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Educate us, what makes you say this?This is a joke right?
Educate us, what makes you say this?This is a joke right?
So you've got some evidence to back this up I presume.Yes, because children are products of their environment. Typically poor sleep, poor discipline, poor parenting and poor academic environments are quick to label ADHD rather than modify and change the area which they live in.
If you have someone who is profound unable to "Focus and Concentrate", more than likely you have an underdiagnosed, under-realized OSA and MR. Just because we have more impulse control and conduct disorders popping up, doesn't make it ADHD.
So, let's look at it from this perspective. What evidence is there really? We have a documented issue with piss-poor research occurring in science. Very poor reliability, validity and repeatability. Assuming this perspective, we cannot trust any research. Further, we also have very poor Inter-rater Reliability scores when it comes to diagnosing. This is a top-down mandate that suggests we react the same because those on the lofty panels often are taking the approach of "this is how I do it" and it then becomes an unwritten rule.So you've got some evidence to back this up I presume.
Is this in adults or children?So, let's look at it from this perspective. What evidence is there really? We have a documented issue with piss-poor research occurring in science. Very poor reliability, validity and repeatability. Assuming this perspective, we cannot trust any research. Further, we also have very poor Inter-rater Reliability scores when it comes to diagnosing. This is a top-down mandate that suggests we react the same because those on the lofty panels often are taking the approach of "this is how I do it" and it then becomes an unwritten rule.
But to your point, there is plenty of evidence something as simple as OSA is under-recognized and underdiagnosed, I think the last number I heard was 80% of sleep related disorders are undiagnosed.
Ah yes the repeated longitudinal studies in multiple countries showing lower rates of SUD, lower rates of incarceration, lower automobile accident rates, and higher graduation rates from early psychostimulant intervention in 5 year olds (who by the way have high interrater reliability even across countries) is an ivory tower made up nonsense to push stimulants that cost a few cents/pill.So, let's look at it from this perspective. What evidence is there really? We have a documented issue with piss-poor research occurring in science. Very poor reliability, validity and repeatability. Assuming this perspective, we cannot trust any research. Further, we also have very poor Inter-rater Reliability scores when it comes to diagnosing. This is a top-down mandate that suggests we react the same because those on the lofty panels often are taking the approach of "this is how I do it" and it then becomes an unwritten rule.
But to your point, there is plenty of evidence something as simple as OSA is under-recognized and underdiagnosed, I think the last number I heard was 80% of sleep related disorders are undiagnosed.
What makes me say that ADHD as an entity exists? I don’t know where to start..Educate us, what makes you say this?
We have a documented issue with piss-poor research occurring in science. Very poor reliability, validity and repeatability. Assuming this perspective, we cannot trust any research.
It's very gratifying getting the T+A done and having life improve, every CAP worth anything is well aware of this medical condition, but I still have only seen ADHD sx entirely disappear following surgery on a handful of occasions across my entire career. Which is to say I complete agree.ADHD is one of the great success stories of psychiatry. There is immense literature supporting its inter-rater reliability and specificity. This includes parents, teachers and clinicians. There is also immense literature supporting the short and long term benefits of psychostimulants, possibly more than any other class of medications. All I can guess about why people would think otherwise is a kind of feeling they might have that all degrees of inattention are essentially normal and acceptable. However, you could make this argument for literally any psychiatric condition. You could say that all degrees of hallucinating or delusions are normal or all degrees of sadness or euphoria. It's an argument, sure, but it's not a world I want to live in. And yes, 2% of kids have OSA. They should absolutely be treated for that, probably before trying stimulants. The same goes for adults before hypnotics. However, the VAST majority of children with ADHD do not OSA.
Okay what? You're just going down a rabbit hole at this point. If you're looking for a field with a ton of research with those characteristics, you probably picked the wrong one in general.
