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Childhood ADHD May Predict Alcohol, Substance Use Problems in Teen
Years
Scientists tracking the progress of children diagnosed with attention-deficit/hyperactivity
disorder (ADHD) as they became teenagers have shed new light on the
link between ADHD and the risk of developing alcohol and substance
use problems. The researchers found that individuals with severe problems
of inattention as children were more likely than their peers to report
alcohol-related problems, a greater frequency of getting drunk, and
heavier and earlier use of tobacco and other drugs. The findings indicate
that childhood ADHD may be as important for the risk of later substance
use problems as having a history of family members with alcoholism
and other substance use disorders. The study appears in the August
issue of the Journal of Abnormal Psychology .
ADHD is one of the most commonly diagnosed pediatric mental health
disorders. It occurs in three to five percent of school-aged children.
While previous research has indicated that ADHD together with a variety
of other childhood behavior disorders may predispose children to drug,
alcohol, and tobacco use earlier than children without ADHD, this study
explores more closely specific aspects of that association.
"This is one of the first studies to focus on the severity of inattention
problems in childhood ADHD as distinct from impulsivity and hyperactivity," says
Ting-Kai Li, M.D., director of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse
and Alcoholism (NIAAA). "It demonstrates the usefulness of distinguishing
ADHD's effects from the effects of childhood behavior disorders, such
as aggression and defiance. Such prospective longitudinal analysis
can best guide us in developing research-based prevention programs
specifically targeted to help young people," he says. NIAAA supported
the study together with the National Institute on Drug Abuse, the National
Institute on Mental Health, and the National Institute of Environmental
Health Sciences, all components of the National Institutes of Health.
Brooke Molina, Ph.D., at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
and University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, and William Pelham, Jr.,
Ph.D., at the State University of New York at Buffalo conducted the
research. The scientists recruited 142 teens between 13 and 18 years
old who had received treatment for childhood ADHD an average of 5 years
earlier at the Attention Deficit Disorder Clinic at the University
of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. The researchers interviewed the teens
along with their parents and teachers.
The scientists also recruited a "control" group of 100 similarly-aged
teens not diagnosed with childhood ADHD. They asked both groups about
their alcohol and substance use, including whether they had ever tried
a substance during their lifetime, how old they were when they first
tried tobacco, alcohol, or drugs, and the type, frequency, and quantity
of substances used during the past six months.
The researchers found that significantly more of the teens diagnosed
with ADHD as children reported episodes of drunkenness than their counterparts
in the non-ADHD group. Nearly twice as many of the ADHD group reported
having been drunk more than once in the past six months.
Both groups gave similar responses when asked if they had ever tried
alcohol, cigarettes, or marijuana at least once; however, the ADHD
group was three times more likely to have tried some other illegal
drug besides marijuana. The teens with childhood ADHD also reported
having used tobacco and having tried an illegal drug other than marijuana
at younger ages than their non-ADHD peers. Additionally, about 11 percent
of the teens diagnosed with ADHD reported having used two or more different
illegal drugs more often, compared with 3 percent of the control group.
The researchers analyzed distinctions within the ADHD group, focusing
on responses from youngsters with more severe symptoms of inattention
in childhood, something not routinely done previously. They also examined
the differences among individuals with symptoms of comorbid behavior
disorders - oppositional defiant disorder (ODD) and conduct disorder
(CD).
The researchers found that the teenagers who reported more frequent
episodes of drunkenness, higher alcohol problem scores, and a greater
likelihood of substance abuse were those diagnosed with more severe
inattention problems in childhood. The youngsters with severe inattention
were about 5 times more likely than others to use an illegal drug other
than alcohol and marijuana at an early age. The researchers point out
that inattention appeared to be a uniquely important variable even
when the analyses considered the presence of ODD and CD, factors which
more typically have been considered predictive of substance use.
Although impulsivity-hyperactivity was not associated with teenage
substance abuse, the authors say that better measurement of this behavior
in future studies will be important. "The presence of ADHD during childhood
appears to be as strong a risk factor for substance use and abuse as
having a positive family history of substance use disorder. It is not
specific to only one substance but cuts across alcohol, marijuana,
and other drugs," says Dr. Molina. "Our findings indicate that the
presence of ADHD during childhood, the severity of symptoms, and the
persistence of the disorder may be risk factors for early substance
use and the emergence of substance abuse disorders during the teen
years."
The article "Childhood predictors of adolescent substance use in a
longitudinal study of children with ADHD" appears in the Journal
of Abnormal Psychology , August 2003, Volume 112, Number 3.
The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, a component
of the National Institutes of Health, U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services, conducts and supports approximately 90 percent of
U.S. research on the causes, consequences, prevention, and treatment
of alcohol abuse, alcoholism, and alcohol problems and disseminates
research findings to science, practitioner, policy making and general
audiences.
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