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Although medication treatment for ADHD
has been extensively studied, relatively
little is known about how children and teens
feel about taking medication. This is an
important gap since children's attitudes
towards medication treatment, and their
perception of how helpful it is, can have
important implications for their willingness
to continue this treatment for the necessary
period of time. Additional knowledge in
this area could be especially helpful for
dealing with conflicts about medication
that often arise during adolescence.
A study provides interesting new information
on this important issue
( Moline, S., & Frankenberger, W. (2001).
Use of stimulant medication for treatment
of ADHD: A survey of middle and high school
students' attitudes. Psychology in the Schools,
38, 569-584.) Participants in this study
were 651 students enrolled in 5 public schools
from 4 districts in Wisconsin and Minnesota.
The average age of the participants was
15, suggesting that the majority were high
school students (the breakdown of middle
and high school
students was not provided) and 78% of the
participants were males
All participants completed an initial anonymous
survey that asked whether they were receiving
medication for treating ADHD. Forty students
-- just over 6% of the sample, reported
they were. These students were then asked
a series of questions that assessed their
attitudes towards medication use. Questions
focused on whether or not students wished
to continue taking medication, how helpful
they perceived it to be, and whether they
experienced adverse side effects. They were
also asked whether peers had ever asked
to buy, or be given, their meds.
Students not taking medication themselves
were asked about their attitude towards
peers receiving medication. This is a nice
addition to the study because very little
information is available on whether peers
have negative attitudes about classmates
who take medication for ADHD. Students were
also asked whether they had observed students
who take medication being approached by
others to give away or sell their medication.
RESULTS
How do adolescents feel about taking stimulant
medication for ADHD?
When asked "if it were up to you, would
you stop taking your medicine?", 16
of the 40 students (35%) indicated they
would. A slightly greater number (n=20,
43%) indicated they wanted to continue taking
meds. Eleven students indicated that they
were undecided. Overall, 64% of the students
either wished to continue their treatment
with stimulants, or were at least not strongly
opposed to continuing..
How
helpful do adolescents perceive stimulant
medication to be?
Questions focused on students'
perception of medication benefits in 5 areas:
academic achievement, behavior, getting
along with peers, getting along with parents
and teachers, and paying attention in school.
Examples of the questions asked in these
areas are shown below.
"Has taking this medicine helped you
become more organized at school?"
"Do you behave better at school when
you take your medicine?"
"Is it harder or easier for you to
make friends while on this medicine?"
"Do your parents like you more when
you are on this medicine?"
"Does taking this medicine help you
pay attention in school?"
Participants responded to each question
on a 5-point scale, with higher scores indicating
they perceived the medication to be helpful.
A response of 3 reflected a neutral attitude
towards whether or not the medication helped.
Scores above 3 thus suggested that it was
perceived as helpful; scores below 3 suggested
that it was not perceived as helpful.
Results indicated that average scores for
items pertaining to behavior, getting along
with peers, getting along with parents/teachers,
and paying attention in school were all
greater than 3 (range 3.26-3.85). On average,
therefore, the adolescents perceived medication
to be helpful in these areas. For the academic
achievement cluster, the average score was
2.95, which was significantly lower than
results for all but one other cluster (i.e.
getting along with peers). Thus, participants
felt that medication was less helpful to
them with schoolwork than with the other
areas
A noteworthy finding is that the question
for which medication received the greatest
endorsement was one asking whether adolescents
thought their parents liked them more when
they were taking medication. The average
score on this question was the highest for
any question on the survey (i.e. 4.05 out
of 5). Apparently, these teens believed
that taking medication had a major impact
on how positively parents felt about them.
Do
adolescents treated with medication experience
adverse side effects?
Thirty percent of the students reported
that they had experienced side effects from
medication. The side effect question that
received the highest rating involved not
feeling like eating lunch after taking medication.
Overall, however, reports of perceived side
effects were relatively mild.
Do
adolescents get approached by others who
want to buy, or be given, their medication?