One of the "great success stories?' Settle down.ADHD is one of the great success stories of psychiatry. There is immense literature supporting its inter-rater reliability and specificity. This includes parents, teachers and clinicians. There is also immense literature supporting the short and long term benefits of psychostimulants, possibly more than any other class of medications. All I can guess about why people would think otherwise is a kind of feeling they might have that all degrees of inattention are essentially normal and acceptable. However, you could make this argument for literally any psychiatric condition. You could say that all degrees of hallucinating or delusions are normal or all degrees of sadness or euphoria. It's an argument, sure, but it's not a world I want to live in. And yes, 2% of kids have OSA. They should absolutely be treated for that, probably before trying stimulants. The same goes for adults before hypnotics. However, the VAST majority of children with ADHD do not have OSA.
As always, you are far more articulate than I could ever be.One of the "great success stories?' Settle down.
While I don't agree that that there is NOT an entity that exists that is close to what is known as ADHD, I think what he is urging us to consider is worthy of consideration.
We know medical and psychiatric research is far from perfect, has biases, likes to extend its "neuroscience" evidence, etc. I hope we aren't so naïve to actually think otherwise? I think his point is that ADHD is soooooo jumped to as a principle diagnosis (even when applying formal DSM criteria) and as a catch-all for behavior problems, hyperactivity, and/or inattention in Medicaid youth populations, as just one example, that it is more than ridiculous. Both statistically and clinically.
Excessive screen-time/videogames, lack of discipline, lack of focus on persistence/distress tolerance, and psychosocial dysfunction.... any kid could essentially have what appears to be ADHD. And yet time and time again, these are the very very fuzzy conditions in which the diagnosis is made and carried over by PCPs and Psychiatrists. I'm pretty sure this is what @Shikima is getting at?
Better long term outcomes for kids who get stimulants at age five than for the kids who don’t get them, maybe we should put it in the water then. I am not familiar with this research base and I do believe there are kids with some neurological patterns that we call ADHD and that benefit from stimulants, but am very skeptical in the vast majority of cases. Just off the top of my head, this research is confounded by the effects of intervention vs no intervention. Sometimes just having an adult pay a little attention to what’s going on with a kid can make a difference.Ah yes the repeated longitudinal studies in multiple countries showing lower rates of SUD, lower rates of incarceration, lower automobile accident rates, and higher graduation rates from early psychostimulant intervention in 5 year olds (who by the way have high interrater reliability even across countries) is an ivory tower made up nonsense to push stimulants that cost a few cents/pill.
The reality is that the evidence basis behind ADHD and the treatment of it in children is leaps and bounds better than 95% of the conditions we treat in psychiatry. This really reads like an adult psychiatrist who has not spend their time going through the childhood ADHD literature base who is frustrated with adult ADHD (and here I would absolutely agree) and then is overgeneralizing this to kids.
Everything you're describing sounds more like an argument for why we should be thorough with our diagnostic interviews and assessments and addressing social factors instead of an argument against actual ADHD. I don't think anyone will argue that a lot of patients are improperly diagnosed or that people just want to medicate away their problems with stimulants attention/executive dysfunction being the latest pop-psychology craze. That doesn't change the fact that stimulants for legit ADHD are by far the most effective treatment for any psychiatric condition we recognize today and that no amount of addressing social factors is going to help many of these patients who clearly benefit immensely from stimulants.One of the "great success stories?' Settle down.
While I don't agree that that there is NOT an entity that exists that is close to what is known as ADHD, I think what he is urging us to consider is worthy of consideration.
We know medical and psychiatric research is far from perfect, has biases, likes to extend its "neuroscience" evidence, etc. I hope we aren't so naïve to actually think otherwise? I think his point is that ADHD is soooooo jumped to as a principle diagnosis (even when applying formal DSM criteria) and as a catch-all for behavior problems, hyperactivity, and/or inattention in Medicaid youth populations, as just one example, that it is more than ridiculous. Both statistically and clinically.
Excessive screen-time/videogames, lack of discipline, lack of focus on persistence/distress tolerance, and psychosocial dysfunction.... any kid could essentially have what appears to be ADHD. And yet time and time again, these are the very very fuzzy conditions in which the diagnosis is made and carried over by PCPs and Psychiatrists. I'm pretty sure this is what @Shikima is getting at?
