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International Consensus Statement on ADHD


Note from Bob: Mainstream media coverage about attention deficit hyperactivity disorder has historically been biased, full of misinformation and heavily influenced by anti-psychiatry groups.

In response to this unfortunate trend, Dr. Russell Barkley and 74 other prominent medical doctors and researchers in AD/HD issued the following statement, which was forwarded to additudemag.com for publication on Feb 1, 2002. ADDitude Magazine applauds these professionals for taking a stand and helping to set the record straight.

Here is the International Consensus Statement:

January 2002

We, the undersigned consortium of 75 international scientists, are deeply concerned about the periodic inaccurate portrayal of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in media reports. This is a disorder with which we are all very familiar and toward which many of us have dedicated scientific studies if not entire careers. We fear that inaccurate stories rendering ADHD as myth, fraud, or benign condition may cause thousands of sufferers not to seek treatment for their disorder. It also leaves the public with a general sense that this disorder is not valid or real or consists of a rather trivial affliction.

We have created this consensus statement on ADHD as a reference on the status of the scientific findings concerning this disorder, its validity, and its adverse impact on the lives of those diagnosed with the disorder as of this writing (January 2002).

Occasional coverage of the disorder casts the story in the form of a sporting event with evenly matched competitors. The views of a handful of non-expert doctors that ADHD does not exist are contrasted against mainstream scientific views that it does, as if both views had equal merit. Such attempts at balance give the public the impression that there is substantial scientific disagreement over whether ADHD is a real medical condition. In fact, there is no such disagreement --at least no more so than there is over whether smoking causes cancer, for example, or whether a virus causes HIV/AIDS.

The U.S. Surgeon General, the American Medical Association (AMA), the American Psychiatric Association, the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (AACAP), the American Psychological Association, and the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), among others, all recognize ADHD as a valid disorder. While some of these organizations have issued guidelines for evaluation and management of the disorder for their membership, this is the first consensus statement issued by an independent consortium of leading scientists concerning the status of the disorder. Among scientists who have devoted years, if not entire careers, to the study of this disorder there is no controversy regarding its existence.

_ADHD and Science _

We cannot over emphasize the point that, as a matter of science, the notion that ADHD does not exist is simply wrong. All of the major medical associations and government health agencies recognize ADHD as a genuine disorder because the scientific evidence indicating it is so is overwhelming.

Various approaches have been used to establish whether a condition rises to the level of a valid medical or psychiatric disorder. A very useful one stipulates that there must be scientifically established evidence that those suffering the condition have a serious deficiency in or failure of a physical or psychological mechanism that is universal to humans. That is, all humans normally would be expected, regardless of culture, to have developed that mental ability.

And there must be equally incontrovertible scientific evidence that this serious deficiency leads to harm to the individual. Harm is established through evidence of increased mortality, morbidity, or impairment in the major life activities required of one's developmental stage in life. Major life activities are those domains of functioning such as education, social relationships, family functioning, independence and self-sufficiency, and occupational functioning that all humans of that developmental level are expected to perform.

As attested to by the numerous scientists signing this document, there is no question among the world's leading clinical researchers that ADHD involves a serious deficiency in a set of psychological abilities and that these deficiencies pose serious harm to most individuals possessing the disorder. Current evidence indicates that deficits in behavioral inhibition and sustained attention are central to this disorder -- facts demonstrated through hundreds of scientific studies. And there is no doubt that ADHD leads to impairments in major life activities, including social relations, education, family functioning, occupational functioning, self-sufficiency, and adherence to social rules, norms, and laws. Evidence also indicates that those with ADHD are more prone to physical injury and accidental poisonings. This is why no professional medical, psychological, or scientific organization doubts the existence of ADHD as a legitimate disorder.

The central psychological deficits in those with ADHD have now been linked through numerous studies using various scientific methods to several specific brain regions (the frontal lobe, its connections to the basal ganglia, and their relationship to the central aspects of the cerebellum). Most neurological studies find that as a group those with ADHD have less brain electrical activity and show less reactivity to stimulation in one or more of these regions. And neuro-imaging studies of groups of those with ADHD also demonstrate relatively smaller areas of brain matter and less metabolic activity of this brain matter than is the case in control groups used in these studies.

