Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I have two kids now in high school, both diagnosed with ADHD in elementary. We decided not to medicate because we didn’t feel the benefits were worth the risks, IN OUR SITUATION. I do believe that stimulant medications have risks and research has not shown that the benefits are clear over the long run. Again, this was our situation because our kids responded well enough to other interventions. They aren’t straight A students or even close (and I doubt they would be on meds) and they do struggle with concentration and getting assignments done but they have also had to learn some really good strategies to cope.
A couple of the studies that influenced our decision:
Medication: The smart-pill oversell. Evidence is mounting that medication for ADHD doesn’t make a lasting difference to schoolwork or achievement
http://www.nature.com/news/medication-the-smart-pill-oversell-1.14701
Large NIH longitudinal study found little benefit long term
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3063150/
From the conclusions:
“Thus, although the MTA data provided strong support for the acute reduction of symptoms with intensive medication management, these long-term follow-up data fail to provide support for long-term advantage of medication treatment beyond two years for the majority of children—at least as medication is monitored in community settings. Decisions about starting, continuing, and stopping medication may have to be made on an individualized basis, avoiding untested assumptions about continuing benefit, and using periodic trial discontinuations to check for need and benefit.”
If you read the long term NIH study closely, it doesn't say exactly what you are saying. Their stats are complicated but essentially it is saying that initial improvements observed from treatments were sustained, but that ultimate outcomes were much more strongly predicted by other factors, one of which was the child's strength of symptom reduction from treatment. Also intensity of treatment beyond the initial trial period played a role in outcomes. Basically, this study was focused on how a one time intervention for a shorter duration of time (14 months or so) played out years later. This was not comparing continued, sustained treatments over a long period of time.
I am also the poster who mentioned the initial study that found medication to be highly effective in symptom reduction. I am a researcher at the NIH and that study was not one that was biased by funding in any way. Very difficult to publish in Pediatrics if there are concerns over financial interests!
OP here- thanks for posting studies. There are a lot of studies, varying levels of quality and rigor, and conflicting outcomes-- part of the reason I asked this question. I will read the two posted- I have a lot of respect for NiH research. It's my first stop when something seems too good to be true. PP thanks for clarifying the portion of the NIH study. These aren't easy studies to wade through without a stats background.
Anonymous wrote:My child is newly diagnosed. He's eight and in the second grade. Medication is a difficult decision for us and after reading the thread about how particular children benefitted from meds, I am interested to hear another point of view. Also, if this goes sideways, I want to say that I respect parents' who are doing their best for their kids, period.
That said, cogent statements on why you didn't opt for medication for your school age children? What did you do instead that was effective?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It's already curious to learn who funded such 'successful' medication studies.
Like they say, "Follow the money."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I have two kids now in high school, both diagnosed with ADHD in elementary. We decided not to medicate because we didn’t feel the benefits were worth the risks, IN OUR SITUATION. I do believe that stimulant medications have risks and research has not shown that the benefits are clear over the long run. Again, this was our situation because our kids responded well enough to other interventions. They aren’t straight A students or even close (and I doubt they would be on meds) and they do struggle with concentration and getting assignments done but they have also had to learn some really good strategies to cope.
A couple of the studies that influenced our decision:
Medication: The smart-pill oversell. Evidence is mounting that medication for ADHD doesn’t make a lasting difference to schoolwork or achievement
http://www.nature.com/news/medication-the-smart-pill-oversell-1.14701
Large NIH longitudinal study found little benefit long term
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3063150/
From the conclusions:
“Thus, although the MTA data provided strong support for the acute reduction of symptoms with intensive medication management, these long-term follow-up data fail to provide support for long-term advantage of medication treatment beyond two years for the majority of children—at least as medication is monitored in community settings. Decisions about starting, continuing, and stopping medication may have to be made on an individualized basis, avoiding untested assumptions about continuing benefit, and using periodic trial discontinuations to check for need and benefit.”
If you read the long term NIH study closely, it doesn't say exactly what you are saying. Their stats are complicated but essentially it is saying that initial improvements observed from treatments were sustained, but that ultimate outcomes were much more strongly predicted by other factors, one of which was the child's strength of symptom reduction from treatment. Also intensity of treatment beyond the initial trial period played a role in outcomes. Basically, this study was focused on how a one time intervention for a shorter duration of time (14 months or so) played out years later. This was not comparing continued, sustained treatments over a long period of time.
I am also the poster who mentioned the initial study that found medication to be highly effective in symptom reduction. I am a researcher at the NIH and that study was not one that was biased by funding in any way. Very difficult to publish in Pediatrics if there are concerns over financial interests!
Anonymous wrote:We don't medicate our D because there's a history of addiction, including alcoholism, in our family. I didn't want to run the risk of having my child become dependent on medications and I was concerned that ADD medication might be a gateway to other types of medication.