You seem to be ignoring that there is a severity spectrum in ADHD just like with other disorders, even if it's not part of the diagnostic specifiers. Some people will have more mild ADHD, which imo is the far more difficult diagnosis and warrants a lot more work-up and treatment of other primary conditions before considering medicating it with stimulants. Not everyone with ADHD requires a stimulant to function (points at self), just like not everyone with depressive or anxiety disorders need meds for them and you could say the bolded about many psychiatric conditions for patients at any age. Can we just stop prescribing antidepressants to those with depression and anxiety and "just pay a little attention to what's going on?"Better long term outcomes for kids who get stimulants at age five than for the kids who don’t get them, maybe we should put it in the water then. I am not familiar with this research base and I do believe there are kids with some neurological patterns that we call ADHD and that benefit from stimulants, but am very skeptical in the vast majority of cases. Just off the top of my head, this research is confounded by the effects of intervention vs no intervention. Sometimes just having an adult pay a little attention to what’s going on with a kid can make a difference.
Wait so you are not familiar with the research base of some of the most fundamental and longitudinal studies of childhood psychopathology but you would like to opine about your skepticism? I do not understand how those sentences make any sense, either you practice and believe in empirical science or you just say whatever you want based on your n=1 life experience.Better long term outcomes for kids who get stimulants at age five than for the kids who don’t get them, maybe we should put it in the water then. I am not familiar with this research base and I do believe there are kids with some neurological patterns that we call ADHD and that benefit from stimulants, but am very skeptical in the vast majority of cases. Just off the top of my head, this research is confounded by the effects of intervention vs no intervention. Sometimes just having an adult pay a little attention to what’s going on with a kid can make a difference.
If one is going to argue about the validity of ADHD as a diagnosis, then frankly they should be questioning every diagnosis in the DSM or any other psychologic/psychiatric nosology manual.
100%. I'm all about calling out ADHD overdiagnosis but that doesn't mean the construct itself is any less valid than another other diagnosis. In fact, ADHD has a HIGHER inter-rater reliability than most of the DSM diagnoses. I mean, lets talk about the terrible replicability and consistency between diagnosis for most of the personality disorders...
100%. I'm all about calling out ADHD overdiagnosis but that doesn't mean the construct itself is any less valid than another other diagnosis. In fact, ADHD has a HIGHER inter-rater reliability than most of the DSM diagnoses. I mean, lets talk about the terrible replicability and consistency between diagnosis for most of the personality disorders...
Not just college age... but also their 40-50 year-old parents, subsequently, as a result of "It's genetic and Sally feels better on stims so I realized I had ADHD too."I don't believe there are any reasonable numbers about the over and under diagnosis of ADHD, but ironically, both are happening at alarming rates. What is safe to say is that the treatment of college age adults has exploded.
Longer term data is probably better for the child->adolescent cohort. Longer term data for adults is lacking, at least as far as the last time I tried to do a deep dive on ADHD literature (which was a year or two ago so completely possible I missed or forgot something.)There is also immense literature supporting the short and long term benefits of psychostimulants, possibly more than any other class of medications.
All I can guess about why people would think otherwise is a kind of feeling they might have that all degrees of inattention are essentially normal and acceptable.
I still think this is the most challenging thing right now. Maybe 5-10% of presenting "inattention" intakes that I get have real obvious/high confidence ADHD diagnoses. 10-30% have other compelling causes of inattention. The remainder are in a spectrum of subjective report of inattention that's difficult to parse once they've learned to read you the DSM criteria thanks to social media and "research."That doesn't change the fact that stimulants for legit ADHD are by far the most effective treatment for any psychiatric condition we recognize today and that no amount of addressing social factors is going to help many of these patients who clearly benefit immensely from stimulants.
Wanted to refresh myself on ADHD genetics and found this great nature paper, which actually talks about the above quite a bit, this paragraph especially:ADHD is actually one of the most heritable of any of the conditions we study, really only beat out by schizophrenia. Neither is actually a natural kind or anything but there is way more support for ADHD being a discrete entity than, say, MDD.
