Attention
Deficit Disorder
Diet & Lifestyle Research
Stimulant
Medication & Children with ADHD?
The
self-esteem of children with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity
Disorder (ADHD) has been shown to be low. The effects of stimulant
medication upon their self-esteem have not been systematically
studied. The present study employed a reliable self-report
instrument to measure the self-esteem of children with ADHD
medicated with stimulants vs. those who were unmedicated. Results
showed that stimulants were associated with significantly higher
self-esteem. Children with ADHD prescribed stimulants reported
feeling more intelligent and more popular than unmedicated children
with ADHD. Children with ADHD and Oppositional Defiant Disorder
(ODD) prescribed stimulants reported feeling better behaved.
Significant correlations indicated that higher doses were associated
with higher self-esteem. The present results suggest a need for a
well-controlled study to determine if stimulants were responsible
for the observed differences in self-esteem.
J Child Adolesc
Psychopharmacol 1999;9(3):185-94, Frankel F, Cantwell DP, Myatt R,
Feinberg DT, UCLA Department of Psychiatry, Los Angeles, California
90095-6968, USA, ffrankel@mednet.ucla.edu
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Effects
of Substance Abuse on ADD
OBJECTIVE: The relationships of attention deficit hyperactivity
disorder (ADHD), conduct disorder, and gender to substance abuse
were studied in a large population-based sample of adolescent twins.
METHOD: Structured interviews were administered to 626 pairs of
17-year-old twins (674 girls and 578 boys) and their mothers to
generate lifetime psychiatric diagnoses, and computerized measures
of current substance use were obtained. Hierarchical logit analyses
were performed to assess the independent effects of ADHD, conduct
disorder, and gender on current substance use, frequency of
substance use, and DSM-III-R diagnoses of substance use disorders.
RESULTS: Conduct disorder was found to increase the risk of
substance use and abuse in adolescents regardless of gender. In
contrast, independent of its association with conduct disorder, an
ADHD diagnosis did not significantly increase the risk of substance
use problems.
CONCLUSIONS: This study found no significant gender differences in
the effects of ADHD and conduct disorder on substance use and abuse,
although there was some suggestion that girls with ADHD might be at
slightly higher risk than boys for substance abuse. In addition,
increased risk of substance abuse among adolescents with conduct
disorder may be primarily confined to those with persistent conduct
disorder.
Am J Psychiatry
1999 Oct;156(10):1515-21, Disney ER, Elkins IJ, McGue M, Iacono WG,
Department of Psychology, University of
Minnesota, Minneapolis 55455- 0344, USA.
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