Editor’s note: I’m often disheartened to find that in many cases educators and parents are quick to unquestioningly trust pharma industry influenced doctors about best treatments for children’s mental and health issues without considering or researching other options. Before taking the advice to drug children it is helpful to get insights from health and wellness coaches like Heather Jones DeGeorge and parenting coaches / counseling experts like Laurie A. Couture who have had great success with helping families find mental and physical health and wellness naturally. I asked DeGeorge to share the top five things families can do for children who have symptoms associated with ADD / ADHD. Here they are.
It’s a familiar scenario: Johnny or Jane (but statistically more frequently, Johnny) can’t sit still in class. Add whatever other “disruptive to the learning environment” things you can think up. Now add the at-home tensions. Nobody needs me to paint a picture of what the world calls ADHD these days. We may all have different pictures in our mind, but remarkably, they are likely to all qualify.
The teachers and/or the doctors might tell you to remove sugar and food dyes. MIGHT. But at the end of the day, as recently exposed in a New York Times opinion piece by psychology professor L. Alan Sroufe most doctors are going to offer you a medication. Some schools will bully you into believing that they will not evaluate your child for IEP/504 accommodations without a diagnosis—possibly without first trying medications (both of which are illegal—at a Federal level that overrides the state).
There are some that believe that if you simply remove the child from a classroom, the problem will be resolved—that ADHD doesn’t exist. If you’re someone for whom that hasn’t worked, you’re thinking “No, because they’re not in the classroom on the weekends or in the summer and it’s still there!” Admittedly, you only have it half right. Seeing a child outside of the classroom isn’t akin to what they would be like if they were learning outside of school for a variety of reasons.
For one, they need several months of decompression once removed from the school environment just to change their behaviors and mindsets. So even if environment is suspected and the school refuses to modify, after being pulled from the school and homeschooled, there is a period of adjustment where you will not see the final (better behavior) although many kids with serious problems “behaving” in school MAY show SOME immediate improvement just from the tension being removed all around.
But I digress…
Drugs. Aaaaahhhh drugs. The quick, easy fix, right? That’s easier than trying to tolerate your kid by homeschooling, isn’t it? Sure it is! If you don’t care what it does to your kid internally and emotionally, it’s great! If you don’t mind that it may not actually work, was never tested for it’s effects on children, the known side effects that may not show up for several years, the propensity it may cause for addiction and the variety of other emotional disorders that may follow because of the body being disrupted by that medication—game on! Better yet, let’s think of the drugs you will inadvertently add for the late-day inability to focus when the full-day drug wears off and/or the evening dose of a “downer” to offset the ADHD meds (which are stimulants) so the kid can sleep. EASY!
Here’s a secret: Western (American) medicine has a nasty habit of 1) treating symptoms instead of root causes of problems; 2) having a medical community that is usually not fully informed about options outside of drugs; and 3) not educating their patients if they happen to HAVE the information.
On the flip side, our culture is not really willing to listen to alternatives that are more work than popping a pill. They are short-sighted and all about what’s easy today. They’ll deal with that other bridge when they get to it (or so they think).
But let’s assume that you’re ready to step out of that vicious scenario. You want to do it different and simply have no clue where to start. This is the bulk of my client base—facing all manner of health (mental and physical) challenge and just NOT happy with what they’re doing or being told to do. What now?
When it comes to ADHD, there are some very well-known things to try before medication. Some of them are pretty painless, and have a good chance of helping. This is not an exhaustive list of things you can do for ADHD before turning to drugs, but these are the things that EVERYONE should do before even considering it.
As a former teacher, my experience makes it evident that a diligent, thinking, loving and supportive parent can provide a good education to their own child. At minimum, you are not allowing that child’s problems to compound and negatively affect their learning because they cannot conform to the learning environment.
There is more to try before drugs. Lots more. It’s not as quick and easy as a pill, but the side effects are nowhere near as dangerous. Consider it.
If you’ve already resorted to the pills, know that there is hope for getting them out of your family’s life. Even if your child stays in school. There is help. There is support. There are families that have been where you are. Mine was one of them.
Heather DeGeorge is a holistic health & wellness coach. In addition to general health and weight loss, she specializes in dietary intervention for behavior and development problems of children; and helping people adjust to specialized or restricted diets based on medical diagnoses like diabetes or gluten intolerance with the end-goal of being able to heal the body and eat a healthy, less restrictive diet. For more information, see her website at http://www.heatherdegeorge.com
The teachers and/or the doctors might tell you to remove sugar and food dyes. MIGHT. But at the end of the day, as recently exposed in a New York Times opinion piece by psychology professor L. Alan Sroufe most doctors are going to offer you a medication. Some schools will bully you into believing that they will not evaluate your child for IEP/504 accommodations without a diagnosis—possibly without first trying medications (both of which are illegal—at a Federal level that overrides the state).
