Hartford Courant (Sunday)

ADHD On The Rise

Percentage Of Kids With The Disorder Nearly Doubles In 20 Years

- By RACHEL BLUTH Kaiser Health

The number of kids diagnosed has nearly doubled in the past 20 years.

The number of children diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactiv­ity disorder has reached more than 10 percent, a significan­t increase during the past 20 years, according to a recently released study.

The rise was most pronounced in minority groups, suggesting that better access to health insurance and mental health treatment through the Affordable Care Act might have played some role in the increase. The rate of diagnosis during that time period doubled in girls, although it was still much lower than in boys.

But the researcher­s say they found no evidence confirming frequent complaints that the condition is overdiagno­sed or misdiagnos­ed.

The U.S. has significan­tly more instances of ADHD than other developed countries, which researcher­s said has led some to think Americans are overdiagno­sing children. Dr. Wei Bao, the lead author of the study, said in an interview that a review of studies around the world doesn’t support that.

“I don’t think overdiagno­sis is the main issue,” he said.

Nonetheles­s, those doubts persist. Dr. Stephen Hinshaw, who co-authored a 2014 book called “The ADHD Explosion: Myths, Medication, Money, and Today’s Push for Performanc­e,” compared ADHD to depression. He said in an interview that neither condition has unequivoca­l biological markers, so it makes it hard to determine if a patient truly has the condition without lengthy psychologi­cal evaluation­s. Symptoms of ADHD can include inattentio­n, fidgety behavior and impulsivit­y.

“It’s probably not a true epidemic of ADHD,” said Hinshaw, a professor of psychology at the University of California at Berkeley and a professor of psychiatry at UC San Francisco. “It might be an epidemic of diagnosing it.”

In interpreti­ng their results, however, the study’s authors tied the

higher numbers to better understand­ing of the condition by doctors and the public, new standards for diagnosis and an increase in access to health insurance through the ACA.

Because of the ACA, “some low-income families have improved access to services and referrals,” said Bao, an assistant professor of epidemiolo­gy at the University of Iowa College of Public Health.

The study, published in JAMA Pediatrics, used data from the National Health Interview Survey, an annual federal survey of about 35,000 households. It found a steady increase in diagnoses among children from about 6 percent of children between 1997 and 1998 to more than 10 percent between 2015 and 2016.

Advances in medical technology also may have contribute­d to the increase, according to the research. Twenty years ago, preterm or low-weight babies had a harder time surviving. Those factors increase the risk of being diagnosed with ADHD.

The study also suggests that fewer stigmas about mental health care in minority communitie­s may also lead to more people receiving an ADHD diagnosis.

In the late 1990s, 7.2 percent of non-Hispanic white children, 4.7 percent of non-Hispanic black children and 3.6 of Hispanic children were diagnosed with ADHD, according to the study.

By 2016, it was 12 percent of white kids, 12.8 percent of blacks and 6.1 percent of Hispanics.

Over the past several decades, Hinshaw said, there’s been an expanded view of who can develop ADHD. It’s no longer viewed as a disease that affects only white middle-class boys, as eating disorders are no longer seen as afflicting only white middle-class girls.

Still, he cautioned against overdiagno­sing ADHD in communitie­s where behavioral issues could be the result of social or environmen­tal factors such as overcrowde­d classrooms.

The study found rates of ADHD among girls rose from 3 percent to more than 6 percent over the study period. It said that was partly a result of a change in how the condition is classified. For years, ADHD pertained to children who were hyperactiv­e.

But in recent years, the American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n added to its guide of mental health conditions that diagnosis should also include some children who are inattentiv­e, Bao said. That raised the number of girls, he explained, because it seems they are more likely to be in that second subtype.

“If we compare these two, you can easily imagine people will easily recognize hyperactiv­ity,” he said.

 ?? GETTY ?? MORE KIDS ARE being diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactiv­ity disorder, and the increase is most pronounced in minority groups.
GETTY MORE KIDS ARE being diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactiv­ity disorder, and the increase is most pronounced in minority groups.

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