Simple Solutions: Decreasing the Misdiagnosis of ADHD Essentially, if parents help their child get their diets on the healthy track, it would decrease the percentage of children being misdiagnosed. Dr. Sears states that he has found that fish oil supplements in their diet can help a childs attention span grow. A good breakfast helps as well. “Kids and teens that eat a good, hearty breakfast with a good source of protein, some good complex carbs, whole grains, yogurt, and things like that, tend to pay better attention in school” (Dr. Sears). Finally, Dr. Sears knows that changing the child’s diet will help.
In addition, Dr. Keith Low is an adviser in educational neural. Dr. Low highlights that there are “Twenty-first Century brains in Twentieth Century schools.” In the Twentieth Century, classrooms were a place where the students would have to sit down and listen to the teacher lecture most of the time. Today, if children do not participate in class, they will end up dozing off. If these students changed their diets to a healthier one, they would be able to concentrate …show more content…
much better.
Douglas Cowan is a Family Therapist that discusses a study.
The study was conducted in Germany. He uses this study because the headlines from the American Press insisted that it is an unprecedented reliable data in which reveals that ADHD is over-diagnosed (Cowan). The researchers contacted about one thousand professionals. They received less then five hundred responses. In this study, the professionals that responded were asked to use a hypothetical analysis. The researchers who were directing the study sent a set of case vignettes, which included symptoms. Some of these individuals did meet the criteria for ADHD, but most of them did not. This can be due to the fact these professionals used prototypes or their own experience to make their decisions on whether the patient is ADHD or
not.
In conclusion, many argue that the symptoms of ADHD should not directly be held to the conclusion of this disorder because it may be mild, or it may disappear with a simple, proper response from teachers, parents or others (Clemming, 673). Adults need to stop assuming that their child has ADHD simply because their child has symptoms similar to the disease, even though they are caused by other things in their life. ADHD symptoms are extremely similar to different problems that children may face throughout their life. By simply getting them to have a healthier lifestyle will help prove if they truly do have ADHD or not.
After everything has changed, if the child still has the symptoms, then take them to get tested. But, because of the doctors lack of criteria and tools, they still misdiagnose and overdisgnose. If all of this could be fixed, there is a better chance that every child being treated for ADHD will truly have it.