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Spotlight on ADHD drugs

lynnie

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97
Children on ADHD drugs suffer strokes
Monday Mar 27 05:35 AEDT
Children as young as five have suffered strokes, heart attacks and hallucinations after taking drugs to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).

Almost 400 serious adverse reactions to the two most used ADHD drugs, Ritalin and Dexamphetamine, had been reported to the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA), The Australian reported.

Almost 60 of the adverse reaction reports dating back to 1980, obtained under freedom of information laws, involved children under the age of 10, the newspaper said.

Cases included the sudden death of a seven-year-old and a five-year-old who suffered a stroke.




Children also experienced heart palpitations and shortness of breath.

Hair loss, muscle spasms, severe abdominal pain, depression and paranoia were also reported.

The TGA said it has asked pharmaceutical companies to provide updated information about cardiovascular side effects involving ADHD medication.

"The TGA is currently reviewing this new information," A TGA spokeswoman said.

The newspaper said prescriptions for Ritalin increased tenfold after the drug was listed on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme last August.

More than 5800 prescriptions were written for Ritalin in January compared with 523 last August.

http://news.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=62843
 
Drug chiefs called in after children suffer strokes
Clara Pirani and Patricia Karvelas
March 28, 2006

AN urgent investigation has been launched into claims drugs used to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder could be killing children.

Parliamentary Secretary for Health Christopher Pyne will also meet pharmaceutical company executives this week to discuss whether such drugs should carry stronger warnings.

Mr Pyne yesterday said he had requested an urgent meeting with Novartis Australia, in response to a report in The Australian that children as young as five had suffered strokes, heart attacks, hallucinations and convulsions after taking ADHD medication.

Documents obtained by The Australian revealed almost 400 adverse reactions had been reported to the Therapeutic Goods Administration, some involving children as young as three.

"I've asked the people of Novartis, who are the makers of Ritalin, to come and see me this week and explain why Ritalin shouldn't have a black box applied to it," Mr Pyne said.

Black box warnings signify that a drug may cause dangerous side-effects. They are the strongest warnings that can be issued by drug regulators.

"The problem is that doctors are inappropriately prescribing Ritalin because they think it's the wonder drug for children with ADHD," Mr Pyne said.

"I'm very concerned about this. Parents are entitled to expect the Government to protect them from those kind of (drugs) that lead to the deaths of their children. I have spoken to the head of the TGA and directed him to fast-track an investigation of the use of Ritalin, including speeding up discussions with the FDA in the United States, who are also investigating."

A spokeswoman for TGA said there was no conclusive evidence ADHD was linked to sudden death or cardiovascular episodes. However, data obtained by The Australian showed the TGA's reports lacked detailed information about the side-effects experienced by dozens of children. Many of the reports failed to note the patient's age.

In more than 60 cases the TGA did not conduct any follow-up investigation to find out whether individuals recovered from the side-effects.

From The Australian
 
Dark side of a wonder drug

Not only do drugs prescribed to combat hyperactivity in children have frightening side effects, they may not be necessary, writes medical reporter

Clara Pirani
March 28, 2006

FOR almost two years Janine Ritson ignored doctors and teachers who told her to medicate her son. Hyperactive, inattentive and angry, the seven-year-old was virtually uncontrollable. "He would fly off the handle at the slightest thing," Ritson says. "He couldn't cope with any change to his routine and he was falling behind in school."

Ritson's son was diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. "I really did not want to give him drugs but after years of hearing that he needed medication, I thought I'd give it a try," she says.

Ritson started her son on a low-dose course of dexamphetamine, one of the most commonly used ADHD drugs in Australia. The relieved mother says the change in her son's behaviour was startling. He was less angry, calmer and easier to control, much to the delight of his frustrated teachers. But the drug also caused alarming side effects.

"He started hallucinating," Ritson says. "He said he could hear monsters and voices in his head that wouldn't stop. And he stopped sleeping. He would still be wide awake at two in the morning."

Ritson sought advice from her doctor and was told to give her son a sleeping pill in combination with the dexamphetamine.

"That was it for me," she says.

"I thought it was ridiculous being told to give him tablets to make him be good and then tablets to make him sleep. I thought, 'If he can't fit in the school system, I'll have to home-school him."'

Ritson stopped giving her son dexamphetamine and, after much research and consultation with specialists, started her son on a strict diet that excluded all chemicals and preservatives.