Accumulating evidence from family, twin, and molecular genetic studies suggests that the disorder we know as ADHD is the extreme of a dimensional trait in the population. The dimensional nature of ADHD has wide-ranging implications. If we view ADHD as analogous to cholesterol levels, then diagnostic approaches should focus on defining the full continuum of “ADHD-traits” along with clinically meaningful thresholds for defining who does and does not need treatment and who has clinically subthreshold traits that call for careful monitoring. The dimensional nature of ADHD should also shift the debate about the increases in ADHD’s prevalence in recent years. Instead of assuming that misdiagnoses are the main explanation for the increased prevalence, perhaps researchers should explore to what extent the threshold for diagnosis has decreased over time and whether changes in the threshold are clinically sensible or not. A shift from categorical to dimensional constructs harmonizes with the Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) initiative of the National Institute of Mental Health [152]. RDoC seeks to define and validate dimensional constructs mediating psychopathology along with the neurobiological underpinnings of these constructs.
The continuum / dimensional model of ADHD is why I feel so strongly that it is the prescribers (or the medication treatment for the problem) who should primarily take responsibility for 'diagnosing' the problem and treating the problem. Since attentional difficulties lie on a continuum and since the decision to treat (at all) a certain level of that problem with medication lies with the prescriber then I think that the prescriber should be the one assessing/diagnosing the condition as well as continuously monitoring the efficacy (balanced against adverse effects) of the medication intervention. However, the current model implemented (at least in the VA system) is one of: (a) someone raises the possibility of 'ADHD' in the patient (most often the patient themselves) ---> (b) enter consult for 'psychological testing/ assessment' to rule in/out 'ADHD' ---> (c) rubber stamping of diagnosis by the resident pseudoneuropsychologist ---> (d) stimulant meds for adult psychiatric patient with comorbid severe PTSD, MDD, GAD, mTBI, OSA, SUD, etc. This results in: (1) diffusion of responsibility between professionals that results in very poor 'quality control' in terms of delivery of and accountability for clinical services, (2) a convenient (inconvenient?) 'label' for 'the problem' or etiological scapegoat for the issue of 'inattention' being 'ADHD' vs. a broad spectrum of other plausible (and treatable) causes or drivers of the 'inattention.' It's a mess.Not just college age... but also their 40-50 year-old parents, subsequently, as a result of "It's genetic and Sally feels better on stims so I realized I had ADHD too."
Longer term data is probably better for the child->adolescent cohort. Longer term data for adults is lacking, at least as far as the last time I tried to do a deep dive on ADHD literature (which was a year or two ago so completely possible I missed or forgot something.)
I still think this is the most challenging thing right now. Maybe 5-10% of presenting "inattention" intakes that I get have real obvious/high confidence ADHD diagnoses. 10-30% have other compelling causes of inattention. The remainder are in a spectrum of subjective report of inattention that's difficult to parse once they've learned to read you the DSM criteria thanks to social media and "research."
Wanted to refresh myself on ADHD genetics and found this great nature paper, which actually talks about the above quite a bit, this paragraph especially:
This is my main worry about our system's upcoming ADHD workflow. We're training the therapists and integrated care psychologists to do ADHD assessments (but decently well thought out assessments, at least) hoping that will lead to doing more behavioral strategies for ADHD (from the therapists) and PCP treatment of ADHD but in the latter case the PCP is even less familiar with treating adults with ADHD than we are so could end up similar to what you describe from the VA. The other challenge will be if they end shipping the pts off to us anyway because then we even have someone internal to the system who's already rubber stamped the diagnosis.The continuum / dimensional model of ADHD is why I feel so strongly that it is the prescribers (or the medication treatment for the problem) who should primarily take responsibility for 'diagnosing' the problem and treating the problem. Since attentional difficulties lie on a continuum and since the decision to treat (at all) a certain level of that problem with medication lies with the prescriber then I think that the prescriber should be the one assessing/diagnosing the condition as well as continuously monitoring the efficacy (balanced against adverse effects) of the medication intervention. However, the current model implemented (at least in the VA system) is one of: (a) someone raises the possibility of 'ADHD' in the patient (most often the patient themselves) ---> (b) enter consult for 'psychological testing/ assessment' to rule in/out 'ADHD' ---> (c) rubber stamping of diagnosis by the resident pseudoneuropsychologist ---> (d) stimulant meds for adult psychiatric patient with comorbid severe PTSD, MDD, GAD, mTBI, OSA, SUD, etc. This results in: (1) diffusion of responsibility between professionals that results in very poor 'quality control' in terms of delivery of and accountability for clinical services, (2) a convenient (inconvenient?) 'label' for 'the problem' or etiological scapegoat for the issue of 'inattention' being 'ADHD' vs. a broad spectrum of other plausible (and treatable) causes or drivers of the 'inattention.' It's a mess.
