Caring for Children with ADHD

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ADHD stands for Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder. It is one of the most common childhood disorders and can continue through adolescence and adulthood. ADHD has been a recognized disorder for over 50 years. There are three different types of ADHD. The disorder affects both males and females. ADHD does not affect intellectual ability, individuals with this disorder are just as smart as others. Doctors and researchers are still not sure why some people have ADHD. Researchers show that the disorder of ADHD probably genetic and that it may be inherited. Scientists are also exploring other things that may be associated with ADHD. It is usually first diagnosed in childhood and often lasts into adulthood. ADHD is more common in kids who are born premature. The disorder affects both the females and the males. Experts have thought that ADHD occurs in three times as many boys as girls. Recently however, boys are more hyperactive then girls would be with this disorder. Hyperactive boys tend to be referred for evaluation somewhere between ages five and seven, and where girls sometimes goes undiagnosed due to it not being fully detectable in females. The three different subtypes of ADHD are predominantly hyperactive-impulsive, predominantly inattentive, or combined hyperactive-impulsive and inattentive. Predominantly hyperactive-impulsive symptoms could be fidgety or squirms in a still position, runs and climbs when they are not suppose to, talks a lot, and interrupts and intrudes others while they are speaking. Predominantly inattentive symptoms could be unfinished work if they are in school or at work, always making careless mistakes, loses homework or important paper work and books, and having problems paying attention. If both t... ... middle of paper ... ...where they can see it on a daily basis. Getting and giving criticism in children with ADHD. There are times where it is necessary, but children with this disorder aren’t good at accepting, or giving it nicely. How you give criticism is important. Criticism is another part of making your child feel loved: sarcastic, negative comments can undo all your hard work to be encouraging. If you want to teach your child how to accept criticism, you need to give it in a constructive way. This means being calm, not angry, and focusing on the behavior you want to change instead of criticizing your child. Sited Page 1. www.mayoclinc.com/health/adhd/Ds00275/DSECTION 2. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/attention-deficit_hyperactivity_disorder 3. health.google.com/health/ref/attention+deficit+hyperactivity+disorder+(ADHD) 4. www.4adhd.com 5. www.healthcastle.com

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