"It's worked really well for him," Ritson says. "He's 10 now and he's like a different child. He has friends, he's doing better in school and he's much calmer."

Ritson's experience is not uncommon. Documents obtained by The Australian this week reveal almost 400 adverse reactions to ADHD drugs have been reported to the Therapeutic Goods Administration, some involving children as young as three. Children as young as five have suffered strokes, heart attacks, shortness of breath, hallucinations, muscle spasms and convulsions.

Cases include the sudden death of a seven-year-old and a five-year-old who suffered a stroke after taking Ritalin. Children also experienced heart palpitations and shortness of breath after taking dexamphetamine.

The data raises questions about whether pharmaceutical companies and drug regulators are providing reliable information about the side effects of these widely prescribed medications.

The use of ADHD drugs has rocketed in the past decade. Prescriptions for dexamphetamine jumped from 96,000 a year to 232,000 in the 10 years to 2004-05. Prescriptions for Ritalin increased 10-fold after the drug was listed on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme in August last year, reducing the cost from $49 to $29.50, or $4.70 for concession card holders. More than 5800 prescriptions were written for Ritalin in January this year, compared with 523 in August last year.

ADHD is now the most commonly diagnosed psychiatric condition among school-age children. In 2000, a federal government report, the National Survey of Mental Health and Wellbeing, surveyed 4000 people in Australia and found that 11 per cent of parents thought their child had ADHD.

Yesterday, parliamentary secretary to the health minister Christopher Pyne said the federal Government would investigate whether the warnings about ADHD medication were adequate.

"I've asked the people of Novartis, who are the makers of Ritalin, to come and see me this week and explain why Ritalin shouldn't have a black box applied to it," he says.

Black boxes are placed on drug labels to signify the drug may cause dangerous side effects. They are the most serious warnings issued by drug regulators.

The US medication watchdog, the Food and Drug Administration, is considering whether all ADHD drugs should carry black boxes. The FDA is also investigating whether ADHD drugs were linked to the deaths of 25 people, including 19 children, and 54 cases of cardiovascular episodes, including heart attacks, strokes and serious heartbeat disturbances, between 1999 and 2003.

Last week a panel of pediatric experts advising the FDA recommended new information about psychiatric and heart risks be added to the labels of ADHD drugs. The panel declined to recommend the black box warning, which a different advisory panel endorsed last month.

The FDA will consider both panels' recommendations before making a final labelling decision.

Although FDA officials say there is no conclusive evidence that the medications cause psychiatric episodes or heart problems, they note a "complete absence" of similar reports in children treated with placebos during trials of ADHD drugs.

Pyne says the TGA should work with the FDA to review warnings about potential side effects caused by ADHD medication.

"The problem is that doctors are inappropriately prescribing Ritalin because they think it's the wonder drug for children with ADHD," Pyne tells The Australian. "I'm very concerned about this. Parents are entitled to expect the Government to protect them from those kind of [drugs] that lead to the deaths of their children. I have spoken to the head of the TGA and directed him to fast-track an investigation of the use of Ritalin, including speeding up discussions with the FDA in the US, who are also investigating."

However, a spokeswoman for the TGA says the regulator has adequate systems in place to monitor adverse events.

"Reporting of adverse drug reactions is just one of the methods utilised by the TGA to monitor the safety of medications," she says. "Other tools include thorough evaluation of all safety and efficacy information prior to approval of a medicine for registration in Australia [and] information sharing with international regulators regarding adverse drug reactions."

Drug companies must also report serious side effects that occur in Australia to the TGA within 15 days of becoming aware of the reaction, a system that relies on consumers or doctors reporting the adverse reactions to the drug company.

"It must be emphasised that, at this stage, no causal relationship has been established between the use of stimulant medicines registered for use in ADHD and sudden death, nor is there clear evidence in the US," the TGA's spokeswoman says.

However, the data obtained by The Australian shows the TGA's reports lack detailed information about the side effects experienced by dozens of children. Many of the reports fail to note the patient's age.

In more than 60 cases, the TGA did not conduct any follow-up investigation to find out whether the individual recovered from the side effects they experienced.

The cases where the outcome was recorded as unknown involved a 12-year-old who suffered heart palpitations, a four-year-old with anorexia and vomiting, and an eight-year-old who experienced hair loss.

Jon Jureidini, the head of the department of psychological medicine at the Women's and Children's Hospital in Adelaide, says many adverse reactions are not reported to the TGA.