Skepticism is always my approach. I will try an d find some time to delve into this research further and I am opining based on other research that I have been more familiar with in the past as I have had less need as I haven’t been working with the younger population. I do think there is a population for which stimulant medication is of benefit, but most of my work the last ten years or so has been with adolescents and young adults that were misdiagnosed and had more severe problems so as you rightly call out my sample is skewed. I guess I wonder how we can see a high rate of over diagnosis in the community and yet have such high interrater reliability in studies. Or am I mistaken and we are not overdiagnosing? Some of why I ask these questions is because I don’t always have the time to be the expert in every area of our field and feedback from others can help me continue to learn.Wait so you are not familiar with the research base of some of the most fundamental and longitudinal studies of childhood psychopathology but you would like to opine about your skepticism? I do not understand how those sentences make any sense, either you practice and believe in empirical science or you just say whatever you want based on your n=1 life experience.
The seminal study randomized patients presenting at age 5 that meet criteria for ADHD to psychostimulants or watchful waiting and then added them on at age 8 in the second group and found all the benefits of treatment were magnified in patients who received treatment earlier. There are countless other studies using population based data from Egypt, Australia, and Europe to support the efficacy of the interventions. I assure you 15 min med checks every 3 months is not the basis behind why a kid doesn't get into a car crash 10 years later...
That's probably because ADHD and "inattention" are not the same thing at all despite one of the sub-types being labeled as "inattentive type". Even within that sub-type, it's so much more than that. ADHD isn't even in the top 2-3 thoughts of my differential when a chief complaint is just "inattention", I'm ruling out depression, anxiety, sleep issues, and trauma-related disorders before I even start asking about ADHD. If it's just inattention, they won't meet criteria anyway. As I'll say below, I try to focus less on the patient's perception of the problem and more on how it's affecting their functioning. If they can't give me actual examples of how it negatively impacts them, they can list off all the criteria they want, they're still not getting stims from me.I still think this is the most challenging thing right now. Maybe 5-10% of presenting "inattention" intakes that I get have real obvious/high confidence ADHD diagnoses. 10-30% have other compelling causes of inattention. The remainder are in a spectrum of subjective report of inattention that's difficult to parse once they've learned to read you the DSM criteria thanks to social media and "research."
The bolded is likely because interrater reliability in studies are almost certainly based on clinicians who are doing full evals (or at least going through full criteria) for ADHD and those studies don't include all the pill mills and the 5 minute diagnoses made by docs/NPs/therapists running churn and burn clinics.Skepticism is always my approach. I will try an d find some time to delve into this research further and I am opining based on other research that I have been more familiar with in the past as I have had less need as I haven’t been working with the younger population. I do think there is a population for which stimulant medication is of benefit, but most of my work the last ten years or so has been with adolescents and young adults that were misdiagnosed and had more severe problems so as you rightly call out my sample is skewed. I guess I wonder how we can see a high rate of over diagnosis in the community and yet have such high interrater reliability in studies. Or am I mistaken and we are not overdiagnosing? Some of why I ask these questions is because I don’t always have the time to be the expert in every area of our field and feedback from others can help me continue to learn.
Skepticism is always my approach. I will try an d find some time to delve into this research further and I am opining based on other research that I have been more familiar with in the past as I have had less need as I haven’t been working with the younger population. I do think there is a population for which stimulant medication is of benefit, but most of my work the last ten years or so has been with adolescents and young adults that were misdiagnosed and had more severe problems so as you rightly call out my sample is skewed. I guess I wonder how we can see a high rate of over diagnosis in the community and yet have such high interrater reliability in studies. Or am I mistaken and we are not overdiagnosing? Some of why I ask these questions is because I don’t always have the time to be the expert in every area of our field and feedback from others can help me continue to learn.
