ADHD as a diagnosis?
Increase in number of kids being medicated, is it correct adjustment for kids getting what they need?
History of ADHD
1980s the core became about inattention, with kids facing inattention and hyperactivity forming a group
Impact comparison to other disorders?
Not a disorder that has huge amount of distress compared to other disorders (491) –> maybe due to medication?
DSM5 ADHD
A persistent pattern of
inattention and/or hyperactivityimpulsivity
Inattention
Fails to give close attention to details or makes careless mistakes
in schoolwork / work/other activities
b. Has difficulty sustaining attention in tasks/play activities
c. Does not seem to listen when spoken to directly
d. Does not follow through on instructions; fails to finish schoolwork /
chores/work duties
e. Has difficulty organizing tasks and activities
f. Avoids, dislikes, or is reluctant to engage in tasks that require
sustained mental effort (lengthy papers).
g. Loses things necessary for tasks or activities
h. Easily distracted by extraneous stimuli (unrelated thoughts).
i. Forgetful in daily activities
Inattention a misnomer?
Attention takes many forms (e.g., arousal, alertness, selective, divided, span of apprehension, persistence)
In ADHD there is no problem with perception, filtering, processing etc, it is the disturbance of prolonged attention to particular stimuli –> ADHD is a failure to direct behaviour forward in time to persist toward delayed end points
Ability to resist distractions?
Children with ADHD do not perceive/encode distractions
differently, rather they:
Respond to distractions more than other children…
React to events that are irrelevant to the goal….
Get off task much faster than others…
Have difficulty re-engaging with tasks following interruptions…
Skip from one incomplete task to another
This ‘inattention’ may largely reflect impaired working memory
HYPERACTIVITY & IMPULSIVITY
Often fidgets with or taps hands or feet or squirms in seat.
b. Often leaves seat in situations when remaining seated is expected
c. Often runs about or climbs in situations where it is inappropriate.
d. Often unable to play or engage in leisure activities quietly.
e. Is often “on the go,” acting as if “driven by a motor”
f. Often talks excessively.
g. Often blurts out an answer before questions completed
h. Often has difficulty waiting his or her turn
i. Often interrupts or intrudes on others
(e. g., butts into conversations, games, or activities).
Emotional impulsivity?
What type of disorder is ADHD?
Historically there were externalising (ADHD, ODD, CD) and disruptive disorder (ODD & CD)
Now new idea of neurodevelopmental disorders
includes ADHD, autism, learning disorders
Rather than a discrete diagnosis, it is about development of neuro capacities
Comorbidity of ADHD & externalising disorders (ODD,CD)
Difference between ADHD & ODD
Neurodevelopmental disorder
Diagnostic Criteria
A. Several symptoms present prior to age 12 years.
B. Several symptoms present in two or more settings
(e.g., home/ school/work; friends/relatives; other activities)
C. Clear evidence that the symptoms interfere with social,
academic, or occupational functioning.
D. Not better explained by another condition.
–> has to have significant impact on kids life across settings, not just reacting to certain environments
Other comorbidities
Highest is ODD & learning disorders
Developmental trajectory
Hyperactivity symptoms –> Most pronounced in preschool and decline over time (normality for some)
Inattention symptoms –> Increasingly apparent with age as peers undergo rapid maturation of prefrontal
cortex as school demands intensify
Environmental Causes of ADHD
Heritability of ADHD
-0.8 heritability in twin studies (hugely significant, almost same as height)
Effects of Parenting on ADHD causation
Hostility of parents?
Other studies show parent-child hostility doesn’t drive ADHD, and that ADHD drives parent-child hostility
Gene-environment correlation?
Adoption study done Testing genetically unrelated mothers and offspring allowed researchers to test for evocative rGE while controlling for confounding passive rGE
Effect of dopamine?
DUAL PATHWAY MODEL OF ADHD (Sonuga-Barke, 2005)
DUAL PATHWAY MODEL OF ADHD (Sonuga-Barke, 2005) - Delay Aversion Hypothesis