
Hundreds of thousands of children prescribed the drug
Ritalin for hyperactivity might simply be the victims of lax parenting,
new evidence suggests.
Children blamed for hyperactivity
'are victims of poor parenting'
A British scientist has cast doubt on the existence of
conditions such as attention deficit disorder (ADD), which will fuel the
controversy over the increasing use of Ritalin.
Warwick Dyer, a behavioural expert, claims parents
need to accept more blame for their children's "disorders" and move away
from the chemical cosh of prescription drugs.
He has developed a programme that focuses on the way
parents behave towards their children - and claims a 100 per cent
success rate over the past five years. Remarkably, he never sees the
child involved, and has just one face-to-face consultation with the
parents. The rest of his work is limited to a daily telephone briefing
with the parents on how to treat their child.
Mr Dyer's theory is based on simple ideas such as a
rigid system of rewards and sanctions for good and bad behaviour, with
an insistence on politeness towards parents - and a demand that mothers
and fathers control their tempers as well.
Mr Dyer said: "I am open-minded about whether ADD
exists or not, but what is certainly clear is that a lot of symptoms
ascribed to such disorders are in fact easily confused with basic
behavioural problems that don't need to be treated with a drug.
"Parenting is not a democracy. You need to give your
child what they want - love and attention - but on your terms, not
theirs."
Mr Dyer's work is now the subject of a Channel 4
Cutting Edge documentary, to be broadcast tomorrow.
One in 10 children is now diagnosed with ADD or the
related attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).
Ritalin is an amphetamine with a similar potency to
cocaine, and prescribing in Britain has soared one hundredfold in the
past 10 years. In 1990, just 3,000 children were on the drug; today,
there are 345,000 taking it, costing the NHS more than £3m a year. The
drug is being given to children as young as 18 months old.
Now a growing lobby of parents, doctors and other
experts is questioning whether ADD or ADHD exist.
Mr Dyer was a primary school teacher in the East End
of London until he retired and set up the Behaviour Change Consultancy.
He now sees about 30 families a year, and claims his techniques work
with everyone, from the youngest children to teenagers.
He said: "The problem is that a lot of parents simply
aren't being parents. In the last 20 years, parents have started talking
to their children a lot more, but they have stopped being in control of
them.
"They have tended to examine how they were brought up
and reject what they thought was bad, but they haven't taken on what was
good. Children are instinctively artful and will try to put themselves
in control of their parents. I put parents back in control."
His "back to basics" approach worked to stunning
effect with Fred and Diane from Essex, and their seven-year-old
daughter, Georgina, who are featured in the Cutting Edge documentary.
Georgina had been prescribed Ritalin and been diagnosed with special
needs because of her appalling temper tantrums and violent behaviour.
She was expelled from her first playgroup at the age of two and a half,
and her parents were so desperate that last year they had decided to put
her into care.
But within weeks of adopting Mr Dyer's techniques,
Georgina's behaviour had improved.
Fred, who runs a wedding video business, and Diane, a
civil servant, had to spend seven months in daily phone calls to Mr
Dyer, where they had to describe her behaviour in detail, and accept
castigations from the expert when they deviated from the sanction
system.
At one point he told the couple: "It's not her fault
that you can't control her. She has wrapped you around her little
finger. You aren't accepting that there isn't anything wrong with your
daughter."
By the end of the seven months, Georgina was having
less than two tantrums a month and while her special needs diagnosis was
being reviewed.
Diane said: "The change has been incredible. This has
all been done without Ritalin. Before, I hated her. Now, she is a normal
child. I feel guilty when I look back to how I treated her before."
Janice Hill, of the Overload Network, a parent support
organisation, said: "Warwick Dyer has shown that the idea of ADHD is a
myth. Children are being given a drug that has the same pharmacology as
cocaine when in fact all they and their parents need are help with their
behaviour.
"Doctors should stop dishing out Ritalin and start
using safe alternatives, which have been proven to work."
By Maxine Frith
22 July 2003
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/health/story.jsp?story=426206
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