I'm not sure where your referral base is from but this is what I expect to see. ADHD "diagnosis" by the NP who sees the patient for 15 minutes, sees elevated scores on a Vanderbilt and parent that wants their kids on stimulants, wham bam thank you mam. The majority of pediatric stimulants are NOT prescribed by child/adolescent psychiatrists and the majority of ADHD diagnosis are NOT by CAP or pediatric neuropsychologists.Skepticism is always my approach. I will try an d find some time to delve into this research further and I am opining based on other research that I have been more familiar with in the past as I have had less need as I haven’t been working with the younger population. I do think there is a population for which stimulant medication is of benefit, but most of my work the last ten years or so has been with adolescents and young adults that were misdiagnosed and had more severe problems so as you rightly call out my sample is skewed. I guess I wonder how we can see a high rate of over diagnosis in the community and yet have such high interrater reliability in studies. Or am I mistaken and we are not overdiagnosing? Some of why I ask these questions is because I don’t always have the time to be the expert in every area of our field and feedback from others can help me continue to learn.
I agree, about half of the time I spend in these evaluations is ruling out anything else potentially causative. I've caught a bunch of severe OSA, several narcolepsy/IH, and the full spectrum of patients with/without insight into anxiety/depression/insomnia as the cause of their inattention. That's not even touching all of the heavy THC use.That's probably because ADHD and "inattention" are not the same thing at all despite one of the sub-types being labeled as "inattentive type". Even within that sub-type, it's so much more than that. ADHD isn't even in the top 2-3 thoughts of my differential when a chief complaint is just "inattention", I'm ruling out depression, anxiety, sleep issues, and trauma-related disorders before I even start asking about ADHD. If it's just inattention, they won't meet criteria anyway. As I'll say below, I try to focus less on the patient's perception of the problem and more on how it's affecting their functioning. If they can't give me actual examples of how it negatively impacts them, they can list off all the criteria they want, they're still not getting stims from me.
The bolded is likely because interrater reliability in studies are almost certainly based on clinicians who are doing full evals (or at least going through full criteria) for ADHD and those studies don't include all the pill mills and the 5 minute diagnoses made by docs/NPs/therapists running churn and burn clinics.
There's also a difference between overdiagnosis and overprescribing. Like I mentioned above, not everyone with a disorder needs meds, and ADHD and stimulants aren't an exception. Plenty of people with mild to moderate symptoms do fine wtihout them. It just so happens that patients like stimulants because they can immediately FEEL the effects unlike most other meds and they have a perceived benefit. Same reason patients love benzos. Imagine how much more often people would be coming in demanding Prozac or Zoloft if they could feel it working hours after starting it.
Clausewitz brings it up frequently, but it's why I like to focus on tangible effects and functioning rather than how patients feel. How many hours are patients spending on work or chores before/after meds? Are they still losing/forgetting things? Have their co-workers and bosses, family, or friends noticed a difference? I don't prescribe meds just so patients can feel better (though it's nice when they do), I prescribe so they actually function better.
I'm stricter with stimulants, but fortunately there are non-stimulant options for suspected ADHD. I have a relatively low threshold to start Wellbutrin if I suspect ADHD but am unsure and will give patients instructions on things to monitor and document. This is where I like the dimensional model better in terms of nosology and I'll give Criteria A for PDs in the alternative model as an example below:I agree, about half of the time I spend in these evaluations is ruling out anything else potentially causative. I've caught a bunch of severe OSA, several narcolepsy/IH, and the full spectrum of patients with/without insight into anxiety/depression/insomnia as the cause of their inattention. That's not even touching all of the heavy THC use.
To be clear, these patients usually aren't just saying the dsm criteria. I always ask for examples. There's a gut feeling and descriptive difference between compelling severe ADHD in that their examples are specific, personal, unique, and have more emotional weight. The most compelling ADHD patients give examples like: literally always having to have their coworker remind them that it's time to head out for a standing daily work meeting or they just won't make it, or screwing up the relatively straightforward materials order every. single. time. at a construction job, or any patient who is truly actually impulsive/hyperactive in the interview, or failing the hazmat (basic) test 4x for the fire department and requiring weeks of intensive dedicated remediation to pass (almost everyone passes the first time), or multiple car accidents from just not attending to the road.
