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#11
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![]() john smith wrote: How recent and accurate is the ADD diagnosis? Children can and often are mis-diagnosed. My son is an example. In second grade he was diagnosed as ADD/ADHD. Seven years later, at our request, he was re-diagnosed. The recent diagnosis is Asperger's Disorder. Two very different psychological conditions with very different treatments. I'd bet that the percentage of kids diagnosed with ADD is pretty close to the percentage that have seen a psych Dr. I've worked with a lot of kids as a coach and as BSA ASM (assistant scout master) and I think a lot of times its just an easy way to sedate the kids when parents or teachers don't have the time for them. Some kids have a lot of energy. -Robert |
#12
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On Wed, 15 Nov 2006 19:00:02 -0800, Robert M. Gary wrote:
I'd bet that the percentage of kids diagnosed with ADD is pretty close to the percentage that have seen a psych Dr. I've worked with a lot of kids as a coach and as BSA ASM (assistant scout master) and I think a lot of times its just an easy way to sedate the kids when parents or teachers don't have the time for them. Some kids have a lot of energy. Kids have the attention span of a gnat... That is normal... |
#13
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#14
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![]() "Robert M. Gary" wrote in message oups.com... I've worked with a lot of kids as a coach and as BSA ASM (assistant scout master) and I think a lot of times its just an easy way to sedate the kids when parents or teachers don't have the time for them. Some kids have a lot of energy. ADD/ADHD is easy to spot in a kid over time. I'm not sure it's good to look at a kid for an hour and prescribe mind-altering drugs to deal with what the doctor thinks might be the problem, but, it doesn't take a pediatrician to spot an abnormally hyperactive or attention deficit child. -c |
#16
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On 16 Nov 2006 09:05:59 -0800, "jahman"
wrote: wrote: Has anyone out there been able to get their aviation medical with a previous diagnosis for ADD or ADHD? What did you have to go through to get it? Thanks for sharing your experience! Thanks for the all the information and advice, guys -- I really appreciate it. What I'm concerned about with not disclosing the diagnosis is that I have been on medication for it in the past, which means that I would have records with my health insurance company noting that I had purchased medication used to treat ADD. Couldn't the FAA simply request those records from my health insurance company, yank my ticket, and then charge me with a felony for failing to disclose a medical condition on the health form? Has anyone out there actually disclosed and been able to still get there medical? I know someone who admitted to having ADD when they were younger and was refused a medical. This happened in Feb, and he is still fighting to get through the tests and submit for a waiver. No one ever asked him about it, he just volunteered. I don't know if the FAA could just look at your records or not, but unless the Insurance company submits your information to the central repository for this stuff ( I forget what it is called) I don't think you'd have a problem. Someone I used to work with always said, "It's easier to say I'm sorry than it is to ask permission." I think for this one it isn't bad advice. Good Luck! z |
#17
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![]() "Robert M. Gary" wrote I'd bet that the percentage of kids diagnosed with ADD is pretty close to the percentage that have seen a psych Dr. I've worked with a lot of kids as a coach and as BSA ASM (assistant scout master) and I think a lot of times its just an easy way to sedate the kids when parents or teachers don't have the time for them. Some kids have a lot of energy. Although I will not argue the fact that it is over diagnosed by some, if you want to know about your child, and possible diagnosis, interview some caring teachers. I may not be any good at diagnosing 75% of the cases that come to me, the 25% of the worse cases are very obvious, if they go untreated. One thing I have been told by doctors is that there is little harm in trying some of the common ADD drugs, with proper follow-up. The drug will have little to no improvement to the child that is not ADHD. If the child is ADHD, the change is remarkable. Really. -- Jim in NC |
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