Wednesday, March 28, 2007

How Are Kids Diagnosed?

With the latest rage of bipolar disorder becoming the "hip" diagnosis for kids across some parts of the country, Philip Dawdy asks some excellent questions, both about Rebecca Riley and kids in general. Prosecutors in the Riley case have mustered some evidence suggesting that Riley's parents fabricated symptoms...
Can would-be patients or families dupe doctors like this all the time? How many more of the millions of kids diagnosed with ADHD and bipolar disorder carry their diagnoses as a result of parental reporting alone, with whatever biases might be present? Is there a way for child psychiatrists to filter out parental bias?
Remember that when kids are quite young (like four years old), they don't have the cognitive skills to report on their own symptoms all that accurately. Yes, the kid should be interviewed, but don't expect much. So, that naturally causes mental health professionals to rely on parent reports. Should doctors try to obtain collateral information? Yep. Teachers, friends' parents, babysitters. It is interesting that parent, teacher, and child reports of children's behavior often differ quite a bit (1, 2, 3). Why?

Environment: Well, the environment impacts behavior. If the parents have a chaotic home environment where discipline is inconsistent, expectations are unclear, and negative emotions run high, then the kid has a better chance of showing a variety of behaviors and emotions that could come across (rightly or wrongly) as some sort of mental disorder. If these same symptoms are not expressed at school, then maybe the controlled environment, positive peer interactions, relationship with the teacher, teacher's strong classroom management skills or whataver are helping Junior keep a lid on the problem behaviors at school. So if the kid can keep it together at school but not at home, is this the kid's problem or the parent's problem?

But teachers are not always tuned in all that well to all students' behavior and certainly not to all of their kids' emotional state, as their job is not to play psychiatrist to kids, but to teach. So their ratings will not be completely accurate either. My personal belief is that getting opinions of teachers (note the plural), parents, the child, and whomever else spends significant time with the kid is much better than relying on the point of view of just one source.

Making Up Symptoms? There will always be bad apples who fabricate symptoms in their kids. I've seen little evidence that such behaviors are common. It is more common that parents don't set up a solid discipline system (discipline, by the way also involves positive reinforcement, not just punishment) and develop strong relationships with their kids. One can also not discount peer influences, especially as kids get a bit older. Bad peers can lead a reasonably good kid down a pretty bad path. I'm also pretty sure that a steady diet of McDonald's, Grand Theft Auto, and other brain-numbing delights is probably not good for development in general and that our lazy-ass American lifestyle could have something to do with some of these cases.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

I started out my career working with kids -- before the advent of the popularity of meds for kids. In those days, we looked to the home and to the classroom environment first and almost always found the answers there in inconsistent discipline, family disruptions, a clash of personality with the teacher. Behavioral interventions almost always worked -- they took time to implement and followup was imperative but they worked.

I really think we need a squadron of Supernannies rather than psych meds to deal with the majority of these allegedly ADHD and :::shudder::: bi-polar children.

Anonymous said...

"I'm also pretty sure that a steady diet of McDonald's, Grand Theft Auto, and other brain-numbing delights is probably not good for development in general and that our lazy-ass American lifestyle could have something to do with some of these cases."

You said it.

soulful sepulcher said...

Don't forget the red and blue dye loading up those sport drinks and "fruit snacks"!

Unknown said...

There are two sad images that I see in this. The first is the man who lived with the family, having to kick the parents door in to tell them that their child was sick - Rebecca was given more drugs. The other is the verbal image found in reports that she was found dead on a pile of clothes in her parents room.

Dante Rose

Anonymous said...

As someone who made it to adulthood with undiagnosed ADD and aspergers, all I can say is that I wish to god someone had noticed and medicated me to the gills when I was six.

Overdiagnosis and overmedication isn't the problem. It's that the wrong kids are are getting diagnosed and medicated.