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>>

>>Please consider being a little more open-minded on this.

>>

>>Out of the millions of children " diagnosed " with ADHD, I'd venture

>>that a conservative 50% have exhausted every " parenting " technique in

>>the books, visited half a dozen medical and educational " specialists, "

>>and made what they think are valiant attempts at changing diets.

>>

>>They are probably putting in a hell of a lot more " parenting " hours

>>than those of us blessed with healthier kids, or those of us lucky

>>enough to have found the needle in the haystack as to what is causing

>>the problem.

>>

>>They need our help and support, more than our judgment.

>>

>>

I agree with both overdiagnosis and that there are really distractible children.

Our approach is to address the causes - along with metabolic.

Here's a paper I wrote a few years ago on this subject:

ADD: A Neurodevelopmental Approach

Kay Ness, Certified Neurodevelopmentalist

Attention Deficit Disorder is a common diagnosis of school age children. With

the prevalence of this diagnosis, approximately 5 to 10% of the school-aged

children according to the Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy, it is important

that parents understand exactly what this label is, what it means, how it is

determined and alternatives that are available for their children.

ADD is defined as " a persistent and frequent pattern of developmentally

inappropriate inattention and impulsivity, with or without hyperactivity. " The

DSM-IV criteria for ADD include nine signs of inattention, six signs of

hyperactivity, and three signs of impulsivity. All signs do not have to be

present for a child to receive the diagnosis of this permanent mental

disability. It is important to note the subjectivity of this diagnosis: there

are no objective medical tests, no brain scans, no blood tests, no

scientifically objective criteria to establish that anyone has this permanent

psychological disorder. The Merck Manual states, " diagnosis is difficult. No

particular organic signs or set of neurological indicators is specific, and no

specific test has been validated. " Diagnosis is based on observation by parents,

psychological professionals and teachers who complete a checklist. Based on a

checklist, an individual is labeled with a mental disorder.

So, the parent is confronted by a situation where their child has been saddled

with a label based on symptoms. Treatment consists of psychostimulant drugs

combined with counseling to best control symptoms. Some educational

accommodations may be recommended. It looks like a hopeless case.

It has been stated that if the only tool you have is a hammer, the entire world

is a nail. With the tool of evaluating mental disabilities based on symptoms,

that the brain is static and fixed, that compensation and training and

controlling with drugs are the only possible treatments, then indeed, it is

hopeless. But, using the tools of scientifically validated brain plasticity and

neurological organization achieved by neurodevelopmental programs, remediation

and elimination of these symptoms that result in the diagnosis is possible.

Some react to the subjectivity of the diagnosis of ADD by saying that it does

not exist. For some children, this may be the case. But some children are very

distractible, cannot sit still, are impulsive and overstimulated in noisy

environments and do have trouble learning because of these issues. But, the

question is: why is this child distractible? Why does this child fidget, put

his hands over his ears, not process what is said to him, not visually focus on

printed material, have to get up and move constantly? What are the underlying

causes of these symptoms?

The neurodevelopmental model of evaluating how the brain receives, processes,

stores and utilizes information is a powerful tool to evaluate underlying causes

of distractibility. Room does not allow detail discussion of the theory and

complete evaluating process using this model, but we will give parents

indications of possible causes.

It is VERY important to understand brain plasticity. Psychological models

assume the brain to be fixed and unchangeable. Since the 1940's, the true

nature of the brain has emerged. The structure, function and even the chemistry

of the brain is changed by specific stimulation. New brain cells grow,

" rewiring " takes place, and brain chemistry actually changes with stimulation.

Stimulation has a very specific meaning in this context. Specific stimulation

is designed to impact the central nervous system to achieve improved function.

With wisdom and knowledge, we can improve how brains function: from the

severely brain injured, autistic, developmentally delayed, mentally retarded,

the learning disabled or dyslexic and of course, the ADD or ADHD child.

Some possible causes are as follows: sensory (over or under sensitivity to

touch, sound, visual stimulation, smells or tastes), processing (inability to

properly process visual or auditory information), storage (mixed dominance -

being right or mixed-handed and left or mixed eye/ear/hand/foot), utilization

(lack of development in the ability to think visually or logically). Each of

these parameters has a world of information behind it but should be carefully

evaluated as possibly influencing the inability of a child (or adult) to focus

and learn normally. All of these areas can be remediated.

Once causes of learning and distractibility problems are evaluated, a program

can be designed to normalize these areas. Normal or superior function becomes

possible.

All children benefit from a well balanced diet of real foods. Removing

processed foods from the diet and limiting or eliminating sugar is often very

beneficial - to all of us!

For Further information contact:

Kay Ness

SENC

4920 Hwy 9, PMB 351

Alppharetta, Ga. 30004

770 619 9843

kyness@...

www.icando.org

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Share on other sites

Kay,

The paragraph at the end does indeed describe a state of being much like an

autistic child. Do you believe, as many others do, that ADD is on the autism

spectrum?

