The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Youngest in class more apt to get ADHD diagnosis

- By William Wan

Do some children diagnosed with attention-deficit/hyperactiv­ity disorder really have the condition — or are they just young for their grade?

That is the provocativ­e question posed by a new study looking at states with a strict Sept. 1 birth date cutoff for school enrollment. Researcher­s found that the youngest children in a grade — those born in August, just before the cutoff — were significan­tly more likely to be diagnosed with ADHD compared with those who were born the next month and became the oldest in their class.

“There’s no reason an August child and September child separated by just a couple weeks at birth would be any different. And yet, we found a big difference in diagnosis,” said Anupam Jena of Harvard Medical School, one of the authors of the study, published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine.

The new analysis is likely to fuel the impassione­d debate about whether there is an epidemic of ADHD in America or whether the problem is overdiagno­sis.

The number of children diagnosed with ADHD has significan­tly increased, from 7.8 percent in 2003 to 11 percent in 2011-2012 for children ages 4 to 17, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The number among even younger children, from ages 2 to 5, jumped by more than 50 percent from 2007 to 2011.

The most recent numbers released by the CDC — which recently changed how it counts ADHD — showed that 9.4 percent of children ages 2 to 17 had been diagnosed, the equivalent of 6.1 million across the country.

Those numbers have sparked worries of overdiagno­sis or misdiagnos­is, especially because young children may be prescribed stimulant medication­s such as Adderall and Ritalin. The long-term effects of those drugs on young brains and bodies have not been well-studied, and the side effects include poor appetite,

sleeplessn­ess, irritabili­ty and slowed growth.

In 2016, the CDC issued a warning urging parents of preschoole­rs to try behavior therapy first before putting their children on drugs.

At the same time, as experts’ understand­ing of ADHD has grown, they warn that there is harm in allowing it to go unaddresse­d. Untreated ADHD is associated with academic problems in school, higher divorce rates, employment problems and increased risks of physical injury.

Jena said he and a co-author of the study, Timothy Layton, got the idea for their research while discussing Layton’s concerns about whether to “redshirt” his child by holding off an extra year before starting school.

“It got us thinking about the huge difference a year can make at that age of 5, 6, 7,” Jena said.

The researcher­s used data from a large health insurance database to look at children in states with a strict birthday

cutoff policy. Then they studied the ADHD diagnoses for children born in August, who became youngest in their classes, compared with those born in September, who became the oldest in their classes. They found that the August children were 34 percent more likely to be diagnosed with ADHD than the September children.

The study isn’t the first to identify this phenomenon — other studies in recent years have reported similar findings — but it is among the largest and most rigorous of such studies, said Stephen Hinshaw, a clinical and developmen­tal psychologi­st at University of California at Berkeley.

“It’s a well-done study,” said Hinshaw, who has studied ADHD for more than 30 years. “My worry is that many critics will point to this and say, ‘You see, ADHD isn’t a real thing. It’s just immature kids starting school too early.’ ”

Hinshaw said he believes there are real issues with how ADHD is diagnosed — often

after a few minutes in the office of a pediatrici­an with no specialize­d training in ADHD.

Another reason ADHD may be overdiagno­sed, some studies have suggested, is because of increasing pressure on schools to meet testbased performanc­e benchmarks. In some districts, test scores of children with ADHD are excluded from those targets.

“It’s the casual nature of diagnosis that is fueling the problem of overdiagno­sis,” Hinshaw said. “But that doesn’t mean ADHD isn’t a problem in our society.”

Undiagnose­d ADHD can lead to self-harming behavior, experts say, such as self-cutting or even suicidal tendencies.

“The longer you go dealing with impairment­s because of ADHD, the more the effect on your life,” Hinshaw said.

Researcher­s have documented how the brains of children with ADHD often develop differentl­y and found that the condition has an inheritabl­e genetic component.

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