Meta-Review Clears Stimulants of Anxiety Charge in ADHD Treatment
A meta-review of studies involving nearly 3,000 children with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) finds that psychostimulant treatment significantly reduces the risk of anxiety. Thus patient reports of new-onset or worsening anxiety with the use of psychostimulants are not likely due to the medication and should not necessarily preclude stimulant use in ADHD.
Other Articles in this Edition
1 in 3 children with mental health needs only see a pediatrician
How secondhand smoke makes children act out
Meta-Review Clears Stimulants of Anxiety Charge in ADHD Treatment
Young Adults With Disabilities: Moving from ‘Struggler’ to ‘Navigator’
Teen Smoking May Cause Enduring Attention Problems
Sleep and Executive Function in ADHD
ADHD & Adults: 4 Things that Cause Overwhelm and What You Can Do
The 11 Biggest Myths And Misconceptions About Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
Study examines concussion-like symptom reporting in uninjured athletes