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Support Groups for Adhd Parents

I have a 7 year old with ADHD/Impulsivity who has trouble focusing at school. He is on medication. Any suggestions on how to help him focus at school?

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Thanks for all of the advice. For those of you who asked, he is on Focalin XR 20mg in the morning, and a short-acting 10mg dose of the same med in the afternoon. Many of you have also asked how my son was diagnosed. My grandfather, who my son was very close to, died when my son was 4 after a lengthy battle with cancer which I did not hide from him. I figured it was better to prepare him for my grandfather's passing, then to just have it happen to him. After Grampy died, my son started acting out, so I brought him to Children's Hospital here in New Orleans to see a child psychologist who did both intelligence testing on him and pyschological testing. My 4 yr old's, at the time, intelligence was that of a 7 yr old. It was the suggestion of the psychologist that we put him on meds, because like most parents, I reluctant to medicate my child. We have tried Ritalin, Stratera, Concerta, and the Daytrana patches. They all worked a little while, but, because of his high metabolism, he outgrew their effectiveness quickly. I know a lot of you have suggested diet changes instead of medication, I have tried that to no avail. His behavior only got worse. I am very happy with his meds and really would prefer not to have to take him off just yet. However, he is in counciling and our hope is to one day get him off of the meds and to learn to control the ADHD/Impulsivity without the medication. His grades are terrific, he just can't seem to focus long enough to get his classwork finished. His teacher and I communicate regularly about his conduct and effort. For that I am grateful and she is very cooperative about letting him leave class to take his afternoon meds. Without them, he wouldn't be able to make it through aftercare, homework time and home time before bed. There were a lot of great suggestions and I will consider them all and even discuss some with the teacher and administration at his school. Unfortunately though, I was told that because he is in private (prochial, or catholic) school, they are not required to be 504 compliant. They are working with me though, and as I said before, as long as he is making A's and B's, I really don't want to pull him out of the school he has been going to since he was 3 and put him somewhere new.

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The med should help him/her focus at school, what is he/she taking? Other than that I don't know. I have twins that are ADHD and their med keeps them focused. It also claims them down. They take Concerta, its easy on the stomic and works well for them.
Hope this helps.
Y. B

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There are lots of tools that can be used at home and school: make sure all subject areas are very organized in folders and notebooks (therefore easy to locate and not get distracted or lost/frustrated), that there is not a lot for him to fidget with (extra pencils, markers, highlighters, erasers, ect.)but still keep them somewhere accessible for when needed (teacher/or coat cubby), where he is placed in the room, a recorder to record teacher and listen to later for notetaking/studying with you, notetaking skills for when older. There are many more suggestions but there is a website http://www.adhd.com/index.jsp you may find useful, there are separate entrances for you (parents), your child, doctor, or teacher . . . with lots of info on techniques to utilize. I hope this helps and good luck.

1 mom found this helpful

Children with ADHD frequently suffer from disordered sleep. The better their routine and sleep schedule, the better their response to their medication will be. At the age of 7, his bedtime should be no later than 8:30 with strict adherence to a bedtime routine. The routine should include removal of all screen stimulus for one hour before expecte time to sleep. That means, no computer, no video games, no hand held games an no televsion. It is not the content of what they see, it is actually the photic stimulation from the light that disrupts the initiation of sleep. Next, their breakfast should include a good balance between long lastin protein and some quick carbohydrate food. For instance, spaghetti and meatballs, peanut butter and jelly, grilled cheese and apple or orange juice (but make sure the juice is 100% juice without any additives. If his medication is any of the long acting stimulants, it should be given a good hour before he is expected to do productive school work. Also make sure that the morning has a strict schedule and routine so that there is no question of expectation of performance each morning. I have several other helpful hints and suggestions if you would like to give me more details and have a private response, I would be glad to help you out.

1 mom found this helpful

Hi R.,

What tests were run to see that your son does have ADHD? What meds is he on? The reason I ask is because my grandson - now 10 - was "diagnosed" as ADHD just by the teacher and his mom filling out a questionnaire. He's been on Adderall, Concerta, and one other thing. The meds really messed him up making him into a zombie and when they wore off, he was unbelievably angry and strong and said his head felt like it was going to blow up - it hurt so bad. When I have him in the summer, he comes off all his meds (he's also asthmatic and has allergies). My little guy is NOT ADHD, the issue is with his diet. I get him off the sugar, dairy, and preservatives, give him supplements as he doesn't get enough of the right nutrients nor does he like vegetables, plus I've changed all my cleaning products.

