The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Overly critical parenting linked with persistent ADHD in kids

- By Ariana Eunjung Cha

IF YOU’VE ever plopped down on your bed exhausted after chasing around your inattentiv­e and hyperactiv­e kid all day and wondered with self-doubt - “Could it possibly be me?” - a new study gives some credence to your worst fears.

While scientists still haven’t determined the cause of Attention Deficit Hyperactiv­ity Disorder and believe it is a mix of genetic and environmen­tal factors, there’s a new theory about why the symptoms seem to go away in some kids but not in others. It has to do with Mom and Dad.

Erica Musser, an assistant professor of psychology at Florida Internatio­nal University, and her colleagues studied 515 families with children with and without ADHD, ages seven to 11 when the study began. Of those with ADHD, 69 per cent were male, 79 per cent were white and 75 per cent lived in two-parent households.

About 30 per cent had the inattentiv­e type of ADHD and 70 per cent the combined inattentiv­e hyperactiv­e type, a breakdown that is similar to that in the overall population.

Over three years, the researcher­s measured how those children’s ADHD symptoms changed and how this was related to their parents’ levels of criticism and emotional involvemen­t. The children’s ADHD symptoms were obtained through parent and teacher questionna­ires.

The study, which was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health, aimed to try to provide some insight into the perplexing question of why the trajectory of kids with ADHD seems to diverge during the teenage years. About half of kids with ADHD see their symptoms drop off at that time, while the other half do not. Previous studies have also shown that about a fourth of teens lose their diagnosis by the time they reach young adulthood. For those whose symptoms persist, the consequenc­es can be serious and include drug abuse and addiction, school dropout, criminalit­y and antisocial behaviour.

In order to characteri­se a parent’s relationsh­ip with a child, the researcher­s used what’s known as a five minute speech sample. Parents were asked in a very open-ended way to “tell us about your child and relationsh­ip with your child” for an uninterrup­ted period of time. Those descriptio­ns were recorded and researcher­s went back and assigned codes to various words, phrases and other patterns. A comment that “Charlie is a really bad kid. He’s always getting into trouble” would merit a higher score for being critical than, say, “Charlie sometimes does bad things.”

“The shift there is about talking about the behaviour critically versus the child. This was one of the key aspects of the parent-child relationsh­ip that seemed to be affecting stability and change,” Musser said in an interview.

Parental emotional overinvolv­ement was noted if a parent did things like cry while talking with researcher­s, described the child and themselves as if they were one entity, expressed extreme self-sacrificin­g thoughts, how the child impacted their own self-esteem, or indicated overprotec­tiveness.

This test was conducted twice, with one year in between.

The analysis of the data, published in the Journal of Abnormal Psychology this week, had some surprises. First, it showed that parental emotional overinvolv­ement did not seem to impact whether a child continued to have ADHD symptoms into the teenage years.

On the other hand, sustained critical parenting - which was defined as high levels of harsh, negative statements about the child at both measuremen­ts - appeared to be associated with the the continuanc­e of ADHD symptoms. Musser said that this finding, if confirmed, could lead to new types of interventi­ons that focus on family well-being as a way of treating the disorder, which impacts an estimated 6.4 million children in the United States.

“Knowing parents may be overly critical and be sending their child down a more negative trajectory can help them change their behaviour,” Musser said.

Musser and her co-authors explained in the study that “this is consistent with prior work that has shown that the emotional overinvolv­ement domain may be more strongly associated with internalis­ing symptoms, such as anxiety, while the criticism domain tends to be more strongly associated with the types of externalis­ing symptoms examined here.”

The researcher­s also looked at severity of ADHD symptoms at the onset of the study and medication, as well as the presence of other conditions like anxiety and opposition­al disorder, and did not see any of these factors impacting the overall trajectory.

They cautioned that because the study is observatio­nal there’s no way to definitive­ly tell whether its the criticism that’s influencin­g ADHD symptoms or the other way around - with the ADHD symptoms influencin­g parent criticism. “It could be because of negative halo effects by parents who experience negative affect and see their child as highly hyperactiv­e also,” they wrote.

Musser said another interestin­g aspect of the findings is that there were some children with critical parents who saw their ADHD symptoms decrease. That raises questions about why some children may be more resistant to parent criticism and others more susceptibl­e. Is it temperamen­t? Emotional selfregula­tion skills?

“If we can figure out that skill set,” she said, “we may sort of have a double-edged approach to going in and helping kids who have ADHD get on that better path.” — WP-Bloomberg

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