The Forums › Forums › What is it? › Need Help! › Are doctors more informed about ADHD now? › Re: Are doctors more informed about ADHD now?
Anonymous
Thank you for your post. It sounds like you have been through quite the journey. Kudos for you for being so involved in your child’s education. I think having such aware and caring parents is half the battle for ADHD children. It probably makes a huge difference too when teachers know you and know your child better.
I want to do everything I can for my daughter, and it is so helpful to hear from people who have already been through it all. Good to know about the IEP -maybe I can include my daughter’s interests more than with the regular curriculum. I will take your advice and have her assessed through the medical system if I can at her age. I figure the younger she is when she is understood, the better.
I am assuming when you say GTA you are meaning Greater Toronto Area? I am not in the area, actually way out west in BC. I think there are doctors out here for children, and I hope so much that they are reasonable. If not I may have to travel East and I will be asking who your doctor is! In my experience and from what I have heard it is easier to have children assessed than adults b/c there is a shortage of doctors who treat adult ADHD. I am not sure why this is the case, but maybe it is because ADHD is so misunderstood and widely unkown to many. I myself can go through many days feeling fine, but then sometimes I just get so tired of all of the things I have to do and then I get behind and overwhelmed, and at those times I wish I had an option of medication.
I think you are correct that this process will make my daughter and I closer; I have been trying to give her high doses of positive behaviour management after reading/watching Dr. Jain talk about how great it is for ADHD children and I love to see her so happy and pleased with herself. She told me she knew I was proud of her, and that it made her happy, and I almost cried with relief. I just hope I can keep up with her and keep remembering the positive management. I was already doing rewards with her: her dentist may hate me: fruit snacks for getting out the door and staying with me in parking lots, t-shirts and or other small toys for not hitting her younger sister, etc. I am looking for some good sugar-free treats-they get us through getting out the door, putting snowsuits on, getting in and out of the car, things that can sometimes be struggles. Thanks again for the advice, I will take this information with me on my journey.
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