Adopted Children Face a Greater Risk for ADHD

A research study lead by Margaret Keyes, of University of Minnesota, found that adopted children were significantly more likely to suffer from a psychiatric disorder, compared to those who were not adopted.

Comparing a random sample of 540 Minnesota-born adolescents who were not adopted with a representative sample of 700 adoptees placed by the three largest adoption agencies in Minnesota, they found 14 percent of the adopted kids had attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder and 19 percent of them had oppositional defiant disorder, compared to 10 percent of the non-adopted children. Of the latter group, 514 were foreign adoptions and 178 were domestic. Researchers interviewed the subjects, as well as their parents and teachers. They performed psychiatric assessments on all adolescents.

ADHD is regarded as a chronic disorder, or a set of “neurobehavioural developmental disorders,” which affect about 3-5% of the world’s population under the age of 19 and about 4% to 8% of American children ages 4 to 17; the symptoms include hyperactivity, as well as forgetfulness, poor impulse control, impulsivity, distractibility, or difficulty with concentration and focus.

"Despite the popularity of adoption, there is persistent concern that adopted children may be at a heightened risk for mental health or adjustment problems," the study's authors write in a report released Monday.

"When you have all the information, you're better prepared to make decisions for your family," Keyes said. "You have information that your adopted child might be at a slightly increased risk, so you can be aware of that and can you use the social services agencies with which you already familiar through the process of adopting."

More than 120,000 children are adopted annually in the United States and about 1.5 million adopted American children are under the age of 18.




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Adoption and behavior
By Robert Hafetz, (2008-05-07 15:23)
Infants only weeks old are able to experience grief and record affective memories of their separation from their first mother. It follows that these memory representations will manifest as behavior later in life. One of the myths of adoption is that an infant is a blank slate unable to think or be aware, so when an adoption occurs they dont know it and will think their new mother is no different from their natural one. Experience and research like this one confirm what adoptees have always known. Adoption creates developmental barriers, impairs attachment, and changes behavior of adoptees in ways that are unique to that process. That doesnt mean adoption makes children nuts, it can in rare cases but lack of insight from the adoption family is the real culprit here. Most adoptees can cope with their separation memories if they are supported by an enlightened adoptive family that recognizes acting out behavior as manifestations of the separation. Too many deny it and wrongly thi nk they can erase the pain of adoption with love. They cant. Only the adoptee himself can resolve the grief, shame, dissconnection, and narcisisstic wound that results from losing the birth mother. Permission to exlpore, search, open discussion, and validation, will go a long way in helping an adoptee build a bridge connecting what he thinks and what he feels. Manby of us adoptees simply cant put words to our emotional memories because they were recorded before the mind could think explicitly. A missdiagnosis of ADHD, mood instability ODD,RAD or other behavior pathologizes adoptees who are not mentally ill in the first place. There is no diagnosis called Adopted child syndrome so to get insurance to pay Drs. use the closest label they can find. All adoptive parents should question any such diagnosis and find a therapist who understands the effects of adoption.
Roberthafetz@comcast.net
Pathwaysinadoptions.com
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