Sentinel & Enterprise

Behaviors associated with ADHD are indisputab­le

- By John Rosemond Visit family psychologi­st John Rosemond’s website at johnrosemo­nd.com; readers may send him email at questions@rosemond.com; due to the volume of mail, not every question will be answered. This column was provided by Tribune News Servic

The Wall Street Journal recently published a letter from a gentleman who, apparently speaking from personal experience, claimed that attentiond­eficit/ hyperactiv­ity disorder (ADHD) is real, then extolled the benefits of the stimulant medication­s typically prescribed when the diagnosis is made. Effectivel­y, said gentleman parroted the false narrative peddled by Big Pharma and Big Mental Health — meaning, he is mistaken.

First and foremost, ADHD is not “real” in the same sense as leukemia or diabetes. The latter can be objectivel­y verified and measured. Not so with ADHD. It is a concept, nothing more. No test will reliably identify it. The diagnostic criteria are entirely subjective. Therefore, a person diagnosed as “having”

ADHD does not “have” more than a diagnosis.

Practition­ers and spokespers­ons for BP and BMH often refer to the “ADHD gene,” a theoretica­l entity that supposedly causes either “brain difference­s” or a “biochemica­l imbalance.” With apologies to individual­s who have swallowed and are emotionall­y invested in these canards, no body of credible, replicated science has establishe­d a cause-and- effect relationsh­ip between any biological variable and the behaviors associated with an ADHD diagnosis.

Oh, the powers that be talk about such cause and effect convincing­ly, obviously, but they cannot produce consistent (if any) hard evidence. The same is true of all psychiatri­c diagnoses, by the way. Yes, even bipolar disorder. Again, my apologies to those who need them.

The ADHD establishm­ent, people with impressive capital letters after their names, claims that certain test results are associated with the behaviors in question. So? The pertinent issue is whether these tests qualify as science. The answer is, they do not. Having administer­ed them, I assure the reader that they are largely superfluou­s to the diagnosis and are given, in large part, to create the illusion that something scientific is being done to arrive at it.

That brings us to the thorniest issue of all: ADHD medication­s. ADHD drugs do not produce the paradoxica­l effect of “slowing people down.” As central nervous system stimulants, they increase attention span (they do so for most folks who take them), and the simple truth is that when someone pays attention to a single task for a reasonable period of time, their activity level will be lower than when their attention is all over the map.

All that said, the behaviors that define an ADHD diagnosis — short attention span and its cascade — are indisputab­le. Given decades of research failing to definitive­ly identify a biological cause, the most likely explanatio­n lies with environmen­tal factors. People so diagnosed, and especially parents of children with ADHD diagnoses, tend to have a knee-jerk pronounced agitation response to that suggestion. Therefore, falsehoods rule.

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