Two-thirds of the participants reported
that this had never happened to them; one-third
reported this happens occasionally. A small
number -- about 10% of the sample -- indicated
this was a frequent occurrence. When asked
who gave them their medication during the
school day, 41% reported they took it themselves,
13% reported they received it from a school
nurse, and 26% received it from a school
secretary. The remainder (20%)did not take
medication at school.
How
do peers view students being treated with
medication for ADHD?
As noted above, participants not taking
medication themselves (n=611) were asked
how they felt about peers treated with stimulant
medication. Results from this part of the
survey were quite positive. The vast majority
of students believed that students who took
meds were not very different from other
students, reported that they did not treat
them differently, and noted that teachers
did not treat these students differently.
When asked whether they felt taking medication
had a significant impact on how students
behaved at school, most felt that it did
not.
Fifty-three percent of students reported
that they had seen students who take medication
being approached to sell it or give it away.
A significant minority --28% -- reported
this was something they observed frequently.
SUMMARY
AND IMPLICATIONS
Results from this study indicate that, among
the adolescents in this sample, a slightly
greater number would choose to continue
taking medication than would choose to discontinue
it. Most students felt that medication helped
them to pay attention, behave more appropriately,
and get along better with peers, parents,
and teachers. They were less certain, however,
that medication had a positive impact on
their academic achievement. This latter
finding is interesting in that significant
effects of medication treatment on long-term
academic achievement have generally not
been found. Apparently, adolescents' own
perceptions are consistent with these other
reports.
The results pertaining to peers' attitudes
towards adolescents taking
medication were encouraging. There was no
indication that peers hold negative attitudes
towards adolescents taking meds, that they
perceive them as "different",
or that they treat them differently from
anyone else. Because parents -- and children
themselves -- are often concerned about
the potentially stigmatizing effects of
medication treatment, the fact that such
effects were not evident in this study is
a positive sign.
The most concerning results from this study
pertain to the reports of
adolescents being approached to sell/give
away medication, as well as the reports
from non-ADHD peers of observing such interactions.
Recall that about one-third of adolescents
taking stimulant indicated they had experienced
this. In addition, over half of non-ADHD
peers reported that they had seen this occur.
Although it is not possible to know how
accurate these figures are, because the
survey was completely anonymous, it seems
unlikely that students were providing inflated
estimates in order to convey a certain image.
If adolescents are really asked to sell
their meds at anywhere near the frequency
indicated by these results, it would be
a major source of concern.
Such data would suggest that, although
there is no evidence stimulant medication
treatment increases the risk of illicit
substance use (in fact, available evidence
points to the contrary), it is possible
that adolescents who take stimulants are
at an increased risk of involvement in illicit
transactions involving their medication.
If this is the case, then it seems extremely
important that adolescents who take stimulant
medication are made fully aware of the dangers
involved in such transactions, and that
they be fully prepared for how to respond
if they are approached in this way. In fact,
if this is occurring as frequently as these
data suggest, preparing adolescents to handle
such experiences appropriately should be
part of the treatment of every adolescent
who receives stimulant medication.
In this regard, it is especially alarming
that 41% of the teens reported they gave
themselves their medication during the day,
as opposed to receiving it from a nurse
or other school staff member. Because stimulants
are classified as controlled substances,
no public school that I am aware of would
have a policy that allowed students to store
and administer their own stimulant medication.
Is it possible that parents prefer to let
their teenager manage his/her own medication
at school rather than making the school
responsible for this? If so, this seems
like a real problem.
This study has significant limitations,
which the authors acknowledge, and which
need to be kept in mind. The most important
limitation is that participants were from
a limited geographic region and were in
no way representative of the general population.
There is no way to know whether the results
obtained for this sample accurately describe
the experience of the larger population
of adolescents with ADHD, or the attitudes
that peers have towards classmates who are
treated with meds. It is also not possible
to know whether the alarming reports about
how often ADHD teens are approached for
their meds, or the percentage who report
administering their own meds at school,
are representative of the larger population.
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