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                                                                March
                                                        2001
ADHD: turning a problem into a disease
by Dr Michael Fitzpatrick
'That's the trouble with you people - every time you see a problem you turn it into
a disease.'
So stated mafia boss Tony Soprano, of the cult drama The Sopranos, on hearing his 13-
year-old son diagnosed as a 'borderline case' of Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD)
(1).
Also known as Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, or ADHD, this disorder has
been one of the most controversial issues in American society over the past decade.
October's decision by the National Institute of Clinical Excellence (NICE) to
approve the prescription of the amphetamine-type drug Methylphenidate (Ritalin) for
the treatment of ADHD is likely to lead to an increase in the diagnosis and medical
treatment of ADHD in Britain (2). But isn't Tony Soprano's pithy diagnosis the right
one?
Soprano's plight captures the confusion and controversy surrounding many diagnoses
of ADHD. After being discovered drunk on stolen altar wine at his expensive private
school, 13-year-old Anthony Junior is referred for 'a complete battery of testing -
psychological, behavioural and medical'. His tests completed, the earnest
educational psychologist informs his parents that Anthony Junior manifests five of
the nine symptoms required for a diagnosis of ADD (six are required to clinch the
diagnosis). When Tony inquires further about these symptoms, he is told that, among
other things, Anthony Junior fidgets. 'That's a sickness?' comes the incredulous
response
, followed by a question that goes to the heart of the problem of diagnosis by ticking 
off checklists of symptoms - 'what constitutes a fidget?'.
Tony sums up the diagnosis as 'bullshit'. His wife, by contrast, seems relieved to 
hear that Anthony has a disease, 'like polio'. 'I knew it', declares Carmella. 'I 
always knew there was something wrong with that kid.' To
ny suggests that all he needs is 'a whack up side the head'; she insists that 'it's an 
illness, right?' - one that needs treatment not chastisement. Yet when Tony asks the 
psychologist, 'What do we do as parents - nothing
?', he is informed that 'Anthony has misbehaved and should be consequenced'. At a 
fraught family dinner, Carmella announces to her truculent son a string of 
restrictions and suspended privileges. But Tony is mystified - '
If he's got a disease, why do they tell me to punish him?'.
The Soprano family drama illustrates the depth of confusion surrounding Deficit 
Hyperactivity Disorder. Though ADHD was formally recognised as a distinct condition by 
the American Psychiatric Association in 1981, its rapi
d rise in popularity as a diagnosis followed the publication of a detailed checklist 
of symptoms over a decade later, in 1994 (3).


'If he's got a disease, why do they tell me to punish him?'
The British guidelines define different types of ADHD, according to the presence of 
particular combinations of the three key features: inattentiveness, impulsiveness and 
hyperactivity (4). Before ADHD can be diagnosed, th
ese signs must have persisted for at least six months to a degree that causes 
developmental problems. The symptoms must be causing significant impairment of social 
or academic functioning, and they must be apparent both a
t home and at school.
Ritalin has been available for 40 years, but again, its use for the treatment of ADHD 
only took off in the mid-1990s. In some states in the USA, between three and five 
percent of primary school children have been diagnose
d with ADHD; estimates of the number of American children on Ritalin vary between 1.7 
million and 2.5 million. According to NICE, an estimated 366 000 children between six 
and 16 in England and Wales (around five percent
of all schoolchildren) meet the diagnostic criteria for some form of ADHD.  A core 
group of more than 73 000 (one percent) are believed to have severe 'combined type' 
ADHD, with all three features: this is the group for w
hich it recommends treatment with Ritalin. At present, only around a quarter of this 
group are on medication. Treatment of children under the age of six is not recommended.
The guidance from NICE, which has been distributed to every General Practicioner (GP), 
paediatrician and psychiatrist in the country, has the force of government edict. It 
insists on diagnosis by a specialist psychiatrist
 or paediatrician, who are authorised to initiate drug treatment - which can then be 
continued, with appropriate safeguards, by a GP. The guidelines also recommend 
medication as part of a comprehensive treatment programme
, involving parents and teachers, which could include specific psychological therapy.
