Link Between ADHD, Low Maternal Education, Lone Parents And Welfare Benefits
Main Category: ADHDAlso Included In: Public Health; Pediatrics / Children's Health
Article Date: 02 Jun 2010 - 4:00 PDT
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A major study of more than a million children has found strong links between receiving medication for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and limited maternal education, single parent families and welfare benefits, according to the June issue of Acta Paediatrica
Swedish experts teamed up to carry out what they believe is the first study of risk factors for ADHD in a national cohort of school children, based on 1.16 million children on the country's Prescribed Drug Register.
"We identified 7,960 Swedish-born children, aged between six and 19, using a prescription for ADHD medication as our indicator of severe ADHD" explains lead author Professor Anders Hjern from the Centre for Health Equity Studies, a collaboration between the Karolinska Institutet and Stockholm University.
"We then tracked their records through other registers, using the unique ten digit reference number all Swedish residents are given at birth, to determine a number of other factors."
ADHD is a common, treatable childhood illness that can affect areas of the brain connected to problem solving, planning ahead, understanding others' actions and controlling impulses. The primary symptoms of the condition are hyperactivity, impulsivity and inattention.
"Genes are also known to play an important role in the development of ADHD and studies of identical twins show that they are very likely to exhibit the same ADHD traits" says Professor Hjern, who carried out the study when he was based at the National Board of Health and Welfare.
Key findings of the Swedish study include:
- Boys were three times more likely to be on ADHD medication than girls, with medication use highest in boys aged between 10 and 15.
- Women who had only received the most basic education were 130 per cent more likely to have a child on ADHD medication than women with university degrees.
- Children were 54 per cent more likely to be on ADHD medication if they came from a single parent family rather than having both parents at home.
- Coming from a family on welfare benefits increased the risk of ADHD medication by 135 per cent when compared with households not claiming benefits.
- There were no statistically significant differences between the effects that socioeconomic factors had on boys or girls in the study.
"Our study showed that almost half of the cases could be explained by the socioeconomic factors included in our analysis, clearly demonstrating that these are potent predictors of ADHD-medication in Swedish schoolchildren" says Professor Hjern.
"There are several ways that family factors may influence ADHD. For example, low parental education is associated with general social disadvantage, a higher number of stress factors and a greater risk of childhood adversity.
"Lack of time and money are more common in single parent families, as are lack of social support and family conflict, including separation, divorce and parental absence.
"We believe that further research into ADHD should focus on the interaction between genes and environmental factors in order to determine the reasons why some children develop ADHD and how it could be prevented."
Notes:
Social adversity predicts ADHD-medication in school children - a national cohort study. Hjern et al. Acta Paediatrica. 99, pp920-924. (June 2010). DOI: 10.1111/j.1651-2227.2009.01638.x
Source:
Annette Whibley
Wiley-Blackwell
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (3)
Parental ADHD?
posted by Cathleen Hollister on 3 Jun 2010 at 8:36 amCould the parents also have ADHD? If you are an adult with ADHD keeping a job, and holding a marriage together is much more difficult. Coping is much more difficult. Also impulsiveness can lead to unprotected sex therefore more children born out of wedlock. This is a no brainer!
This study is very one sided and doesn't look at all the variables. Parents with ADHD = kids with ADHD.
Good Reason Long Known
posted by Dr Billy Levin on 3 Jun 2010 at 3:20 pmIf ADHD is indeed a left brain (learning side) immaturity and/or right brain (behavior impulsive) brain and inherited then it would hardly be surprising that if a mother had it by inheritance she might find it unavoidable to under achieve at school due to neglect and educational ignorance. Boys have the disadvantage that Testosterone boosts the already over developed right brain making ADHS even more possible.