"We doctors are very poor at reporting adverse drug reactions," Jureidini says. "Most of trainees who rotate through our unit don't even know what the forms look like. I think the drug companies, the TGA and the doctors ourselves are all failing the community in the area of monitoring adverse events."

Jureidini says claims by drug regulators and pharmaceutical companies that the number of adverse reactions are minimal when compared with the number of people who take ADHD medication cannot be substantiated.

"You can't rely on the actual number of adverse reaction reports versus the number of people taking the medication as any kind of estimate of the incidence of adverse events," Jureidini says. "The number of adverse events will always be grossly underestimated because we are so bad at reporting."

Jureidini claims there is also a lack of reliable data about the long-term use of ADHD medication on young children.

In September last year an analysis of more than 2200 studies into 16 drugs, including Ritalin and dexamphetamine, found there was no solid evidence about the long-term effect of ADHD drugs.

The review was conducted by the Drug Effectiveness Review Project at Oregon State University, a research group set up by 12 US states to provide independent information about some of the more commonly used drugs. It warned there were no good quality studies that examined the long-term safety of ADHD drugs.

"Good-quality evidence on the use of drugs to affect outcomes relating to global academic performance, consequences of risky behaviours, social achievements etc is lacking," the study found.

Joe Tucci, a psychologist and chief executive of children's welfare group the Australian Childhood Foundation, says the medication should not be given to young children, whose brains are still developing.

"I don't think we know enough yet about the long-term consequences of using this medication, especially when children are taking it every day for years," he says.

Tucci says medication can help a small number of children with severe behavioral problems. However, he says, doctors are prescribing medication far too often.

"The medical profession and the drug companies have pushed the model that really difficult children's behaviour can always be explained as a medical problem that requires a medical solution, which is a drug," Tucci says. "We've come to use medical intervention as a way of treating internal or emotional difficulties in children."

Lois Achimovich, a Fremantle psychiatrist with 30 years' experience, says many parents don't want to give their children medication but increasingly they don't have a choice.

She claims the lack of affordable mental health services in Australia has left parents without any support.

"Counselling should always be tried before drugs are given but there are waiting lists, in Western Australia, for example, of more than a year to get a child and adolescent mental health appointment," Achimovich says. "Any child behaviour that looks abnormal, parents think is ADHD, and they know that there's medication for it. Pills have become a cheap alternative to this problem."

Ritson says that finding an alternative to medication is a long and expensive process.

"It's really hard because you know your kids are suffering and you are told by teachers and doctors that they should be medicated," she says. "It has been an expensive, long road. We've had every possible test done, we went to lectures about alternative treatments and spent nights looking at papers on the internet, but it was worth it."

From The Australian
 
Band's drug stand
From: March 28, 2006

US rock band Living Things has taken a public stand against the medication of children for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.

Drawing from his childhood experiences of growing up with ADHD, lead singer Lillian Berlin is telling audiences all over the US that medicating children for behavioural problems does not work.

"My story is the story of what a lot of kids went through in the 1990s: The big whole ADD and ADHD phenomena kicked in," Berlin said.

"Kids were getting diagnosed with ADD, which is just a glorified term for daydreaming. You'd get put on Ritalin or Prozac or Paxil, all these mood-controlling prescriptions, but since you were under the age of 18 you didn't have a choice.

"You'd have your teacher or your parents telling you to do it. In my school, if you were diagnosed with ADD you'd be put in a special district for handicapped kids.

"I think that's obnoxious because every kid daydreams and every kid is wild. It's just that some kids are more wild and some kids daydream more than others."

Berlin was diagnosed at the age of 12, when he says he was put into a class for slow learners and prescribed Ritalin.

In a recent interview, he told The Independent the drug made him stressed and aggressive.

"I would get into fights. If you didn't take the pill, you could get expelled," he said.

The school also made him keep a record of his feelings in a journal, which he now plans to publish under the title Post-Mortem Bliss.

News.com.au
 
These views in the way they have been presented here, ie anti ritalin anti ADHD, have no credability. Until you have suffered from adhd and can provide something approaching an opinion rather than just regergitating other peoples fringe dweller shit views in here (and shit it most certainly is), EDIT: Not necessary.
 
