A child held in an artificial environment will exhibit a spectrum of behavior. Add in Dietary issues and sugar abuse in particular, allergies and the odd real issue and we have plenty of causation.
Then use training that is appropriate for possibly two thirds to one third of the class and plenty of behavior issues can be expected. And just what do you hope to accomplish with a child who is reading deficient?
All this opened the door for a finding of anomalous behavior that could be treated with a pill. It felt, looked, smelled, and sounded like nonsense. Yet millions of vulnerable children are fed this pill. .
ADHD a Fraud? Harvard Now Thinks So Too
https://drhurd.com/2017/11/26/adhd-fraud-harvard-now-thinks/
“Renowned Harvard Psychologist Jerome Kagan Says ADHD is Largely a Fraud”, says the headline.
I’ve been saying this since 1996 or so. Glad that Harvard is finally on board.
What’s the problem with ADHD? It’s such a vague diagnostic category
that it could apply to almost anybody – especially any child – at any
given point in time.
“We could get philosophical and ask ourselves: “What does mental
illness mean?” If you do interviews with children and adolescents aged
12 to 19, then 40 percent can be categorized as anxious or depressed.
But if you take a closer look and ask how many of them are seriously
impaired by this, the number shrinks to 8 percent. Describing every
child who is depressed or anxious as being mentally ill is ridiculous.
Adolescents are anxious, that’s normal. They don’t know what college to
go to. Their boyfriend or girlfriend just stood them up. Being sad or
anxious is just as much a part of life as anger or sexual frustration,”
Kagan told Spiegel.
And then there are the consequences of labeling:
What are the implications for the millions of American children
who are inaccurately diagnosed as mentally ill? Kagan believes it’s
devastating because they think there is something fundamentally wrong
with them. He’s not the only psychologist to raise the alarm about this
trend, but Kagan and others feel they’re up against “an enormously
powerful alliance: pharmaceutical companies that are making billions,
and a profession that is self-interested.”
Of course, drug companies will take the hit for making a profit off
of fraud. But drug companies are merely doing what people want them to
do – to give them medicine to foster the illusion that “My kid has an
illness. Surely my kid’s underperformance cannot be due to him- or
herself, or any other factor. It MUST be a disease.”
Sure, people like to delude themselves. But you can’t blame drug
companies for cashing in on it. You have to blame the people who want to
delude themselves for WANTING to delude themselves. And you have to
blame the self-described scholars and doctors encouraging them to delude
themselves in the name of science. Those are the real ones to blame.
Nobody ever looks at the reality of what false or questionable disease labels do to children.
I wrote all about it back in the 1990s:
The questions have less to do with whether ADD exists as a
syndrome—since obviously many children do demonstrate these
behaviors—than with whether or not it is proper to label ADD a medical
“disorder.”
Mental health clinicians such as myself, for example, continually
hear parents of kids diagnosed with ADD point out that their kids can
concentrate when and if they choose to do so. The operative word here is
“choose.”
Proponents of ADD seem to be suggesting that kids do not make
choices, that if Johnny does not concentrate on his homework or pay
attention in class it must be due to a “disorder” rather than a simple
choice not to focus his attention.
What objective, physiological evidence do experts offer in
support of their view that ADD is a medical disorder? Little to none. It
is true that some kids labeled with ADD—which used to be called
“hyperactivity”—do calm down significantly when given certain types of
medication (such as Ritalin), or changes are made in their diets. But
these facts by no means prove that attention is solely the result of
physiological factors.
How, for instance, do you reconcile the fact that many kids with
ADD pay attention some days more than others? And how do you explain the
fact that some kids who display ADD in the classroom show no evidence
of such a syndrome when playing a video game, talking to friends on the
telephone, or engaging in other intellectually undemanding activities?
If ADD kids have a biological inability to focus, then why do they
easily concentrate on so many activities?
This is a very serious matter for parents to consider. This is
more than a dispute over mere wording or diagnostic classification among
health professionals. The real questions boil down to these: Is my
child failing to concentrate in school because he has a medical disease
which prevents him from doing so? Or is he failing to concentrate in
school because he chooses not to do so?
Readers of DrHurd.com heard it first, as long ago as 1996. Now
Harvard’s most prominent psychologist agrees: ADHD is a questionable
concept, at best. Welcome aboard, Harvard. The view is clear and
beautiful when you view reality plainly, honestly and objectively.
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