Do Children with ADHD Earn Less and Divorce More as Adults?

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What happens to ADHD kids when they grow up? How does the condition affect their adult lives? If you’re a mental healthcare professional, you might be interested in a recent study by the American Psychological Association and reported in JAMA’s Archives of General Psychiatry. It revealed some of the problems encountered by adults who were diagnosed with ADHD as children.

 

The study, as surmised by a recent Reuters article, showed that some individuals became less educated, earned less and were more prone to divorce and substance abuse. "A lot of them do fine, but there is a small proportion that is in a great deal of difficulty," said Rachel Klein, a professor of child and adolescent psychiatry at New York University Langone Medical Center in New York. Klein noted that this troubled segment of former ADHD individuals will have a tendency to end up in jail or in the hospital. As is well known, children with ADHD are restless, impulsive and easily distracted. 

 

The study (the most exhaustive to date) followed 135 white men who had shown hyperactive tendencies as children in the 1970s, and who had subsequently been referred to Klein's hospital. Researchers noted that the children were not aggressive or antisocial, and that they came from middle-class homes with “well meaning” parents. When the men were interviewed at 41 years of age, researchers found that those with childhood ADHD left school 2.5 years earlier and had reached salaries well below those without ADHD—$93,000 vs. $175,000. Roughly one-third had been in jail at some point—a tripling of those in the comparison group.

 

Klein notes that childhood ADHD can be a risk factor in leading kids and teens to use drugs, engage in criminal activity and experiment with similar antisocial behaviors. Estimates by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show that three to seven percent of U.S. school-age children have ADHD. Klein notes that less than half of these children will encounter permanent problems.

 

J. Russell Ramsay, who studies ADHD at the University of Pennsylvania's Perelman School of Medicine, noted that these adults can still lead normal lives, based on the severity and complexity of their disorder. "We are not talking about awful outcomes necessarily," said Ramsay. "This is sort of a reminder to pay attention to the unique needs of the child, the educational environment and the home environment." Researchers noted that the findings underscore the importance of long-term monitoring and treatment of ADHD children.

 

How do women fare who were diagnosed with ADHD as girls? The researchers indicated that the same conclusions can’t be applied to women—nor to any ethnic and social groups—since only white men of average intelligence were included in the study.

 

photo courtesy of MorgueFile.com

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  • Thomas O
    Thomas O
    the research group does not show a comparison between the general population and the increase or decrease of those research items. I've seen society as a whole following this trend.As a law enforcement officer and father of an ADHD w/m child I am glad that my son has opportunities and medications that have improved over the years. My son's pediatrician has ADHD and is a good example of what can be accomplished.
  • Cheree W
    Cheree W
    I think your information is very interesting as I have an 11 year old white male with Attention Deficit.  I am curious though to know how this same study would affect those without hyperactivity?  I do see now low self esteem and often wondered how the demanding needs of our society in addition to peer pressure would affect my son.  Would you assume the same outcome with those who lack the hyperactivity? Thank you - Cheree
  • Joan P
    Joan P
    135 sounds a tad low to be called an "exhaustive" test. It doesn't sound very scientific to me - only white middle-class men - no women or minorities.  And, I'd love to know in what world would earning $93,000 would be considered something less than desirable????
  • Joyce F
    Joyce F
    I met a few of those.  One is an insurance (was) salesman.  I do not think it overly affects their intelligence, it seems to be like a hearing problem.  It is all in how you 'see' it.  If you do not hear or see as someone else does, you are not going to understand the same.  It is kind of different.  A few have mentioned being anger inclined, as a frustration sometimes.   If people do not understand them, after several tries, it can be frustrating.  If they say 'The road runs west',they might say 'the west road runs'.
  • Krystal Hilsabeck
    Krystal Hilsabeck
    I was an ADHD child and still have ADHD at 48 I have issues when it comes to jobs after reading this article I understand a little bit more about my ADHD and the problems that I face in my life.
  • Alex Kecskes
    Alex Kecskes
    My sympathies go out to you, Sandra. I'm sure some day, the love and devotion you have shown your two boys will reward you with two fine adult sons. Sympathies to you as well,Yamily. Here's a site I think you might find helpful:http://www.drphil.com/articles/article/150
  • Sandra F
    Sandra F
    Alex: Maybe you could do a research on Parents of children with ADHD and Autism. I personally have one of each and as a mother of 4 children have had a hard time with men who can't admit that there is something different about the boys. Their natural father and their step father could not accept that the boys are different and why I have spent so much tme in and out of Doctor's offices and playing advocate for my sons in school. Hence after years of marriage and abusive treatment from them Divorce was the only way to be able to support my children to the fullest.  First marriage 13 years and second marriage 10 years. Some friends of mine have opened their marriages in order to get the support they need to help them deal with their marriages and issues they can not discuss with their spouses about their children with special needs. This would be a good subject for research as well;.
  • Yamily M
    Yamily M
    I have a child with ADHD and would love more information on this topic.

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