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Nothing personal but when you ask for special consideration from your boss for your repeated fucking up of a simple task because of your "ADHD" and they look at you like your a lieing piece of shit, like your lazy,...even when you provide medical proof...
I blame Dr Peter Breggen and the people who propagate his views, which are, shit.
He has zero credability, experience, intergrity.

http://www.quackwatch.org/11Ind/breggin.html

People should consider giving themselves, I dunno, ANY education on ritalin and ADHD before talking.

Wikipedia

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ritalin

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ADHD

It is worth noting that Ritalin has been used since the early 50's and has been more comprehensively studied than ANY other drug in history.

ADHD has been discribed in medical literiture for over 100 years when in 1902 the English pediatrician George Still described a condition analogous to ADHD which he regarded it as innate and not caused by the environment.

Dr Danial Amen has shown through his pioneering brain imiging work the biological proof of ADHD and its several subtypes and the difference that treatment with psychostimulants brings about

http://www.amenclinic.com/bp/atlas/ch12.php

^^^
Read it
 
ADHD outbreak
June 14, 2006

ADULTS, some older than 85, are taking ADHD drugs at a rate almost as high as children.

An investigation by The Daily Telegraph reveals 24,009 prescriptions for the attention deficit hyperactivity disorder medications dexamphetamine and Ritalin were issued in NSW last year to people aged 15 and over.

The number of scripts issued through the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme to children was 31,954.

Usually an individual with ongoing ADHD is prescribed two scripts a year.

Medicare Australia documents show almost half of the adult scripts in NSW -- 12,283 -- were for those aged 15 to 24.

There were 1038 scripts for 25 to 34-year-olds, 4422 for those aged 35 to 44, and 3198 scripts for those aged 45 to 54.

There were 49 scripts for those aged 85 or older.

The figures for all Australia show 121,569 of the 229,374 scripts were issued to people 15 and over.

The figure on adult prescriptions come a day after The Daily Telegraph published a report showing doctors were prescribing the two drugs to poorer areas at up to 10 times the rate of scripts for affluent areas. The trend is similar for adult prescription.

The Hunter Urban Division of General Practice, based at Newcastle, had the highest number of scripts -- 3002 -- closely followed by Hunter Rural area with 1873.

Other areas with more than 1000 scripts included Central Coast, Nepean and Central West areas.

Joy Toll from the organisation ADDults with ADHD, said diagnosis of the condition in older people was growing.

She said parents or even grandparents would seek medical advice after a child or grandchild was diagnosed with ADHD.

"Awareness is growing that ADHD is a whole-of-life issue," she said.

Ms Toll said symptoms in adults included getting bored very easily, finding it difficult to concentrate, finding it hard to remember things and "flitting from task to task".

"When they start taking medication it is like fine tuning a radio to hear just one station, meaning it enables them to concentrate on one thing at a time," she said.

University of South Australia academic Brenton Prosser recently wrote a book on the social trend of medicating ADHD sufferers.

He said many childhood sufferers describe themselves as "growing out of" the condition, but those who don't often medicate well into adulthood.

"It raises issues about some of the social expectations we are placing on adults where they are taking medication to cope with the way their natural diversity doesn't fit," he said.

From The Daily Telegraph
 
Pill-popping doesn't ADHD up
OPINION

By Anita Quigley
April 01, 2006

IS Ritalin the new corporal punishment? Are the types of children who were getting the strap when I was at school 25 years ago, now being given drugs instead?

I ask because we seem to have a frightening number of children diagnosed with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD).

And the only way to "discipline" them is to dope them up.

Prescriptions for Ritalin increased tenfold after it was listed on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme last August, reducing the cost from $49 to $29.50 or $4.70 for concession card holders.

More than 5800 prescriptions were written for Ritalin in January this year, compared with 523 last August. Prescriptions for the other favoured ADHD drug, Dexamphetamine, jumped from 96,000 a year to 232,000 in the 10 years to 2004-05.

This week we learned that children as young as five have suffered strokes, heart attacks, hallucinations and convulsions after being administed these drugs.

Almost 400 serious adverse reactions have been reported to the Therapeutic Goods Administration.

On Thursday, 14 Queensland teenagers overdosed on Ritalin after a 13-year-old girl is believed to have taken the pills to school to share with her friends. The Year 9 students fell ill suffering from nausea and increased heart rates and were taken to hospital. They were released by early evening.

The long-term side-effects of the prolonged use of such drugs are only part of the problem. Also disturbing is the message pill-popping sends to children.