Honestly, we have just accepted that our child is not likely to be a strongly academic person. She has fantastic people skills, a summer job that she loves, a rich history of volunteer and service work and she can pull B's and the occasional A in subjects that she is passionate about. She got into a decent college -- with scholarships -- and is planning on a career that doesn't involve a desk. She'd like to be a wedding planner, do something with hotels or the travel industry, possibly be a flight attendant.
We also have some ASD in our family and I feel passionately that there are lots of variants in human behavior and that everyone doesn't need to look alike. My son meets the criteria for HFA, as did my dad, and I probably do as well. I think it's pointless to try to fix people who aren't broken, just different. Mostly I'm interested in accepting my daughter and everyone who doesn't fit the norm for behavior and function. We are more than just cogs in the US productivity machine.
Anonymous wrote:
I have two kids now in high school, both diagnosed with ADHD in elementary. We decided not to medicate because we didn’t feel the benefits were worth the risks, IN OUR SITUATION. I do believe that stimulant medications have risks and research has not shown that the benefits are clear over the long run. Again, this was our situation because our kids responded well enough to other interventions. They aren’t straight A students or even close (and I doubt they would be on meds) and they do struggle with concentration and getting assignments done but they have also had to learn some really good strategies to cope.
A couple of the studies that influenced our decision:
Medication: The smart-pill oversell. Evidence is mounting that medication for ADHD doesn’t make a lasting difference to schoolwork or achievement
http://www.nature.com/news/medication-the-smart-pill-oversell-1.14701
Large NIH longitudinal study found little benefit long term
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3063150/
From the conclusions:
“Thus, although the MTA data provided strong support for the acute reduction of symptoms with intensive medication management, these long-term follow-up data fail to provide support for long-term advantage of medication treatment beyond two years for the majority of children—at least as medication is monitored in community settings. Decisions about starting, continuing, and stopping medication may have to be made on an individualized basis, avoiding untested assumptions about continuing benefit, and using periodic trial discontinuations to check for need and benefit.”
Anonymous wrote:My son had terrible side effects from 2 different drugs (became manic, abusive, violent, could not sleep with out sleeping pills, very thin, lost his personality and would not go outside, only wanted to be inside) he was 8.
I took him off after 1 year, we are working on using exercise, low carb/ high protein diet, consequences to manage it at this point.
He is now 12, we'll see about re introducing medication in a year or 2, if jr high becomes overwhelming.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a very robust trial published in the scientific journal Pediatrics that compared outcomes of young kids with ADHD in 3 arms: 1) treatment alone, 2) treatment and behavioral modifications/therapy, 3) behavior alone. They found that treatment by far was the greatest cause of successful outcomes. In the arm of the study that combined it with behavioral therapy, they found that the behavioral interventions were also very helpful IF your child had other comorbidities such as anxiety, etc... But for ADHD, medication alone made the measurable difference.
I think it makes sense to be slow and deliberate about this decision, especially because about a third of kids mature out of the diagnosis as adults. However, I also know many adults who went I diagnosed and looking back it clearly had a major impact on their grades and subsequent life choices. If medication will help, that's a very good thing (unless side effects are too great). There are many things our kids are exposed to daily that we don't know the exact long term side effects of.
It's already curious to learn who funded such 'successful' medication studies.
Like they say, "Follow the money."
*always, not already
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a very robust trial published in the scientific journal Pediatrics that compared outcomes of young kids with ADHD in 3 arms: 1) treatment alone, 2) treatment and behavioral modifications/therapy, 3) behavior alone. They found that treatment by far was the greatest cause of successful outcomes. In the arm of the study that combined it with behavioral therapy, they found that the behavioral interventions were also very helpful IF your child had other comorbidities such as anxiety, etc... But for ADHD, medication alone made the measurable difference.
I think it makes sense to be slow and deliberate about this decision, especially because about a third of kids mature out of the diagnosis as adults. However, I also know many adults who went I diagnosed and looking back it clearly had a major impact on their grades and subsequent life choices. If medication will help, that's a very good thing (unless side effects are too great). There are many things our kids are exposed to daily that we don't know the exact long term side effects of.
It's already curious to learn who funded such 'successful' medication studies.
Like they say, "Follow the money."
Anonymous wrote:There is a very robust trial published in the scientific journal Pediatrics that compared outcomes of young kids with ADHD in 3 arms: 1) treatment alone, 2) treatment and behavioral modifications/therapy, 3) behavior alone. They found that treatment by far was the greatest cause of successful outcomes. In the arm of the study that combined it with behavioral therapy, they found that the behavioral interventions were also very helpful IF your child had other comorbidities such as anxiety, etc... But for ADHD, medication alone made the measurable difference.
I think it makes sense to be slow and deliberate about this decision, especially because about a third of kids mature out of the diagnosis as adults. However, I also know many adults who went I diagnosed and looking back it clearly had a major impact on their grades and subsequent life choices. If medication will help, that's a very good thing (unless side effects are too great). There are many things our kids are exposed to daily that we don't know the exact long term side effects of.