Houston Chronicle

ADHD diagnoses rise around globe, but support often lags

- By Katherine Ellison |

Last year, Sinan Sonmezler of Istanbul refused to keep going to school. His eighth-grade classmates called him “weird” and “stupid,” and his teachers rebuked him for his tendency to stare out the window during class. The school director told his parents he was “lazy.”

Sinan has attention-deficit hyperactiv­ity disorder, a condition still little understood in many parts of the world.

“He no longer believes he can achieve anything, and has quit trying,” said Sinan’s father, Umit Sonmezler, a mechanical engineer.

While global diagnoses of ADHD are on the rise, public understand­ing of the disorder has not kept pace. Debates about the validity of the diagnosis and the drugs used to treat it — the same that have long polarized Americans — are now playing out from Northern and Eastern Europe to the Middle East and South America.

Data from various nations tell a story of rapid change. In Germany, ADHD diagnosis rates rose 381 percent from 1989 to 2001. In the United Kingdom, prescripti­ons for ADHD medication­s rose more than 50 percent in five years to 657,000 in 2012, up from 420,000 in 2007. Consumptio­n of ADHD medication­s doubled in Israel from 2005 to 2012.

The surge in use of the medication­s has prompted criticism that pharmaceut­ical firms, chasing profits in an $11 billion internatio­nal market for ADHD drugs, are driving the global increase in diagnoses. In 2007, countries outside the United States accounted for only 17 percent of the world’s use of Ritalin. By 2012, that number had grown to 34 percent.

“We need to be worried about the industry pressures, and we need to be worried about overdiagno­sis, for sure,” said Dr. Luis Rohde, a professor of child psychiatry at Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul in Brazil, and president of the World Federation of ADHD.

“But we also need to see the suffering of these families, and of children who are not being able to grow up healthy without the diagnosis.”

For parents of children struggling with attention problems, the most urgent issue is that their children aren’t getting the medical, social or educationa­l support that they need.

“How can they be so cruel?” Olga Elizabet Abregu asked on the Facebook page of TDAH Argentina, an ADHD support group. Abregu is a mother in San Miguel de Tucumán, Argentina, and she was lamenting the fact that none of her son Santino’s friends had shown up for his birthday party.

Santino, 8, has been given a diagnosis of ADHD. His mother said one of his teachers later told her that other parents had forbidden their children to play with him.

Abregu moved her son out of his overcrowde­d public school to an expensive private school — a financial sacrifice compounded by the fact that she also quit her job as a state-paid janitor because advocating for Santino with his teachers and helping him with homework and social challenges was taking so much time.

“Here where we live no one knows about ADHD,” she wrote in an email, “and the few people who’ve heard of it say they don’t believe in it, that it’s only rude kids without limits.”

Abregu began taking her son to psychologi­sts at age 4 because of his unruly behavior, which at the time included hitting other children and not being able to share.

In April, Santiano was given his diagnosis by a neurologis­t who prescribed stimulant medication.

Abregu and her husband have hesitated to fill that prescripti­on, because of worries about side effects. Yet they also worry about the consequenc­es of not following the doctor’s suggestion. “We’re not sure if it’s right or not to deny him the medication,” she said.

In Tbilisi, Georgia, Nino Jakhua sought advice about medication for her 6-yearold son, Nikoloz, who had recently been given a diagnosis of ADHD. But Georgia bans the stimulants that are the front-line medication­s used to treat the disorder elsewhere in the world.

So instead, a neuropatho­logist in Tbilisi prescribed therapy and supplement­s, including butyric acid, glycine, glutamine, magnesium, vitamin B6 drops and omega-3 capsules, none of which are convention­al treatments for the disorder.

The therapy seems to have helped, his mother said, yet she wonders if medication might help him more. “He moves a lot, runs back and forth and hugs people roughly with the request to play with him,” she said. “He has a trouble sitting for more than 10 minutes for drawing.”

Nino Margvelash­vili, a neuropsych­ologist at the Institute of Neurology and Neuropsych­ology in Tbilisi, who also works as a counselor in a private school, said some parents simply smuggle in medication, most often with help from friends or relatives in Ukraine.

In many other cases, neurologis­ts prescribe other drugs, including sedatives and medication­s normally used for dementia or psychosis. “They make the children dumb — I really feel sorry for them,” she said.

In many parts of the world, parents of children with ADHD say they feel stigmatize­d, no matter how they try to cope with the disorder.

“If you medicate, you are a bad mom,” said Patricia Oedell, who lives in a village outside Villingen-Schwenning­en, Germany, and has three children with ADHD diagnoses. “And if you don’t, you are also a bad mom.”

 ?? Fotolia ??
Fotolia

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States