Most of the marginal feeling patients give the exact same semi-vague examples (the most common ones you'll see on social media/websites devoted to patient facing info on ADHD): Everyone says they start loading the dishwasher and then start cleaning the counter and then start doing the laundry and don't get any of that done as quickly as they'd like because they get sidetracked. They procrastinate (which is not specific to ADHD) things a lot. They feel it takes them so much longer than other people to get things done (but are still successful in their JD/MD/PhD program / software dev job / promoted through three managerial levels in 5 years). These examples may be true and they may be common because they're actually common baseline manifestations of ADHD but they also sound like a script coming from patients along a wide spectrum of proxy indicators of function (educational attainment, workplace promotions for high performance, successful relationships.) And good luck nailing these people down on "often" or "impairing" beyond "I could be so much more effective/efficient/have better work life balance." So where do you draw the line? If you take too skeptical an approach, you're probably missing people who could genuinely benefit from medical help.
I agree--I similarly start most patients on nonstims except for more obvious/severe ADHD. There's roughly equivalent data for the non-stims as for the stims in adults (none of the data is great really), it's a safer place to start, and lots of people see benefit from those options. It is also a mild test for whether the pt will start heavily pushing for stims anyway.I'm stricter with stimulants, but fortunately there are non-stimulant options for suspected ADHD. I have a relatively low threshold to start Wellbutrin if I suspect ADHD but am unsure and will give patients instructions on things to monitor and document. This is where I like the dimensional model better in terms of nosology and I'll give Criteria A for PDs in the alternative model as an example below:
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In this model, a person is considered to have a personality disorder if they score a 2 or higher in severity in at least 2/4 of the above areas of functioning (identity, self-direction, empathy, intimacy). I realize we don't have a uniform, well-validated scale of functioning with scoring like this for ADHD, but there are plenty of tools that can help and we can use a general model like this to guage the severity of impairment that each symptom causes. The nice thing about ADHD is that when symptoms are severe, they're pretty easy to pick up in 5 or 10 minutes on initial intake unless the patient is a great actor. It can be tough if it's not obvious, that's where the specifics mentioned comes in though. If they're giving vague responses about functional impairment, we can trial Wellbutrin or Strattera and instruct them to monitor specific tasks or metrics (for example: how many times do you have to read 2-3 sentences before it sticks?) before considering stimulants.
One thing I like to ask about that helps me is hyperfocus. Even with inattentive type, patients can have periods of diving down rabbit holes for hours (I've seen it last days and look like mania a few times) and being unable to remove themselves from a topic that prevents them from doing relevant tasks. If that's not present, especially if patients adamantly deny that, it's a red flag for me that either something else is going on or they're seeking stims. And maybe surprisingly, patients with legit ADHD almost uniformly have told me that the hyperfocus and inability to pull themselves out of the rabbit hole improves after they start the right treatment; usually that med is a stimulant, but some patients (and me, lol) have also told me non-stims improved this as well.
Yep, secondary metric for me is how badly does the patient want their symptoms to improve vs how badly do they just want a stimulant, lol.I agree--I similarly start most patients on nonstims except for more obvious/severe ADHD. There's roughly equivalent data for the non-stims as for the stims in adults (none of the data is great really), it's a safer place to start, and lots of people see benefit from those options. It is also a mild test for whether the pt will start heavily pushing for stims anyway.
What are thoughts on Adzenys or Cotempla due to shortages? They have a ton of vouchers to include a $50 max even for uninsured and non participating pharmacies. It seems almost too good to be true since the other vouchers are 0, 15, and 30 ish.
I do it all the time right now because I haven't had a patient yet who can't get Adzenys or Cotempla. The branded manufacturers are probably making bank with the shortage because their production seems to have been fine....even Vyvanse I haven't run into any issues. Their coupons are actually that good too, if they go to particular pharmacies they only pay $35 even if their insurance rejects it and $0 if insurance accepts at all....I had one person who would have had a $100 copay at CVS and went to $0 at an AytuConnect pharmacy.
