bruuuno
6:43 Sun Aug 26
Re: adhd
|
It’s likely that it did Sidney, but people just suffered their whole lives instead of being given treatment to help them.
In the same way that ptsd didn’t exist after the Second World War yet thousands of veterans turned to drink and isolated themselves from their families and society
|
Spandex Sidney
6:11 Sun Aug 26
Re: adhd
|
Did this exist 30/40/50 years ago? I don't remember it being a problem.
Not saying it doesn't exist, just seems a modern phenomenon in my limited life experience
|
bruuuno
6:07 Sun Aug 26
Re: adhd
|
I’d love to punch in the face some of these doctors who deny its existence.
Currently a two year wait for an appointment with an ADHD specialist in my city
|
chiff
5:26 Sun Aug 26
Re: adhd
|
My grandson has ADHD which I recognized when he was two years old. I was at the time a SEN teacher at a specialist residential school fast forward several years and we were advised to go down the medication route. We refused, choosing to manage the condition through keeping him active largely through sport, namely football and rugby. The problem was that his school chose not to recognise the condition, refusing all strategies to help him in the classroom. So we removed him from school and put him in a school that recognized the condition. In his teens he grew out of it to some extent. Nevertheless for the parent or guardian or in our case his kindship carer it can be exhausting. In recent years the government have chosen to take the view that the problem does not exist, purely to save money. As both a grandparent carer and professional I can tell you this condition is a reality with some children.
|
The Dursley Massive
12:01 Sat Aug 25
Re: adhd
|
Ritalin is a tricky one.
I’ve seen kids who are totally unteachable if they’ve not taken their morning dose. You know they’ve missed their meds instantly. Just crazy, and almost impossible for them to learn.
It can be a real appetite suppressant for some kids, which can cause problems when they’re fucking exhausted from not eating.
Doctors are now thankfully a bit more reluctant to prescribe than 6 or 7 years ago when (like antidepressants) they were dishing them out like sweets. If the doctor/ed psych is suggesting them then probably worth doing it. They review dosage regularly and try to keep the dose as low as possible.
|
Mike Oxsaw
11:54 Fri Aug 24
Re: adhd
|
No. And I don't have time for all this.
|
gph
11:47 Fri Aug 24
Re: adhd
|
Apart from kids trying to fly instead of getting bored too quickly?
|
bruuuno
11:39 Fri Aug 24
Re: adhd
|
Some people have found that microdosing LSD has the benefits of stimulants without the negative side effects
|
Stubbo
11:38 Fri Aug 24
Re: adhd
|
Also my wife teaches in a SEN school primarily for kids diagnosed ADHD or Autistic spectrum so have some minor insight through her
|
Stubbo
11:36 Fri Aug 24
Re: adhd
|
Yep Ritalin and Adderall.
The film is on Netflix if you're interested. Not purely focussed on ADHD but on the use of the drugs by the full cross section in the States.
|
Darlo Debs
11:31 Fri Aug 24
Re: adhd
|
Isnt the drug called Ritilin?
|
Stubbo
11:30 Fri Aug 24
Re: adhd
|
"Take Your Pills" it's called and focusses on the drugs Aderall and Ritalin
|
Stubbo
11:29 Fri Aug 24
Re: adhd
|
There's a US docu-film about it and the dosing of kids with it (is basically controlled prescription of amphetamines).
Can't recall the title but was worth a look.
Overriding conclusion was battle through without the drugs if I recall, coming from the kids that had been given it through their childhoods.
|
|