These same psychological deficits in inhibition and attention have been found in numerous studies of identical and fraternal twins conducted across various countries (US, Great Britain, Norway, Australia, etc.) to be primarily inherited. The genetic contribution to these traits is routinely found to be among the highest for any psychiatric disorder (70-95% of trait variation in the population), nearly approaching the genetic contribution to human height. One gene has recently been reliably demonstrated to be associated with this disorder and the search for more is underway by more than 12 different scientific teams worldwide at this time.

Numerous studies of twins demonstrate that family environment makes no significant separate contribution to these traits. This is not to say that the home environment, parental management abilities, stressful life events, or deviant peer relationships are unimportant or have no influence on individuals having this disorder, as they certainly do. Genetic tendencies are expressed in interaction with the environment. Also, those having ADHD often have other associated disorders and problems, some of which are clearly related to their social environments. But it is to say that the underlying psychological deficits that comprise ADHD itself are not solely or primarily the result of these environmental factors.

This is why leading international scientists, such as the signers below, recognize the mounting evidence of neurological and genetic contributions to this disorder. This evidence, coupled with countless studies on the harm posed by the disorder and hundreds of studies on the effectiveness of medication, buttresses the need in many, though by no means all, cases for management of the disorder with multiple therapies. These include medication combined with educational, family, and other social accommodations. This is in striking contrast to the wholly unscientific views of some social critics in periodic media accounts that ADHD constitutes a fraud, that medicating those afflicted is questionable if not reprehensible, and that any behavior problems associated with ADHD are merely the result of problems in the home, excessive viewing of TV or playing of video games, diet, lack of love and attention, or teacher/school intolerance.

ADHD is not a benign disorder. For those it afflicts, ADHD can cause devastating problems. Follow-up studies of clinical samples suggest that sufferers are far more likely than normal people to drop out of school (32-40%), to rarely complete college (5-10%), to have few or no friends (50-70%), to under perform at work (70-80%), to engage in antisocial activities (40-50%), and to use tobacco or illicit drugs more than normal. Moreover, children growing up with ADHD are more likely to experience teen pregnancy (40%) and sexually transmitted diseases (16%), to speed excessively and have multiple car accidents, to experience depression (20-30%) and personality disorders (18-25%) as adults, and in hundreds of other ways mismanage and endanger their lives.

Yet despite these serious consequences, studies indicate that less than half of those with the disorder are receiving treatment. The media can help substantially to improve these circumstances. It can do so by portraying ADHD and the science about it as accurately and responsibly as possible while not purveying the propaganda of some social critics and fringe doctors whose political agenda would have you and the public believe there is no real disorder here. To publish stories that ADHD is a fictitious disorder or merely a conflict between today's Huckleberry Finns and their caregivers is tantamount to declaring the earth flat, the laws of gravity debatable, and the periodic table in chemistry a fraud. ADHD should be depicted in the media as realistically and accurately as it is depicted in science -- as a valid disorder having varied and substantial adverse impact on those who may suffer from it through no fault of their own or their parents and teachers.

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Sincerely,

Russell A. Barkley, Ph.D.

Professor

Depts. Of Psychiatry and Neurology

University of Massachusetts Medical School

55 Lake Avenue North

Worcester, MA 01655

Edwin H. Cook, Jr., M.D.

Professor

Departments of Psychiatry and Pediatrics

University of Chicago

5841 S. Maryland Ave.

Chicago, IL

Mina Dulcan, M.D.

Professor

Department of Child and Adolescent

Psychiatry

2300 Children's Plaza #10

Children's Memorial Hospital

Chicago, IL 60614

Susan Campbell, Ph.D.

Professor

Department of Psychology

4015 O'Hara Street

University of Pittsburgh

Pittsburgh, PA 15260

Margot Prior, Ph.D.

Professor

Department of Psychology

Royal Children's Hospital

Parkville, 3052 VIC

Australia

Marc Atkins, Ph.D.

Associate Professor

University of Illinois at Chicago

Institute for Juvenile Research

Department of Psychiatry

840 South Wood Street, Suite 130

Chicago, IL 60612-7347

Christopher Gillberg, M.D.

Professor

Department of Child and Adolescent

Psychiatry

University of Gothenberg

Gothenberg, Sweden

Mary Solanto-Gardner, Ph.D.

Associate Professor

Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry

The Mt. Sinai Medical Center

One Gustave L. Levy Place

New York, NY 10029-6574

Jeffrey Halperin, Ph.D.

Professor,

Department of Psychology

Queens College, CUNY

65-30 Kissena Ave.

Flushing, NY 11367

Jose J. Bauermeister, Ph.D.