Personally, I think kids are labeled too easily just so more money can be made. You can go to the following website and check to see what chemicals are in the things you use that your son may be reacting to as well look at what he's eating and drinking.

http://www.householdproducts.nlm.nih.gov/ingredients.htm

Some chemical ingredients to look out for:
• Sodium hydroxide
• Hydrochloric acid
• Butyl cellosolve (2-Butoxyethanol)
• Formaldehyde
Bleach (sodium hypochlorite)
• Ammonia
• Sulfamic acid
• Petroleum distillates
• Sulfuric acid
• Lye (potassium hydroxide)
• Morpholine

These are the cleaning products I now use:
http://www.GreenHealthyClean.com

I hope I have been of some help. God Bless.

PS I can also send you some testimonials from others with "ADHD" kids who have gone to "natural" rather than chemical help.

1 mom found this helpful

Set up a reward system. He gets a sticker for everyday that he does good at school and after so many is rewarded by a trip to the park or zoo, etc. Also, around your home find things for your child to do in given time limits, like cleaning his room, helping you do laundry, reading a book, coloring a picture, etc. If your child feels he's being given attention for doing good things and you can make it the difference in good attention and bad obvious to your child it may help some. Just an idea, I have a close friend who's little girl has AD/HD as well.

Please make sure he has an accurate diagnosis. While I am not one of those people that believe it doesn't exist, I do agree that it is sometimes over-diagnosed and misdiagnosed.

Then our child needs to be placed in 504 so that he can receive accommodations. These accommodations usually include repeated directions, preferential seating, and test read aloud. This is a federal law and if your child's school receives federal funds they must accommodate under act 1120. These accommodations are especially important when it comes to high stakes testing.

Make sure you constantly communicate with your child's teacher. It is easier than ever to do this because of computers. Kids with ADD need immediate consequences or rewards, so a quick e-mail may get his attention. Let his teacher know what you are doing at home such as a reward system so that he knows you are working together. She can just make a quick note and initial it and you can do the same.

If you are going to try medication you may want to try the non-stimulants first. From what I am told they are better. I tried them with my son, but unfortunately they didn't work for long. Talk to your Doctor about the different types of medicines.

I grew up with a brother who was ADHD. Just recently on the
today show they were talking about how food coloring can contribute to ADHD and ADD. It was very interesting. Try and keep him off sugar and sodas as much as possible. And they were showing candy with dye's in it such and lemon heads
and my brother loved lemon heads and Red Hots! I would look at some natural ways to help prevent the ADHD befor medicating. You could go to a book store and get some literature on it. You have to keep them busy. They get bored quick and are usually very intelligent. Get him to help you and dad out around the house and sports help direct some of that energy. As long as you know how to deal with it its alot easier. You can tell my brother something 5 times and it might go in one ear and out the other. Focusing is hard for them to do. Try not to get to angry at him. It use to drive my mom crazy! Until she found out how to deal. But that was 20 years later after he was out of the house. Good Luck!

Hi R.,
My name is W. and I have a 15 year old son who was diagnosed with ADHD at the age of 5. We spent the first year trying vitamins, minerals, music therapy, color therapy, diet changes, aromatherapy, you name it we tried it. The ones we still use today are color therapy (avoid red colors they are stimulants), aromatherapy (vanilla scented plug ins work the best for a constant scent in his room and through-out the house)and have added medication. We tried Ritalin first and that was inaffective so we tried Clonodine. It worked best in the patch form because it was then released in a low dosage constantly. It also had very few side effects. We had to stop when his skin got to sensitive for the patch.

I suggested to his teachers to avoid red and provided them with a plug-in and vanilla scented inserts for his classroom. Soft music also helped but that wasn't an option at school.

He has since been diagnosed with Bi-polar and Asperger's Syndrome and it's a whole different ball game now.

I do have a suggestion though for a support group for you...call Wraparound Tulsa at ###-###-#### and they can either suggest a group for you or reffer you to another help center. We have been approved for the services that Wraparound provides, in home counseling and a mentor for our son. Maybe you could get some help through them also. It is a free service but you have to go through an application process first.

Good luck
W. Q

Hi I have a 7 year old that is not on anything, has troble focusing and I am tring other things. I first was using focas factor kids chewables, he took it for a long time, it was helping and now he says it taste like fish, so I went to the GNC and got the Omega 3 soft chews for $20 they taste like starburst and smell pretty good too we are going to see how this works so far the teacher seems to be saying he is doing good so you might try it. We got a list of focus foods off the internet and he is such a picky eater I could not get him to eat Tuna or Lima beans or the other foods on the list. So I am trying to use the Omega 3 for now Let me no how it goes. He has not been tested. I really think I will try other things before meds Dont like um much.

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