Child's ADHD Diagnosis Is Tied To Mother's Health Status
Main Category: ADHDAlso Included In: Women's Health / Gynecology; Psychology / Psychiatry; Pediatrics / Children's Health
Article Date: 31 Dec 2008 - 0:00 PDT
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The probability of having one's child receive an attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) diagnosis involves a mother's own medical conditions and her use of health services prior to having the child, a new study finds.
What is not clear, however, is whether the effects are due to biological, environmental or psychosocial factors - or some combination of these.
The new study implies "that the diagnoses and health care utilization that a mother receives prior to having her child is predictive of having a child who is diagnosed with ADHD," said G. Thomas Ray, lead author. "Our study raises the possibility that certain types of mothers - those who get or seek diagnoses and who use more health services - may be more likely to seek ADHD diagnoses for their children."
Ray works in the research division at Kaiser Permanente in Northern California. The study appears in the January issue of the journal Medical Care.
Specifically, Ray said, "The mothers of children who are diagnosed with ADHD are more likely to be diagnosed with health conditions such as depression and anxiety disorder and use more health services in the year prior to, and the two years after, the birth of their child, than mothers of children without ADHD or the mothers of children with asthma."
Using records from a Northern California Kaiser Permanente database, the researchers identified three groups: mothers of children with ADHD, mother of children without ADHD and mothers of children with asthma. Authors then compared the mothers' diagnoses, health care use and costs among the groups.
Mothers of children with ADHD spent about $1,000 more on health care in the year before and in the two years following the birth of their child compared to mothers who did not have children with ADHD and they had more illnesses than mothers of children with asthma did.
Sam Goldstein, Ph.D., editor of the Journal of Attention Disorders and a research professor of psychology at George Mason University, said the new study expands on previous work.
For example, a 1985 study from the American Journal of Orthopsychiatry "identified poor maternal health during pregnancy, young age of mothers, previous miscarriage, first pregnancy, prematurity, long labor and toxemia as maternal factors that significantly differentiated children with ADHD from controls," Goldstein said.
"Keep in mind that the diagnosis of ADHD for the time being is not medical but behavioral," Goldstein said. "A host of phenomena can contribute to the adverse behavioral symptoms that lead to a diagnosis of ADHD."
Ray recommends that future studies address the methods making an ADHD diagnosis, since such diagnoses are relatively subjective and since parents, teachers and physicians all influence the process.
Ray GT, Croen LA, Habel LA.
"Mothers of children diagnosed with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder: health conditions and medical care utilization in periods before and after birth of the child."
Medical Care, 47(1), 2009.
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MLA
12 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/134161.php>
APA
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/134161.php.
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Hypothyrodisim Cause Of Son's ADD
posted by Karla Jones on 7 Jan 2009 at 10:42 amI know that my son was born with ADD & LD because of my Doctor taking me off my thryoid meds at 5 weeks gestation until my son was born. I supposedly had the best GYN'S in the city and did whatever they said faithfully, so it wasn't because I wasn't trying very hard to have a healthy baby.
NOW the practice is to keep pregnant women ON THE MEDS throughout the pregnancy as they have found that a mom being even slightly hypothyroid can effect brain development and cause all kinds of developmental problems. You might do an article on this as I think it is an issue that needs to be addressed as I am sure it effected many moms and babies. My son was born in 1980 and he is still struggling for survival in this society due to this oversight of the medical profession. I had a friend that was hypothyroid and pregnant at the same time and she went to a DO and he kept her on her thyroid meds! So it was only the AMA who was doing this. I wondered at the time who was right. I found out.
Karla Jones
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