There are some that believe that if you simply remove the child from a classroom, the problem will be resolved—that ADHD doesn’t exist. If you’re someone for whom that hasn’t worked, you’re thinking “No, because they’re not in the classroom on the weekends or in the summer and it’s still there!” Admittedly, you only have it half right. Seeing a child outside of the classroom isn’t akin to what they would be like if they were learning outside of school for a variety of reasons.
For one, they need several months of decompression once removed from the school environment just to change their behaviors and mindsets. So even if environment is suspected and the school refuses to modify, after being pulled from the school and homeschooled, there is a period of adjustment where you will not see the final (better behavior) although many kids with serious problems “behaving” in school MAY show SOME immediate improvement just from the tension being removed all around.
But I digress…
Drugs. Aaaaahhhh drugs. The quick, easy fix, right? That’s easier than trying to tolerate your kid by homeschooling, isn’t it? Sure it is! If you don’t care what it does to your kid internally and emotionally, it’s great! If you don’t mind that it may not actually work, was never tested for it’s effects on children, the known side effects that may not show up for several years, the propensity it may cause for addiction and the variety of other emotional disorders that may follow because of the body being disrupted by that medication—game on! Better yet, let’s think of the drugs you will inadvertently add for the late-day inability to focus when the full-day drug wears off and/or the evening dose of a “downer” to offset the ADHD meds (which are stimulants) so the kid can sleep. EASY!
Here’s a secret: Western (American) medicine has a nasty habit of 1) treating symptoms instead of root causes of problems; 2) having a medical community that is usually not fully informed about options outside of drugs; and 3) not educating their patients if they happen to HAVE the information.
On the flip side, our culture is not really willing to listen to alternatives that are more work than popping a pill. They are short-sighted and all about what’s easy today. They’ll deal with that other bridge when they get to it (or so they think).
But let’s assume that you’re ready to step out of that vicious scenario. You want to do it different and simply have no clue where to start. This is the bulk of my client base—facing all manner of health (mental and physical) challenge and just NOT happy with what they’re doing or being told to do. What now?
When it comes to ADHD, there are some very well-known things to try before medication. Some of them are pretty painless, and have a good chance of helping. This is not an exhaustive list of things you can do for ADHD before turning to drugs, but these are the things that EVERYONE should do before even considering it.
- Get a vision test that specifically screens for “convergence insufficiency”. Any regular eye doctor can do this and the problem is easily correctable. But the problem, believe it or not, presents as ADHD.
- Have a full audiogram hearing test done. Auditory processing problems can also make a child appear to have ADHD (or other behavior problems)
- Have a chiropractor take x-rays of your child’s spine, hips and neck to review them for subluxations (compressions of the spinal bones) that are most known to present as ADHD because the crunching of these bones on the spinal nerves disrupts the communication network. There is a high correlation between the the first vertebrae in the neck (the Atlas) and ADHD but other disruptions in the communication network can also cause ADHD symptoms. The stress of daily living is enough to cause these bones to be out of alignment—there doesn’t need to have been an accident or fall, and you don’t need to be in pain to see a chiropractor. The health benefit of chiropractic care is now well-enough documented that almost all health insurance covers at least some level of treatment.
- Remove all of the food dyes from the child’s diet. All of them. This can be hard to do if they’re in school and you can’t supervise them; but if they’re having trouble in school—the school should work with you on this. You could see results sooner than later (as in a month or less).
- Last, give your child a daily dose of Omega-3 fish oil. This may take up to 2 weeks to see some reaction to. I happen to like Nordic Naturals brand because they are pharmaceutical grade (filtered of impurities very well) and lemon flavored—which is easy to hide. You don’t need the child version (which is a smaller bottle giving half a dose of the same thing as the regular bottle—for the same price). Since the American diet is extremely overloaded with Omega-6, definitely get an Omega-3. When the two are out of balance, there are plenty of problems.
As a former teacher, my experience makes it evident that a diligent, thinking, loving and supportive parent can provide a good education to their own child. At minimum, you are not allowing that child’s problems to compound and negatively affect their learning because they cannot conform to the learning environment.
There is more to try before drugs. Lots more. It’s not as quick and easy as a pill, but the side effects are nowhere near as dangerous. Consider it.
If you’ve already resorted to the pills, know that there is hope for getting them out of your family’s life. Even if your child stays in school. There is help. There is support. There are families that have been where you are. Mine was one of them.
Heather DeGeorge is a holistic health & wellness coach. In addition to general health and weight loss, she specializes in dietary intervention for behavior and development problems of children; and helping people adjust to specialized or restricted diets based on medical diagnoses like diabetes or gluten intolerance with the end-goal of being able to heal the body and eat a healthy, less restrictive diet. For more information, see her website at http://www.heatherdegeorge.com
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