Advocates of ADHD, who consider that it is 'underdiagnosed and undertreated' in 
Britain, have welcomed the NICE report as a vindication of their campaign for greater 
recognition of this disorder (5). They believe that ADH
D is a 'genetic, neurological' condition and that evidence of brain dysfunction has 
been found in various cerebral imaging studies. These claims regarding ADHD - which 
have been made about a wide range of conditions from
schizophrenia and manic depressive psychosis to alcoholism and homosexuality - remain 
controversial.
A consensus conference of independent scientists convened by the US National 
Institutes of Health in 1998 found no conclusive evidence for brain dysfunction and 
characterised all current theories about ADHD as 'speculativ
e' (6). The conference noted that there was no simple and reliable diagnostic test and 
that most assessments were carried out by family doctors, with the result that there 
was no consistency in diagnosis, treatment or fol
low-up.
The symptoms attributed to ADHD are diverse, shading into more clearly defined 
psychiatric conditions on one side and into the range of normal experience on the 
other. In addition to the basic features, authorities claim
that 60 to 70 percent of those diagnosed with ADHD have coexisting conditions such as 
'oppositional defiant disorder, conduct disorder, depression, anxiety and obsessive 
behaviour, specific learning difficulties, speech a
nd language disorder'.


An estimated five percent of schoolchildren in England and Wales apparently meet the 
diagnostic criteria for some form of ADHD
Many children with ADHD are also said to exhibit poor self-esteem and social skills, 
insatiability, excessive dogmatism, poor organisation and time management, 
relationship difficulties, lack of motivation, problems with
rule-governed behaviour, over-sensitivity, vulnerability to stress. Harry Enfield's 
'Kevin' is immediately recognisable as a sufferer, but by these criteria, so are many, 
if not most, teenagers.
In their most recent publication, GD Kewley and PA Latham claim that ADHD is a 
progressive condition, which, if left untreated in young children, leads to grave 
consequences in teenage years (7). This - unsubstantiated -
claim is illustrated with a diagram indicating 'the likely progression of untreated 
ADHD'. This shows 'ADHD only' at the age of six progressing through various stages to 
reach 'criminal behaviour, school exclusion, substa
nce abuse, conduct disorder, lack of motivation, complex learning difficulties' at the 
ages of 14 to 16.
The attraction of Ritalin, a drug which 'normalises brain function and stabilises the 
situation', is obvious. It not only offers to improve children's behaviour, it also 
promises to solve the social problems of the nation
. According to Kewley and Latham, up to 90 percent of children show 'very significant 
improvement' on Ritalin and only 5 to 10 percent experience side effects, which are 
usually mild, dose-related and transient. Pass the
tablets, then?
Not so fast. The dramatic expansion in the number of children diagnosed with ADHD and 
treated with Ritalin in the USA in the 1990s has provoked criticism from a number of 
different quarters. Psychotherapists question the
reliability of the diagnostic criteria, the neglect of wider social and emotional 
factors which may cause behavioural disturbance in children and the emphasis on 
medication at the expense of psychological and social thera
pies.
Pharmacologists and psychologists have expressed alarm at the widespread use in 
children of a class of drugs which is considered potentially dangerous and addictive 
among adults (8). Since their widespread abuse, in the f
orm of 'speed' in the 1950s and 1960s, amphetamines have been strictly controlled. The 
paradox that drugs which have a stimulant effect in adults appear to have a calming 
effect on hyperactive children is little understoo
d, though there are theories about their effects on neurotransmitters such as 
serotonin and dopamine.
Arguments rage about the incidence and seriousness of the side effects of Ritalin 
among children taking it for ADHD. The drug is well known to cause loss of appetite, 
disturbance of sleep, mood and behaviour, headaches an
d tics; its more severe critics believe it can cause more severe toxicity, growth 
retardation and addiction. Enthusiasts for the drug treatment of ADHD deny these more 
severe side effects and claim that the minor ones are
 uncommon, dose-related and short-lived.


