Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't settle for 504, get the iep
How would one qualify for an IEP with ADHD - Inattentive + executive function?
Can someone address this question? We're in the same situation too.
Thank you!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids who don't take meds are more likely to self-medicate with drugs and alcohol. Also, they tend to suffer social isolation and low self-esteem Stay open to meds and go to a good psychiatrist who has experience in medication combos and dosage levels beyond what a pediatrician will manage.
Source/reference?
Just go to www.pubmed.com and search ADHD and substance abuse of some other drug/term. There are hundreds that discuss the increased risk.
We've been over this. There is no good evidence that not medicating ADHD leads to increase risk of drug abuse - the studies don't appear to compare treatments other than medical; they include cigarette smoking as drug abuse; and/or were conducted by researchers with long-standing ties to the pharmaceutical industry and a resultant huge conflict of interest. There is *so much* conflict of interest with medical research in this area being funded by drug companies that you can't just go on pubmed - you need to look at a lot of different sources.
Nice blanket statement and you are wrong. No, not every study was by drug companies... Most weren't. Don't read one of three; read a bunch. FDA can only base their assessments on very specific drug trials that are hard to conduct with kids. Many drugs aren't approved for cfertain outcomes by FDA for a myriad reasons. I work with rare diseases and patients are always stuck with insurance companies not acknowledging the only drugs that work clinically because they haven't "met their trial standard", standards that are often impossible to meet. FDA only recently started recognizing the need to allow quality of life measures ( a standardized assessment of ones quality of life) as a viable outcome measure. They have yet to implement.
Of venture to guess that my kid and my family's QOL is significantly higher on medication.
We're talking here about the specific claim that ADHD meds reduce the risk of drug addition and school failure as compared to other, non-drug approaches. Please provide the study that demonstrates that - which is 1) NOT co-authored by someone with demonstrable financial ties to the pharmaceutical industry (so that knocks out Biederman and many others) and 2) compares stimulant treatment of ADHD with other non-pharmaceutical treatment methods, instead of meds v nothing. Maybe that exists?
You also have to exclude Barkley, since he gets $$ from the ADHD drug companies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids who don't take meds are more likely to self-medicate with drugs and alcohol. Also, they tend to suffer social isolation and low self-esteem Stay open to meds and go to a good psychiatrist who has experience in medication combos and dosage levels beyond what a pediatrician will manage.
Source/reference?
Just go to www.pubmed.com and search ADHD and substance abuse of some other drug/term. There are hundreds that discuss the increased risk.
We've been over this. There is no good evidence that not medicating ADHD leads to increase risk of drug abuse - the studies don't appear to compare treatments other than medical; they include cigarette smoking as drug abuse; and/or were conducted by researchers with long-standing ties to the pharmaceutical industry and a resultant huge conflict of interest. There is *so much* conflict of interest with medical research in this area being funded by drug companies that you can't just go on pubmed - you need to look at a lot of different sources.
Nice blanket statement and you are wrong. No, not every study was by drug companies... Most weren't. Don't read one of three; read a bunch. FDA can only base their assessments on very specific drug trials that are hard to conduct with kids. Many drugs aren't approved for cfertain outcomes by FDA for a myriad reasons. I work with rare diseases and patients are always stuck with insurance companies not acknowledging the only drugs that work clinically because they haven't "met their trial standard", standards that are often impossible to meet. FDA only recently started recognizing the need to allow quality of life measures ( a standardized assessment of ones quality of life) as a viable outcome measure. They have yet to implement.
Of venture to guess that my kid and my family's QOL is significantly higher on medication.
We're talking here about the specific claim that ADHD meds reduce the risk of drug addition and school failure as compared to other, non-drug approaches. Please provide the study that demonstrates that - which is 1) NOT co-authored by someone with demonstrable financial ties to the pharmaceutical industry (so that knocks out Biederman and many others) and 2) compares stimulant treatment of ADHD with other non-pharmaceutical treatment methods, instead of meds v nothing. Maybe that exists?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids who don't take meds are more likely to self-medicate with drugs and alcohol. Also, they tend to suffer social isolation and low self-esteem Stay open to meds and go to a good psychiatrist who has experience in medication combos and dosage levels beyond what a pediatrician will manage.
Source/reference?
Just go to www.pubmed.com and search ADHD and substance abuse of some other drug/term. There are hundreds that discuss the increased risk.
