Research Identifies Link Between Childhood ADHD And Adult Crime
Main Category: ADHDAlso Included In: Mental Health; Psychology / Psychiatry; Pediatrics / Children's Health
Article Date: 29 Oct 2009 - 4:00 PDT
Schoolchildren with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder are substantially more likely to engage in many types of criminal activity such as burglary, theft and drug dealing as they grow older, a new study by the Yale School of Public Health has found. The research was published in The Journal of Mental Health Policy and Economics.
An analysis of more than 10,000 adolescents who were later surveyed as young adults found that children with ADHD were twice as likely to commit theft later in life and had a 50 percent higher incidence of selling drugs. The research results are believed to be the first evidence of a link between illegal activity and the childhood condition commonly known as ADHD that uses a national sample of individuals.
Authors Jason M. Fletcher, assistant professor at the school, and Barbara Wolfe of the University of Wisconsin-Madison say the findings suggest that children exhibiting ADHD symptoms should be viewed as an at-risk group and that intervention programs might be appropriate.
Researchers estimate that crimes where ADHD is a factor cost society $2 billion to $4 billion annually. "While much research has shown links between ADHD and short-term educational outcomes, this research suggests significant longer-term consequences in other domains, such as criminal activities," said Fletcher, the study's lead author. He added, "We also found important differences in the association between adult crime and the type of childhood ADHD symptoms-whether hyperactive or inattentive or both."
It is estimated that ADHD affects between 2 percent to 10 percent of schoolchildren in the United States. The condition is far more prevalent in males than females and is much higher among close relatives than in the general population, suggesting a genetic origin. Treatment for ADHD, meanwhile, has increased sharply over the past 20 years with pharmaceuticals, such as Ritalin, now commonly used.
Fletcher said the link between ADHD and criminal activity will be further investigated by examining whether pharmacological treatments may reduce the risk of illegal activities as an adult. He is also investigating the relationships between childhood ADHD symptoms and labor market outcomes, such as employment and earnings.
Source
Yale University
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MLA
11 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/169145.php>
APA
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/169145.php.
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (2)
Treatment Does Help - ADHD
posted by Cathi Zillmann NPP on 30 Oct 2009 at 6:34 amThe article raises the question whether pharmaceutical intervention can help prevent crime in young people with ADHD. As a prescriber, I know medication helps because it helps slow them down and notice the implications of what they're doing. But more importantly, it helps them benefit from other interventions such as psychotherapy. Medication for the child also helps lighten the tension at home so the parents can benefit from the other important aspect of ADHD treatment, parent education (and often treatment for the parents). Finally, it helps the youth do better in school, so they can feel a sense of self-efficacy and have some hope of ever getting a meaningful job.
hasty conclusion
posted by catherine doyle on 3 Nov 2010 at 2:11 pmThis study shows only a correlative relationship between ADHD and criminal behavior as an adult and not a causal relationship. In fact, this study could easily point to a problem of mis and under diagnosis early enough, as well as, a huge amount of ignorance regarding the nature of the disorder which tends to lead to mal-attribution of motive for everyday behaviors such as inattention being labeled as ignoring authority etc. This in turn leads to a lack of tolerance and inappropriate responses to patient over time leading to a severely degraded sense of self-esteem. Over time this develops an attitude of oppositional authority defiant behavior that we further label as a 'disorder'. One could reasonably argue that this oppositional defiance is not a disorder at all but merely a rational response over time to what is experienced by the undiagnosed ADHD child as a hostile, unfairly judgmental and abusive world. ADHD individuals also compare strongly to politicians, entrepreneurs and actors on personality testing with the main difference in traits reported being no bedwetting reported by the last three categories.
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