A 1998 conference characterised all current theories about ADHD as 'speculative'
In the USA, Ritalin and ADHD are at the centre of a series of battles involving rival 
groups of parents, psychiatrists and paediatricians, lawyers, politicians and drug 
companies. One group has recently launched a class-a
ction lawsuit against the drug company Novartis and the American Psychiatric 
Association, claiming that they 'planned, conspired and colluded to create, develop 
and promote the diagnosis of ADD/ADHD in a highly successful
 effort to increase the market' for Ritalin (9). Another group is suing Novartis for 
the alleged adverse effects of Ritalin on their children. Yet another parents' group 
is actively promoting the wider use of Ritalin: opp
onents allege that it receives financial support from the drug companies.
The key problem underlying the ADHD controversy - accurately identified by Tony 
Soprano - is the trend for defining a wider and wider range of experience and 
behaviour in psychiatric terms, 'turning a problem into a disea
se'. The tendency to medicalise social problems is encouraged by the availability of 
treatments - either tablets or talking cures - which offer a ready solution to 
difficulties experienced by individuals, families and com
munities.
Over the past decade there has been an explosion of labels such as post-traumatic 
stress disorder, chronic fatigue syndrome ('ME'), addictions to everything from 
heroin, alcohol and tobacco to sex, food and toxic relation
ships. It seems that in a society that appears to have lost any sense of purpose or 
direction, individuals feel intensely vulnerable and fragile. It is not surprising 
that the consequences of this pervasive insecurity are
 experienced most acutely in the sphere where adult confidence is most critical - in 
bringing up children. When Tony Soprano vents his family problems with his senior 
mafia confidantes, one sagely observes that 'it's hard
 to raise kids in the information age'.
Tony later confesses to his own psychiatrist his worries that Anthony's problems have 
been passed down to him from his own father ('the belt was his favourite child 
development tool'). He believes that the problem is in t
he blood, in the genes - 'my son is doomed'. The psychiatrist challenges Tony's 
fatalistic view that 'you are what you are', insisting that 'a genetic predisposition 
is not a destiny', that behaviour is not 'preordained'.
 'You have a choice', she tells him. 'You have free will. This is America.'
But the choice cannot be reduced to that between drugs and psychotherapy, biological 
determinism and therapeutic voluntarism. The real choice is to refuse the diagnosis of 
ADHD: the difficulties of family life in the mode
rn world cannot be understood - or resolved - at the levels of biology or psychology.
Dr Michael Fitzpatrick is the author of The Tyranny of Health: Doctors and the 
Regulation of Lifestyle, published by Routledge. Buy this book at Amazon
(1) The Sopranos, series one, episode seven, 'Down Neck', written by Mitchell Burgess 
and Robin Green, directed by Lorraine Senna. See The Sopranos
(2) See the National Institute of Clinical Excellence website
(3) A detailed checklist of ADHD symptoms was published in 1994, in the Diagnostic and 
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, APA, Washington DC
(4) Guidance for the use of Methylphenidate (Ritalin, Equasym) for Attention Deficit 
Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) in childhood was produced by the National Institute of 
Clinical Excellence in October 2000
(5) See the arguments put forward by Geoffrey Kewley in the British Medical Journal, 
23 May 1998. See also GD Kewley, PA Latham in Update, 19 October 2000
(6) See the British Medical Journal, 5 December 1998
(7) 'ADHD - underdiagnosed and undertreated?', GD Kewley and PA Latham, Update, 19 
October 2000
(8) See the article 'Strong medicine' by Steve Baldwin on netdoctor
(9) See the British Medical Journal, 23 September 2000
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The libertarian therefore considers one of his prime educational
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State among its hapless subjects.  His task is to demonstrate
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"democratic" State has no clothes; that all governments subsist
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[[For a New Liberty:  The Libertarian Manifesto, Murray N. Rothbard,
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