Dr. Barkley's counterargument is essentially "it's preposterous to suggest that ADHD isn't well defined ... because clearly it is well defined," but that's a circular argument -- and still conflates "diagnosis" with "loose pattern of symptoms". He seems to get a bit emotional and take things personally; as if merely questioning the status quo of drugging kids implies that he is a bad person. Though we can't blame individual doctors for doing what they and the system institutionally thinks is best, it's still important to have critical, objective dialogue, even if it's uncomfortable. (Although my favorite de-motivational poster quote seems relevant here: "No single raindrop believes it is to blame for the flood".)
He also bristles that "They're only classified as Schedule II drugs!", etc. Let's be explicitly clear, they're amphetamine salts; we're drugging kids with amphetamine uppers.
Dr. Barkley is so (pseudo?)certain! Yet it all begs the question: How on earth did humanity survive back when cavepeople had such inadequate access to amphetamines?
Re: TBI leads to ADHD -- not saying that subcase is never true, but in the context of this thread, "why more US cases of ADHD vs. the world," unless children in the US suffer from proportionally more incidents of TBI to explain the uptick, then TBI isn't as relevant.
> and still conflates "diagnosis" with "loose pattern of symptoms"
He doesn't, he's really precise about the naming in those cases. For now we don't have a better way to diagnose, but you can follow him review papers which do try to improve the diagnosis. If ADHD is defined in terms of symptoms, the diagnosis has to use those.
> He seems to get a bit emotional
Oh no, someone cares about their field of work being misrepresented. I'm glad it never happens in places like HN ;) You can listen to the arguments and ignore how he feels about the topic.
> Let's be explicitly clear, they're amphetamine salts; we're drugging kids with amphetamine uppers.
First, only one part of available drugs are amphetamines - there are other options.
Second, they don't work for them the same as others. I've had the most relaxing naps after stimulants, which is not why others use them. I'm not sure what you're specifically against here - improving kids' lives by giving them meds that others can abuse for fun? Is this just about a moral take? Because we know that medication in ADHD lowers the chance of dying from multiple causes https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10901868/
> How on earth did humanity survive back when cavepeople had such inadequate access to amphetamines?
Just like we do today. Some people have a bit worse experience with life than others. Is not like ADHD kills you in short term, just lowers the life expectancy.
There's definitely a moral aspect / undertone here (similar to many other topics).
I think also, disputes like this suffer from a double red herring of sorts, where folks argue past each other and confuse "whether a solution has efficacy" vs. "is there an alternate solution closer to the root cause that renders the initial problem moot".
In this case, "whether ADHD meds work" is a separate topic vs. "could most ADHD cases just be childhood anxiety, or mitigated with therapy, etc". Or diabetes: "$20B+ industry for insulin to lower blood sugar," vs. "why not just consume less sugar in the first place". Could it be that we're all be so busy trying to find solutions to a problem that itself is optional?
> Let's be explicitly clear, they're amphetamine salts; we're drugging kids with amphetamine uppers.
If it saves them becoming smokers later, then good.
The reality is that people with ADHD will just medicate with other more harmful, more addictive stimulants like nicotine.
I'm willing to wager that a large reason why we "see" ADHD more is because we have less self-medication. Smoking is out of fashion. I'm sure in, say, the 70s it was trivial to be a high-functioning person with ADHD and never know it. I mean, every other person was smoking - you fit right in.
He also bristles that "They're only classified as Schedule II drugs!", etc. Let's be explicitly clear, they're amphetamine salts; we're drugging kids with amphetamine uppers.
Dr. Barkley is so (pseudo?)certain! Yet it all begs the question: How on earth did humanity survive back when cavepeople had such inadequate access to amphetamines?
Re: TBI leads to ADHD -- not saying that subcase is never true, but in the context of this thread, "why more US cases of ADHD vs. the world," unless children in the US suffer from proportionally more incidents of TBI to explain the uptick, then TBI isn't as relevant.