Professor,

Department of Psychology

University of Puerto Rico

San Juan, PR 00927

Steven R. Pliszka, M.D.

Associate Professor and Chief

Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry

University of Texas Health Sciences Center

7703 Floyd Curl Drive

San Antonio, TX 78229-3900

Mark A. Stein, Ph.D.

Chair of Psychology

Children's National Medical Center and

Professor of Psychiatry & Pediatrics

George Washington Univ. Med. School

111 Michigan Ave. NW

Washington, DC 20010

John S. Werry, M.D.

Professor Emeritus

Department of Psychiatry

University of Auckland

Auckland, New Zealand

Joseph Sergeant, Ph.D.

Chair of Clinical Neuropsychology

Free University

Van der Boecharst Straat 1

De Boelenlaan 1109

1018 BT Amsterdam

The Netherlands

Ronald T. Brown, Ph.D.

Associate Dean, College of Health Professions

Professor of Pediatrics

Medical University of South Carolina

19 Hagood Avenue

P. O. Box 250822

Charleston, SC 29425

Alan Zametkin, M.D.

Child Psychiatrist

Kensington, MD

Arthur D. Anastopoulos, Ph.D.

Professor, Co-Director of Clinical Training

Department of Psychology

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

P. O. Box 26164

Greensboro, NC 27402-6164

James J. McGough, M.D.

Associate Professor of Clinical Psychiatry

UCLA School of Medicine

760 Westwood Plaza

Los Angeles, CA 90024

George J. DuPaul, Ph.D.

Professor of School Psychology

Lehigh University

111 Research Drive, Hilltop Campus

Bethlehem, PA 18015

Stephen V. Faraone, Ph.D.

Associate Professor of Psychology

Harvard University

750 Washington St., Suite 255

South Easton, MA 02375

Florence Levy, M.D.

Associate Professor

School of Psychiatry

University of New South Wales

Avoca Clinic

Joynton Avenue

Zetland, NSW, 2017, Australia

Mariellen Fischer, Ph.D.

Professor,

Department of Neurology

Medical College of Wisconsin

9200 W. Wisconsin Avenue

Milwaukee, WI 53226

Joseph Biederman, M.D.

Professor and Chief

Joint Program in Pediatric

Psychopharmacology

Massachusetts General Hospital and

Harvard Medical School

15 Parkman St., WACC725

Boston, MA 02114

Cynthia Hartung, Ph.D.

Postdoctoral Fellow

Department of Psychology

Department of Psychology

University of Denver

2155 S. Race St.

Denver, CO 80208

Stephen Houghton, Ph.D.

Professor of Psychology

Director, Centre for Attention & Related Disorders

The University of Western Australia

Perth, Australia

Gabrielle Carlson, M.D.

Professor and Director,

Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry

State University of New York at Stony Brook, Putnam Hall

Stony Brook, NY 11794

Charlotte Johnston, Ph.D.

Professor

Department of Psychology

University of British Columbia

2136 West Mall

Vancouver, BC, Canada V6T 1Z4

Thomas Spencer, M.D.

Associate Professor and Assistant

Director, Pediatric Psychopharmacology

Harvard Medical School and

Massachusetts General Hospital

15 Parkman St., WACC725

Boston, MA 02114

Thomas Joiner, Ph.D.

The Bright-Burton Professor of Psychology

Florida State University

Tallahassee, FL 32306-1270

Rosemary Tannock, Ph.D.

Professor of Psychiatry,

Brain and Behavior Research

Hospital for Sick Children

55 University Avenue

Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5G 1X8

Adele Diamond, Ph.D.

Professor of Psychiatry

Director, Center for Developmental

Cognitive Neuroscience

University of Massachusetts Medical School

Shriver Center

Trapelo Rd.

Waltham, MA

Carol Whalen, Ph.D.

Professor

Department of Psychology and Social Behavior

University of California at Irvine

3340 Social Ecology II

Irvine, CA 02215

Stephen P. Hinshaw, Ph.D.

Professor,

Department of Psychology #1650

University of California at Berkeley

3210 Tolman Hall

Berkeley, CA 94720-1650

Herbert Quay, Ph.D.

Professor Emeritus

University of Miami

2525 Gulf of Mexico Drive, #5C

Long Boat Key, FL 34228

John Piacentini, Ph.D.

Associate Professor

Department of Psychiatry

UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute

760 Westwood Plaza

Los Angeles, CA 90024-1759

Philip Firestone, Ph.D.