We've been over this. There is no good evidence that not medicating ADHD leads to increase risk of drug abuse - the studies don't appear to compare treatments other than medical; they include cigarette smoking as drug abuse; and/or were conducted by researchers with long-standing ties to the pharmaceutical industry and a resultant huge conflict of interest. There is *so much* conflict of interest with medical research in this area being funded by drug companies that you can't just go on pubmed - you need to look at a lot of different sources.
Nice blanket statement and you are wrong. No, not every study was by drug companies... Most weren't. Don't read one of three; read a bunch. FDA can only base their assessments on very specific drug trials that are hard to conduct with kids. Many drugs aren't approved for cfertain outcomes by FDA for a myriad reasons. I work with rare diseases and patients are always stuck with insurance companies not acknowledging the only drugs that work clinically because they haven't "met their trial standard", standards that are often impossible to meet. FDA only recently started recognizing the need to allow quality of life measures ( a standardized assessment of ones quality of life) as a viable outcome measure. They have yet to implement.
Of venture to guess that my kid and my family's QOL is significantly higher on medication.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids who don't take meds are more likely to self-medicate with drugs and alcohol. Also, they tend to suffer social isolation and low self-esteem Stay open to meds and go to a good psychiatrist who has experience in medication combos and dosage levels beyond what a pediatrician will manage.
Source/reference?
Just go to www.pubmed.com and search ADHD and substance abuse of some other drug/term. There are hundreds that discuss the increased risk.
We've been over this. There is no good evidence that not medicating ADHD leads to increase risk of drug abuse - the studies don't appear to compare treatments other than medical; they include cigarette smoking as drug abuse; and/or were conducted by researchers with long-standing ties to the pharmaceutical industry and a resultant huge conflict of interest. There is *so much* conflict of interest with medical research in this area being funded by drug companies that you can't just go on pubmed - you need to look at a lot of different sources.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids who don't take meds are more likely to self-medicate with drugs and alcohol. Also, they tend to suffer social isolation and low self-esteem Stay open to meds and go to a good psychiatrist who has experience in medication combos and dosage levels beyond what a pediatrician will manage.
Source/reference?
Just go to www.pubmed.com and search ADHD and substance abuse of some other drug/term. There are hundreds that discuss the increased risk.
We've been over this. There is no good evidence that not medicating ADHD leads to increase risk of drug abuse - the studies don't appear to compare treatments other than medical; they include cigarette smoking as drug abuse; and/or were conducted by researchers with long-standing ties to the pharmaceutical industry and a resultant huge conflict of interest. There is *so much* conflict of interest with medical research in this area being funded by drug companies that you can't just go on pubmed - you need to look at a lot of different sources.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids who don't take meds are more likely to self-medicate with drugs and alcohol. Also, they tend to suffer social isolation and low self-esteem Stay open to meds and go to a good psychiatrist who has experience in medication combos and dosage levels beyond what a pediatrician will manage.
Source/reference?
Just go to www.pubmed.com and search ADHD and substance abuse of some other drug/term. There are hundreds that discuss the increased risk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids who don't take meds are more likely to self-medicate with drugs and alcohol. Also, they tend to suffer social isolation and low self-esteem Stay open to meds and go to a good psychiatrist who has experience in medication combos and dosage levels beyond what a pediatrician will manage.
Source/reference?
Anonymous wrote:Kids who don't take meds are more likely to self-medicate with drugs and alcohol. Also, they tend to suffer social isolation and low self-esteem Stay open to meds and go to a good psychiatrist who has experience in medication combos and dosage levels beyond what a pediatrician will manage.
Anonymous wrote:Ok, here is some recent research debunking the claim that ADHD meds reduce the risk of drug abusehttp://psychnews.psychiatryonline.org/doi/10.1176/appi.pn.2013.4a6
And as far as I know, there are no studies that compare the outcomes of non-drug and drug treatment in terms of later illegal drug use. Also, apparently a lot of the earlier studies counted nicotine use as drug abuse - which, while concerning, is not exactly the same as being an alcoholic.
Anyway, my point here is that the decision to medicate or not should not be guided by scare tactics about a kid becoming a heroin addict if not medicated. There are many other much more important factors at play - and the evidence is thin for the claim, and tainted by conflicts of interest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids who don't take meds are more likely to self-medicate with drugs and alcohol. Also, they tend to suffer social isolation and low self-esteem Stay open to meds and go to a good psychiatrist who has experience in medication combos and dosage levels beyond what a pediatrician will manage.
Citation?
