If your child had seizures would you deny them medication to stop them?
If your child was a diabetic would you refuse to give them the medication that helps regulate their blood sugar?
ADHD is a brain disorder. His brain is misfiring. The medication speeds up his brain activity so it syncs up and fires the right way.
Why wouldn't you give your child that has a brain disorder a medication to help him be able to fully function?
Yes, give this child medications so he can feel normal. So he can finally understand what focusing on something feels like. Where he's not in a fugue and can't pay attention to anything because all the distractions get in the way.
We gave our guy plain old Ritalin. It's an old med. It's been around for years and years and years and years. They have longitudinal studies on it. They've kept track of the people in the very first trials and seen how they turned out as adults and parents and maybe even grandparents by now.
It's taken at school so the full effect happens at school and not on the way to school. Then it's out, completely gone bye bye, in 4 hours. If he only needs to have that focus for church or a short term event then you only give him one for the day. You don't have to treat him the rest of the day unless he's out of control, then you might need a complete psych eval to see if there are other diagnosis that might help refine what meds they should give him.
If he's at school he takes one in the morning, goes to class. Goes to lunch then takes another, or maybe he only takes half. Our guy took a nap in Kindergarten after lunch so it would be counter productive for him to take another dose of any sort of Ritalin. If he was going to do a Valentine's Day Party then go outside to play the rest of the afternoon I wouldn't think he'd need another dose after lunch. But if they're older kids who have a full schedule then they'd need to take that other dose after lunch.
Our guy took a whole one at school, right when classes were about to start. Then he took a half after lunch. He got out at 3 and was great the rest of the day.
In the evenings he went out and played, had a good time, didn't have to sit down and be quiet and concentrate to learn.
This worked for us. When his mom took him for the summer last year she took him all meds and had a doc put him on a time release med. He was groggy and sleepy and didn't want to function. She said "that's what he needs". Umm, no. He needs something that doesn't stay in him all the time and build up where he's a walking zombie.
We liked Ritalin because it gave us a lot more control.