Professor

Departments of Psychology & Psychiatry

University of Ottawa

120 University Priv.

Ottawa, Canada K1N 6N5

Salvatore Mannuzza, M.D.

Research Professor of Psychiatry

New York University School of Medicine

550 First Avenue

New York, NY 10016

Howard Abikoff, Ph.D.

Pevaroff Cohn Professor of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry

NYU School of Medicine

Director of Research

NYU Child Study Center

550 First Avenue

New York, NY 10016

Keith McBurnett, Ph.D.

Associate Professor

Department of Psychiatry

University of California at San Francisco

Children's Center at Langley Porter

401 Parnassus Avenue, Box 0984

San Francisco, CA 94143

Linda Pfiffner, Ph.D.

Associate Professor

Department of Psychiatry

University of California at San Francisco

Children's Center at Langley Porter

401 Parnassus Avenue, Box 0984

San Francisco, CA 94143

Oscar Bukstein, M.D.

Associate Professor

Department of Psychiatry

Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic

3811 O'Hara Street

Pittsburgh, PA 15213

Ken C. Winters, Ph.D.

Associate Professor

Director, Center for AdolescentSubstance Abuse Research

Department of Psychiatry

University of Minnesota

F282/2A West, 2450 Riverside Ave.

Minneapolis, MN 55454

Michelle DeKlyen, Ph.D.

Office of Population Research

Princeton University

286 Wallace

Princeton, NJ 08544

Lily Hechtman M.D. F.R.C.P.

Professor of Psychiatry and Pediatrics,

Director of Research,

Division of Child Psychiatry,

McGill University, and

Montreal Childrens Hospital.

4018 St. Catherine St. West.,

Montreal, Quebec, Canada. H3Z-1P2

Caryn Carlson, Ph.D.

Professor

Department of Psychology

University of Texas at Austin

Mezes 330

Austin, TX 78712

Donald R. Lynam, Ph.D.

Associate Professor

University of Kentucky

Department of Psychology

125 Kastle Hall

Lexington, KY 40506-0044

Patrick H. Tolan Ph.D.

Director, Institute for Juvenile Research

Professor, Department of Psychiatry

University of Illinois at Chicago

840 S. Wood Street

Chicago, IL 60612

Jan Loney, Ph.D.

Professor Emeritus

State University of New York at Stony Brook

Lodge Associates (Box 9)

Mayslick, KY 41055

Harold S. Koplewicz,M.D.

Arnold and Debbie Simon Professor of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Director of the NYU Child Study Center

Richard Milich, Ph.D.

Professor of Psychology

Department of Psychology

University of Kentucky

Lexington, KY 40506-0044

Laurence Greenhill, M.D.

Professor of Clinical Psychiatry

Columbia University

Director, Research Unit on Pediatric Psychopharmacology

New York State Psychiatric Institute

1051 Riverside Drive

New York, NY 10032

Eric J. Mash, Ph.D.

Professor

Department of Psychology

University of Calgary

2500 University Drive N.W.

Calgary, Alberta T2N 1N4

Russell Schachar, M.D.

Professor of Psychiatry

Hospital for Sick Children

555 University Avenue

Toronto, Ontario

Canada M5G 1X8

Eric Taylor

Professor of Psychiatry

Institute of Psychiatry

London, England

Betsy Hoza, Ph.D.

Associate Professor

Department of Psychology, #1364

Purdue University

West Lafayette, IN 47907-1364

Mark. D. Rapport, Ph.D.

Professor and Director of Clinical Training

Department of Psychology

P.O. Box 161390

University of Central Florida

Orlando, Florida 32816-1390

Bruce Pennington, Ph.D.

Professor

Department of Psychology

University of Denver

2155 south Race Street

Denver, CO 80208

Anita Thapar MB BCh, MRCPsych, PhD

Professor,

Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Section

Dept of Psychological Medicine

University of Wales College of Medicine

Heath Park, Cardiff

CF14 4XN United Kingdom

Ann Teeter, Ph.D.

Associate Professor

Department of Psychology

University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee

Milwaukee, WI 53201

Stephen Shapiro, Ph.D.

Department of Psychology

Auburn University

226 Thach

Auburn, AL 36849-5214

Avi Sadeh, D.Sc

Director, Clinical Child Psychology

Graduate Program

Director, The Laboratory for Children's Sleep Disorders

Department of Psychology

Tel-Aviv University

Ramat Aviv, Tel Aviv 69978

ISRAEL

Bennett L. Leventhal, M.D.