Awesome!
They also have a thing where it's 50 max for ANY pharmacy even uninsured.
I'm guessing there isn't much concern for Cotempla for adults as off-label?
This is the gray area where I struggle to understand the nuance of treatment.So where do you draw the line? If you take too skeptical an approach, you're probably missing people who could genuinely benefit from medical help.
This is the gray area where I struggle to understand the nuance of treatment.
At what point does treating pathology become just improving performance? What exactly is being defined as the pathology to treat? In the example of the fireman who repeatedly struggles to complete his haz mat test, does he need to get fired from his job for the threshold to be high enough to justify stimulants? At that point he might have bigger problems. What if he never gets fired and eventually hobbles his way through a Pass -- technically he never needed a medication to "advance his career", but stimulants may have helped -- would we have called that treatment, or performance enhancement?
The reason I ask is because it seems so subjective and arbitrary to call one patient's experience of inattention pathologic and "deserving" of medication, whereas another patients challenges are interpreted to be less persuasive by the clinician because the patient hasn't suffered enough dire consequences of their ADHD/Inattention symptoms (yet). I would think the goal is to change the trajectory of these patients before they hit those brick walls, rather than using their crash as reassurance to the physician that he/she is not overtreating.
I think you answered the question as to where the misdiagnoses come from and it is consistent with what I see as afar as less qualified providers more likely to misdiagnose.I'm not sure where your referral base is from but this is what I expect to see. ADHD "diagnosis" by the NP who sees the patient for 15 minutes, sees elevated scores on a Vanderbilt and parent that wants their kids on stimulants, wham bam thank you mam. The majority of pediatric stimulants are NOT prescribed by child/adolescent psychiatrists and the majority of ADHD diagnosis are NOT by CAP or pediatric neuropsychologists.
There are so many instances of misdiagnosis in medicine generally and psychiatry in particular, but Joe Shmoes 15 minute tip-top shop existing does not decrease the validity of having multiple different blinded child/adolescent psychiatrists assessing the same patient and then seeing how reliable the diagnosis is.
This is the gray area where I struggle to understand the nuance of treatment.
At what point does treating pathology become just improving performance? What exactly is being defined as the pathology to treat? In the example of the fireman who repeatedly struggles to complete his haz mat test, does he need to get fired from his job for the threshold to be high enough to justify stimulants? At that point he might have bigger problems. What if he never gets fired and eventually hobbles his way through a Pass -- technically he never needed a medication to "advance his career", but stimulants may have helped -- would we have called that treatment, or performance enhancement?
The reason I ask is because it seems so subjective and arbitrary to call one patient's experience of inattention pathologic and "deserving" of medication, whereas another patients challenges are interpreted to be less persuasive by the clinician because the patient hasn't suffered enough dire consequences of their ADHD/Inattention symptoms (yet). I would think the goal is to change the trajectory of these patients before they hit those brick walls, rather than using their crash as reassurance to the physician that he/she is not overtreating.
Love what you guys said. I am the same. I talk about the concept of medical necessity and risks versus benefits. Not every diabetic needs insulin. Do we always need to take a sledgehammer to a fly? For stimulants, I tell the patient, let's set up some tangible goals. How much time are you spending on work? How are your quarterly reviews? If you work say...in medical billing, has your collection rate gone up 5%? 10%? more? If there is no change in measurable outcomes, why are we continuing the take the medication? If there is change but we plateau at a dose, what's the point of increasing? Once we talked about tangible goals (which even is used in general therapy), people have gotten less pushy about stims for less well defined reasons. I find that it can commonly develop into a discussion about a patient wanting to feel "motivated" or "good." Which opens a good discussion about what is our reasoning for looking into these medications.Clausewitz brings it up frequently, but it's why I like to focus on tangible effects and functioning rather than how patients feel. How many hours are patients spending on work or chores before/after meds? Are they still losing/forgetting things? Have their co-workers and bosses, family, or friends noticed a difference? I don't prescribe meds just so patients can feel better (though it's nice when they do), I prescribe so they actually function better.