We have long been an adult nation of pill-poppers. Drugs soothe every modern condition.

ADHD has become the defence of choice in our court system.

If someone's feeling down, you don't ask why; you give them Prozac. If someone's sexually dysfunctional, they take Viagra. If you can't quit smoking, there's Zyban.

And now, if your three-year-old is hyperactive, you don't look at their junk-food diet or discipline.

Instead, you give them Ritalin or Dexamphetamine. When the going gets tough, kids get drugged because it is the easiest solution for some parents. They don't want to correct difficult or different behaviour.

I am sure there were children wrongly dismissed as belligerent when I was school, who in hindsight may have had disorders that were left untreated. But could there really be enough today to justify 5800 scripts written in one month? Mass medication has become the cop-out solution. And the next generation will know no other way to cope. We may even be "medicating-out" the quirks of genius not easily recognised in childhood.

Imagine the world without the high energies of Leonardo da Vinci, Picasso and Einstein . . . thought by some to have ADHD symptoms.

Instead, we will have adults whose earliest memories will be of taking pills; what the rest of us rarely had to do until old age kicked in.

Who comes after Generation Y? Generation Z of course. For the generation of zombies who will be used to taking a pill from age of three.

From The Daily Telegraph
 
NEWS: SMH- 8/3/2007 'Global ADHD drug use 'nearly triples'

Global ADHD drug use 'nearly triples'
March 8, 2007 - 11:49AM

The use of drugs to treat attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD, has more than tripled worldwide since 1993, with Australia among the heavy users, researchers say.

Spending on such drugs rose nine-fold between 1993 and 2003, the team at the University of California, Berkeley reported.

"ADHD could become the leading childhood disorder treated with medications across the globe," Richard Scheffler, an expert in health economics and public policy who led the study, said in a statement.

"We can expect that the already burgeoning global costs for medication treatment for ADHD will rise even more sharply over the next decade."

Roughly one in 25 US children and adolescents is taking medication for ADHD, the researchers found.

They used an international pharmaceutical database to examine data from nearly 70 countries. In 1993, 31 countries used ADHD drugs, but by 2003 that number had risen to 55, they found.

France, Sweden, Korea and Japan all showed increases in ADHD drug use among five to 19-year-olds.

"The usage of ADHD medications increased 274 per cent during the study period," Scheffler's team wrote in the journal Health Affairs.

The United States led the pack, accounting for 83 per cent of the prescriptions and $US2.4 billion ($A3.1 billion) in 2003.

Australia and Canada also had much heavier use than the researchers predicted.

ADHD is marked by poor concentration, distractibility, hyperactivity, impulsiveness and other symptoms beyond what might be expected for the patient's age.

Amphetamine drugs can control the symptoms, but their use is sometimes controversial.

Methylphenidate, sold under the brand name Ritalin by Novartis, was once the standard. But costly and long-acting medications like Johnson & Johnson's Concerta, Strattera, made by Eli Lilly and Co, and Adderral XR, made by British drugmaker Shire Plc, are now driving up costs, the researchers said.

"Costs are likely to rise globally as long-acting medications, which offer easier use and result in better compliance, become more prevalent outside the US," said Dr Peter Levine, a pediatrician with Kaiser Permanente in Walnut Creek, California.

Psychologist Stephen Hinshaw of UC Berkeley said "cross-cultural research has shown that ADHD exists in all cultures, with increased access to public education a factor in its detection."

The researchers recommended that countries keep tabs on the use of ADHD drugs and make sure their benefits are worthwhile.

SMH
 
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They are scary stats there... was talking about this same thing the other day with a doctor friend...Dos'nt look like it will get any better. How about tackling the issues these kids may have?!Solution in a pill, i think not:\
 
1 in 25? Wow.

I thought it was overprescribed but that is rediculous.
 
Once, when I was very young, I went to an ADD testing centre. I did an attention test were i scored 37 out of 40. They then put me on ritalin and I got 38 out of 40. They immediately said the ritalin made me concentrate better and prescribred me on it. I didn't really know what it was, but hated having to swallow a pill everyday, so my mum, after realizing how stupid it was, and probably getting annoyed at me whining everytime I had to swallow a pill, let me stop taking it after a few weeks. This is just another example of how easily they prescribe it.
 
Doubt on ADD kids diagnosis
Sue Hewitt
March 11, 2007 12:00am

UP to a third of Australian children classed as having attention deficit disorder may have been misdiagnosed.