If an impulsive sexual act would result in an unacceptable but unavoidable pregnancy the baby might also have ADHD. This would result in a major obstruction to the mother’s further education even more. This would result in often giving up the child to an adoption agency or raising the child as a single parent. If the young and irresponsible (possible also ADHD) father went to work to support the baby and mother instead of furthering his education this family would have a more than likely chance of a future poor income stressful situation or otherwise welfare would have to assist one way or another. In fact all these situations are typical of many inherited ADHD life styles.
The genes are the primary cause and environment cannot cause but certainly aggravate the pitiful situation. Medical neglect and ignorance certainly does not help the situation. Far too many ADHD people are either neglected or never diagnosed, diagnosed too late or when diagnosed too often incorrectly or ineffectively treated.
The fact that the genetic factor is strong enough to diagnose a future ADHD child before the mother falls pregnant might help to prevent unwanted babies in unwed mothers who might have to depend on welfare. Treating all those in need of treatment long before the age of 6 might also help. Certainly treating all adults will also help. All is possible provided doctors educate the public of the need to diagnose early enough and treat effectively.
Dangers in Linking ADHD to Class
posted by Kerry on 2 Jul 2010 at 5:43 amI am a university ed., sole support mother of a boy with ADHD. I have a professional job in health-care and we live a relatively enlightened life. We are not members of the elite - that's for sure - but my son has a nice life with many perks other families can't afford.
ADHD, as with so many health issues, runs the risk of being exclusively linked to class. Class is always part of these discussions, but must be woven in with smart context and move beyond correlation to more causal explanations. Social determinants of health are central to so many aspects of our lives and cannot be ignored. Moreover, if you have something like ADHD, that is not properly identified and/or treated, how can you climb out of poverty, etc.?
It's a tough discussion for someonone like me. I have ADHD traits and it seems my son's father does do. Could my son's father and I achieved more without ADHD? Probably...but I was 37 yrs. old, working as a professional with 6 yrs. post secondary education when I had a planned, healthy pregnancy with my now ex-husband. Having little contact with my ex and his family has left many unanswered questions about my son's paternal genetic profile. Putting some pieces of this puzzle together has been instructive. In coming to the realization that not only ADHD, as we frame this cluster of traits in "the west", but gene pools in places like North Africa, where my ex is from, may contain traits needed for success in this ancient culture vs. those qualities deemed adaptive here in urban, information-centric North America.
We know that severe mental illness (i.e. schizophrenia, etc.) often correlates with poverty b/c of debilitating symptoms. We must resist the urge to assume that only those that are poor have these illnesses and understand that until better treatments emerge, these ppl rely on social assistance to survive. It is not poverty that leads to this diagnosis, but the illness that prevents it's victim from living a dignified life b/c of the terrible symptoms it produces. When we see a few generations of related ppl with this illness, we can forget that the illness makes ppl poor, not the other way around.
Poverty - and its related issues - and ADHD strike me as a much different scenario than more devastating diagnoses at this point in time. ADHD is highly identifiable and treatable from a young age. Most children begin to exhibit ADHD very early and parents often resist treatment for a variety of reasons. Parents too can gain insight into their lives by becoming more aware of their history and the possibility of having these traits too. With treatment, parents and children alike can not only feel better, but accomplish more and by association move beyond poverty. Parents who have grown up poor without social capital, etc. may have trouble climbing out of poverty and/or ensuring their children have more choices than they did.
Without "maternal education" coming to conclusions about family health isn't as easy as for these women as it might be for their educated counterparts. However, with solid family health intervention, these children could enjoy a much higher quality of life than their parents once treated for ADHD. Being able to achieve more in school with enhanced attention, is central to a plethora of other successes known to evolve from solid ADHD diagnosis and treatment.
Articles like this are important, but must be read critically and applied to solid practice to move beyond harmful stereotypes. I would also assert that articles like this could dissaude so-called middle-class parents from securing proper health care for a child with ADHD. If ADHD is presented to the public as something that correlates with class and those in less affluent circumstances, they will miss the boat for their children.
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