long periods of time. Meds are only a temporary reprieve from symptoms, as a previous poster is experiencing with her second grader. [/quote]
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