The psychiatrist who identified ADD has admitted up to 30 per cent of those diagnosed with it may not have the condition.

In Australia, 80,000 children have been diagnosed with the condition and studies have shown a "heavy" use of medication, such as Ritalin.

Dr Robert Spitzer, who classified ADD, has admitted many youngsters may have been misdiagnosed.

"They may simply be showing normal signs of being happy or sad," said Dr Spitzer, a professor of psychiatry at Columbia University, New York. The use of drugs to treat ADD has more than tripled since 1993, with Australians among the heavy users, according to researchers at the University of California, Berkeley.

Melbourne adolescent psychologist Dr Michael Carr-Gregg said Dr Spitzer's admission was not surprising because "there is a tendency to put children in a pharmaceutical straitjacket".

"We know children who are distressed and do not have the vocabulary (to express it) act out with very hyperactive behaviour," he said.

Dr Carr-Gregg said ADD might be a "cry from the heart" about something happening in a child's life.

"Every parent must make sure their child is properly assessed by a pediatrician," he said.

He did not believe ADD misdiagnoses were as high as 30 per cent in Australia because of the "judicious" approach of local doctors.

Australian Medical Association vice-president Dr Choong-Siew Yong said ADD had "always been controversial".

He said symptoms sometimes overlapped and it could be difficult to determine what was normal or abnormal behaviour.

Herald Sun
 
all the so called experts should do their research. I have ADHD. I was diagnosed 2 years ago. I was never a behaviour problem ( ADHD is NOT a behavioural condition) and I am not stupid. I take 10 dexies a day sometimes less. I have no side effects because I was diagnosed correctly!!! giving kids small doses of speed when they don't have the condition will of course cause problems. Dexies have the opposite effect on those with ADHD. There's plenty written about how it works. I wish I didn't have to take medication but I can't modify my attention deficiency. Its just impossible. Ask anyone who has it. Life's crazy for me when I don't take my pills. Do I worry about side effects? Well put it this way I am safer behind the wheel of a car when I take my meds, I don't leave electrical appliances on, I don't lose things constantly, I actually listen to what people say without interupting and can finish a task before flitting onto something else - so I think they far out weighs any possible side effects:)
 
ADHD kids should be reassessed
March 13, 2007

CHILDREN diagnosed with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) should be reassessed, a Melbourne specialist has said following a report showing Australia was among the heaviest users of ADHD drugs.
The US study, headed by eminent health economics and public policy expert Richard Scheffler, found the use of drugs to treat ADHD had more than tripled worldwide since 1993.

Researchers at the University of California found Australia was among the heaviest users of drugs to treat ADHD.

Child and adolescent psychiatrist George Halasz, from the Monash Medical Centre in Melbourne, said the researchers found about 30 per cent of Australian children diagnosed with ADHD were misdiagnosed.

The study said one in 100 children were medicated for it.

The reason ADHD was often misdiagnosed was through a misunderstanding of the disorder, Mr Halasz said on Channel 9.

"ADHD is much like fever, it is a symptom and it signals that something is not right," he said.

"So a number of us (psychiatrists) for over a decade have been saying just to medicate these children is really very poor medicine.

"The medication will do something to relieve the symptoms, but it doesn't get at the cause."
ADHD initially appears in childhood and has symptoms such as hyperactivity, forgetfulness and poor impulse control.

Amphetamine drugs can control the symptoms, experts say.

Mr Halasz said parents of children diagnosed with ADHD and on medication should ask their doctor to review their child's case.

"Return to their doctor and discuss the reason their child is taking the medication," Mr Halasz said.
"I think the medical profession has a huge responsibility in this and there is no shirking the issue.

"I think there will probably be major repercussions in the psychiatric and paediatric professions as a result of this (study)."

The Australian
 
whats wrong with a euphoric effect.....not that I ever get one when I take my dex. I also hope that the standard dex remain as they work just perfectly for me....
 
I hope if this [Lisdexamphetamine] gets to Australia (which it surely will) the standard dex will remain on the market!

If it does, and is intended to replace amphetamine altogether I'm not sure it would completely solve the problem of diversion, as the hydrolysis mentioned on the wiki link can also be performed with relative ease outside the body.

There are several dexamphetamine replacement drugs currently being looked at. IMO, in all likelihood dex will largely be replaced, with different drugs being used for different ailments.
 
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