Irving B. Harris Professor of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry

Director, Child & Adolescent Psychiatry

Vice Chairman, Dept. of Psychiatry

The University of Chicago

5841 S. Maryland Ave.

Chicago, IL 60637

Hector R. Bird, M.D.

Professor of Clinical Psychiatry

Columbia University

College of Physicians and Surgeons

1051 Riverside Drive (Unit 78)

New York, NY 10032

Carl E. Paternite, Ph.D.

Professor of Psychology

Miami University

Oxford, OH 45056

Mary A. Fristad, PhD, ABPP

Professor, Psychiatry & Psychology

Director, Research & Psychological Services

Division of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry

The Ohio State University

1670 Upham Drive Suite 460G

Columbus, OH 43210-1250

Brooke Molina, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor of Psychiatry and Psychology

Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic

University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine

3811 O'Hara Street

Pittsburgh, PA 15213

Sheila Eyberg, PhD, ABPP

Professor of Clinical &Health; Psychology

Box 100165

1600 SW Archer Blvd.

University of Florida

Gainesville, FL 32610

Rob McGee,PhD

Associate Professor,

Department of Preventive & Social Medicine,

University of Otago Medical School,

Box 913 Dunedin,

New Zealand.

Terri L. Shelton, Ph.D.

Director

Center for the Study of Social Issues

University of North Carolina - Greensboro

Greensboro, NC 27402

Steven W. Evans, Ph.D.

Associate Professor of Psychology

MSC 1902

James Madison University

Harrisonburg, VA 22807

Sandra K. Loo, Ph.D.

Research Psychologist

University of California, Los Angeles

Neuropsychiatric Institute

760 Westwood Plaza, Rm 47-406

Los Angeles, CA 90024

William Pelham, Jr., Ph.D.

Professor of Psychology

Center Children and Families

State University of New York at Buffalo

318 Diefendorf Hall

3435 Main Street, Building 20

Buffalo, NY 14214

J. Bart Hodgens, Ph.D.

Clinical Assistant Professorof Psychology and Pediatrics

Civitan International Research Center

University of Alabama at Birmingham

Birmingham, AL 35914

Terje Sagvolden, Ph.D.

Professor

Department of Physiology

University of Oslo

N-0316 Oslo, Norway

Thomas E. Brown, Ph.D.

Asst. Professor

Dept. of Psychiatry

Yale University School of Medicine

New Haven, CT

Daniel F. Connor, M.D.

Associate Professor

Department of Psychiatry

University of Massachusetts Medical School

55 Lake Avenue North

Worcester, MA 01655

Daniel A. Waschbusch, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor of Psychology

Director, Child Behaviour Program

Department of Psychology

Dalhousie University

Halifax, NS B3H 4R1 CANADA

Kevin R. Murphy, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor

Dept. of Psychiatry

University of Massachusetts Medical School

55 Lake Avenue North

Worcester, MA 01655

Michael Aman, Ph.D.

Professor of Psychology and Psychiatry

The Nisonger Center

Ohio State University

1581 Dodd Drive

Columbus, Ohio, U.S.A.

Blythe Corbett, Ph.D.

M.I.N.D. Institute

University of California, Davis

4860 Y Street, Suite 3020

Sacramento, CA 95817

Deborah L. Anderson, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor

Department Pediatrics

Medical University of South Carolina

Charleston, SC 29425

Lisa L. Weyandt, Ph.D.

Professor, Dept. of Psychology

Central Washington University

400 East 8th Avenue

Ellensburg, WA 98926-7575

Michael Gordon, Ph.D.

Professor of Psychiatry

Director, Child & Adolescent Psychiatric

Services, & Director, ADHD Program

SUNY Upstate Medical University

750 East Adams Street

Syracuse, NY 13210

Lawrence Lewandowski, Ph.D.

Meredith Professor of Teaching Excellence

Department of Psychology

Syracuse University

Syracuse, NY

Erik Willcutt, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor

Department of Psychology

Muenzinger Hall D-338

345 UCB

University of Colorado

Boulder, CO 80309

Thomas M. Lock, M.D.

Associate Professor of Clinical Pediatrics

Acting Chief, Division of Developmental

Pediatrics and Rehabilitation

Acting Director, Robert Warner Rehabilitation Center

State University of New York at Buffalo School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences

936 Delaware Ave.

Buffalo, NY 14209


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