5 Year ADHD Study Identifies Effective Strategies For Decreasing Aggressiveness And Improving Behavior Without Medicine
Main Category: ADHDAlso Included In: Psychology / Psychiatry
Article Date: 24 Aug 2007 - 16:00 PDT
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Non-medicinal interventions are highly effective in preventing the behavioral and academic problems associated with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), according to a five-year study led by researchers at Lehigh University's College of Education.
The study, titled "Project Achieve" and funded by the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), was the largest of its kind focusing on children aged 3 to 5 who have shown significant symptoms of ADHD. It also involved researchers from Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown, Pa.
The researchers, led by George DuPaul, professor of school psychology at Lehigh; Lee Kern, professor of special education at Lehigh; and Dr. John Van Brakle, chair of the pediatrics department at Lehigh Valley Hospital, studied 135 preschool students with ADHD symptoms. They evaluated the effectiveness of early intervention techniques in helping children decrease defiant behavior and aggression, while improving academic and social skills.
The study's results are reported in a special series on ADHD in the most recent issue of School Psychology Review. Published by the National Association of School Psychologists, the quarterly is the world's second-largest peer-reviewed psychology journal.
"Early identification and intervention are essential, but there has been a lack of research on how to identify and intervene effectively with these children during their preschool years," said Thomas Power, editor of the journal and program director with the Center for Management of ADHD at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.
"The investigation by Kern, DuPaul and their colleagues is the most ambitious study ever conducted of non-pharmacological, psychosocial interventions for young children with ADHD."
The results were significant. Using a variety of early intervention strategies, parents reported, on average, a 17-percent decrease in aggression and a 21-percent improvement in their children's social skills. Teachers saw similarly strong results; in the classroom, there was a 28-percent improvement in both categories. Early literacy skills improved up to three times over their baseline status.
"Medication may address the symptoms of ADHD," says DuPaul, "but it does not necessarily improve children's academic and social skills. And because this is a lifelong disorder, without any cure, it's important that we start understanding what tools and strategies are effective for children with ADHD at such an early age.
"There's simply a lack of understanding about the type of non-medicinal services that are available to preschool children and their families. Our goal is to address behavioral and academic issues before they become more problematic in elementary school."
Early intervention techniques include highly individualized programs that often rely on positive supports to reinforce behavior. For example, in consultation with parents and preschool teachers, Project Achieve researchers modified the environments in home and school (such as altering tasks and activities in the classroom to accommodate for ADHD students) in an effort to improve behavior. The highly interactive techniques were presented as alternatives to medicine.
ADHD is a lifelong mental disorder that may become apparent in a child's formative preschool years. The disorder, which makes it difficult for children to control their behavior and pay attention, affects about 7 percent of the school-aged population. The disorder has become a public health concern, however, because 40 percent of children who show signs of ADHD are suspended from preschool, while approximately 16 percent are eventually expelled.
The researchers suggest that a multi-tiered approach to intervention, offering more traditional services to at-risk children and more intensive services to children in greatest need, may be the most practical and cost-effective strategy for helping preschoolers overcome behavioral and academic challenges.
"While parents of children with ADHD usually trace the characteristic behaviors back to the preschool years," says Van Brakle, "pediatricians have long questioned whether such children can accurately be identified, given the overlap with normal behaviors in young children. And if so, whether any intervention that does not involve medicine can be of value. Project Achieve suggests that with careful assessment, such children can be accurately identified and that appropriate behavioral interventions are an important part of the treatment plan."
School Psychology Review's special ADHD issue features two ADHD articles co-authored by researchers at Lehigh's College of Education. DuPaul also contributed the Forward for the issue, which is titled, "School-Based Interventions for Students With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Current Status and Future Directions."
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For additional information, visit http://www3.lehigh.edu/about/news/avnews.asp to watch DuPaul and Kern discuss the outcome of Project ACHIEVE and its potential impact on the ADHD community.
Source: Tom Yencho
Lehigh University
Visit our adhd section for the latest news on this subject.
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Report On ADHD Study Is Flawed
posted by Anon on 24 Aug 2007 at 6:38 pmThe Medical News Today report on effective non-medicinal strategies for preventing behavioral and academic problems associated with ADHD does not live up to its headline. The five-year study, as presumably reported by the investigators and even as presumably reported in the news release from which the newsletter based its revised article, surely listed at least one or two strategies for preventing aggressiveness or for preventing "academic problems", but none were reported in this article. The study may well have produced useful conclusions, but, regrettably, a reader of Medical News Today would have to consult additional sources to find them. And, it appears that the results are results reported by parents and teachers, not results observed by objective researchers. Readers interested in ADHD and its diagnosis deserve a more complete article than this one. This subject would seem to raise very serious questions regarding accommodation of ADHD students in public schools under federal civil rights law and also of measures targeted at pre-schoolers to "prevent" delinquency. It would be nice to have a link to a peer-reviewed report by the investigators that covers their methodology, an enumeration of "effective strategies" and a discussion of ethical issues confronted during the five-year-study (for example, some mention of the fate of young people who did not have the benefit of the medication.)
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