I'm not the PP who wrote that but I know from experience-- from seeing family members who destroyed their own lives from self medication with drugs and alcohol.
Since then, I've found many articles that confirm that. It's not just one source.
We decided to medicate because we wanted our kid to understand that there are productive and regulated ways of helping yourself. Bottom line is that you are going to seek what will help your brain.
The FDA censured several drug companies for claiming that their ADHD drug prevented substance abuse. I don't think the science is there. It is fine to talk about how the meds seem to work for your kid, but pretty execrable to claim that not using meds is going to turn your kid into a drug addict.
Right, and that's why the statement says:
Kids who don't take meds are more likely to self-medicate with drugs and alcohol.
"More likely" does not mean that not using meds is going to turn your kid into a drug addict
Having a high cholesterol diet will put you at greater risk of having a heart attack. It does not mean that eating red meat will make you have a heart attack.
Show me the evidence on that. The FdA doesn't appear to believe that is true.
And I mean show me studies where the authors do not get paid by the pharmaceutical industry ...
Katusic SK, Barbaresi WJ, Colligan RC, Weaver AL, Leibson CL, Jacobsen SJ. Psychomotor stimulant treatment and risk for substance abuse among young adults with a history of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder: a population-based, birth cohort study. J Child Adolesc Psychopharmacol (2005) 15:764–76. doi:10.1089/cap.2005.15.764
Wilens TE, Faraone SV, Biederman J, Gunawardene S. Does stimulant therapy of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder beget later substance abuse? A meta-analytic review of the literature. Pediatrics (2003) 111:179–85. doi:10.1542/peds.111.1.179
Dalsgaard S, Mortensen PB, Frydenberg M, Thomsen PH. ADHD, stimulant treatment in childhood and subsequent substance abuse in adulthood – a naturalistic long-term follow-up study. Addict Behav (2014) 39:325–8. doi:10.1016/j.addbeh.2013.09.002
These are a few after a brief 2 minute search on pubmed. I'm sure a more extensive search would provide more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids who don't take meds are more likely to self-medicate with drugs and alcohol. Also, they tend to suffer social isolation and low self-esteem Stay open to meds and go to a good psychiatrist who has experience in medication combos and dosage levels beyond what a pediatrician will manage.
Citation?
I'm not the PP who wrote that but I know from experience-- from seeing family members who destroyed their own lives from self medication with drugs and alcohol.
Since then, I've found many articles that confirm that. It's not just one source.
We decided to medicate because we wanted our kid to understand that there are productive and regulated ways of helping yourself. Bottom line is that you are going to seek what will help your brain.
The FDA censured several drug companies for claiming that their ADHD drug prevented substance abuse. I don't think the science is there. It is fine to talk about how the meds seem to work for your kid, but pretty execrable to claim that not using meds is going to turn your kid into a drug addict.
Right, and that's why the statement says:
Kids who don't take meds are more likely to self-medicate with drugs and alcohol.
"More likely" does not mean that not using meds is going to turn your kid into a drug addict
Having a high cholesterol diet will put you at greater risk of having a heart attack. It does not mean that eating red meat will make you have a heart attack.
Show me the evidence on that. The FdA doesn't appear to believe that is true.
And I mean show me studies where the authors do not get paid by the pharmaceutical industry ...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids who don't take meds are more likely to self-medicate with drugs and alcohol. Also, they tend to suffer social isolation and low self-esteem Stay open to meds and go to a good psychiatrist who has experience in medication combos and dosage levels beyond what a pediatrician will manage.
Citation?
I'm not the PP who wrote that but I know from experience-- from seeing family members who destroyed their own lives from self medication with drugs and alcohol.
Since then, I've found many articles that confirm that. It's not just one source.
We decided to medicate because we wanted our kid to understand that there are productive and regulated ways of helping yourself. Bottom line is that you are going to seek what will help your brain.
The FDA censured several drug companies for claiming that their ADHD drug prevented substance abuse. I don't think the science is there. It is fine to talk about how the meds seem to work for your kid, but pretty execrable to claim that not using meds is going to turn your kid into a drug addict.
Right, and that's why the statement says:
Kids who don't take meds are more likely to self-medicate with drugs and alcohol.
"More likely" does not mean that not using meds is going to turn your kid into a drug addict
Having a high cholesterol diet will put you at greater risk of having a heart attack. It does not mean that eating red meat will make you have a heart attack.
Show me the evidence on that. The FdA doesn't appear to believe that is true.