Sheri B.

kyness@... wrote:

>>

>>Please consider being a little more open-minded on this.

>>

>>Out of the millions of children " diagnosed " with ADHD, I'd venture

>>that a conservative 50% have exhausted every " parenting " technique in

>>the books, visited half a dozen medical and educational " specialists, "

>>and made what they think are valiant attempts at changing diets.

>>

>>They are probably putting in a hell of a lot more " parenting " hours

>>than those of us blessed with healthier kids, or those of us lucky

>>enough to have found the needle in the haystack as to what is causing

>>the problem.

>>

>>They need our help and support, more than our judgment.

>>

>>

I agree with both overdiagnosis and that there are really distractible children.

Our approach is to address the causes - along with metabolic.

Here's a paper I wrote a few years ago on this subject:

ADD: A Neurodevelopmental Approach

Kay Ness, Certified Neurodevelopmentalist

Attention Deficit Disorder is a common diagnosis of school age children.

With the prevalence of this diagnosis, approximately 5 to 10% of the school-aged

children according to the Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy, it is important

that parents understand exactly what this label is, what it means, how it is

determined and alternatives that are available for their children.

ADD is defined as " a persistent and frequent pattern of developmentally

inappropriate inattention and impulsivity, with or without hyperactivity. " The

DSM-IV criteria for ADD include nine signs of inattention, six signs of

hyperactivity, and three signs of impulsivity. All signs do not have to be

present for a child to receive the diagnosis of this permanent mental

disability. It is important to note the subjectivity of this diagnosis: there

are no objective medical tests, no brain scans, no blood tests, no

scientifically objective criteria to establish that anyone has this permanent

psychological disorder. The Merck Manual states, " diagnosis is difficult. No

particular organic signs or set of neurological indicators is specific, and no

specific test has been validated. " Diagnosis is based on observation by parents,

psychological professionals and teachers who complete a checklist. Based on a

checklist, an individual is labeled with a mental disorder.

So, the parent is confronted by a situation where their child has been

saddled with a label based on symptoms. Treatment consists of psychostimulant

drugs combined with counseling to best control symptoms. Some educational

accommodations may be recommended. It looks like a hopeless case.

It has been stated that if the only tool you have is a hammer, the entire

world is a nail. With the tool of evaluating mental disabilities based on

symptoms, that the brain is static and fixed, that compensation and training and

controlling with drugs are the only possible treatments, then indeed, it is

hopeless. But, using the tools of scientifically validated brain plasticity and

neurological organization achieved by neurodevelopmental programs, remediation

and elimination of these symptoms that result in the diagnosis is possible.

Some react to the subjectivity of the diagnosis of ADD by saying that it

does not exist. For some children, this may be the case. But some children are

very distractible, cannot sit still, are impulsive and overstimulated in noisy

environments and do have trouble learning because of these issues. But, the

question is: why is this child distractible? Why does this child fidget, put

his hands over his ears, not process what is said to him, not visually focus on

printed material, have to get up and move constantly? What are the underlying

causes of these symptoms?

The neurodevelopmental model of evaluating how the brain receives,

processes, stores and utilizes information is a powerful tool to evaluate

underlying causes of distractibility. Room does not allow detail discussion of

the theory and complete evaluating process using this model, but we will give

parents indications of possible causes.

It is VERY important to understand brain plasticity. Psychological models

assume the brain to be fixed and unchangeable. Since the 1940's, the true

nature of the brain has emerged. The structure, function and even the chemistry

of the brain is changed by specific stimulation. New brain cells grow,

" rewiring " takes place, and brain chemistry actually changes with stimulation.

Stimulation has a very specific meaning in this context. Specific stimulation

is designed to impact the central nervous system to achieve improved function.

With wisdom and knowledge, we can improve how brains function: from the

severely brain injured, autistic, developmentally delayed, mentally retarded,

the learning disabled or dyslexic and of course, the ADD or ADHD child.

Some possible causes are as follows: sensory (over or under sensitivity

to touch, sound, visual stimulation, smells or tastes), processing (inability to

properly process visual or auditory information), storage (mixed dominance -

being right or mixed-handed and left or mixed eye/ear/hand/foot), utilization

(lack of development in the ability to think visually or logically). Each of

these parameters has a world of information behind it but should be carefully

evaluated as possibly influencing the inability of a child (or adult) to focus

and learn normally. All of these areas can be remediated.

Once causes of learning and distractibility problems are evaluated, a

program can be designed to normalize these areas. Normal or superior function

becomes possible.

All children benefit from a well balanced diet of real foods. Removing

processed foods from the diet and limiting or eliminating sugar is often very

beneficial - to all of us!

For Further information contact:

Kay Ness

SENC

4920 Hwy 9, PMB 351

Alppharetta, Ga. 30004

770 619 9843

kyness@...

www.icando.org

Link to comment
Share on other sites

At 04:00 PM 2/15/2006 -0800, you wrote:

>Kay,

> The paragraph at the end does indeed describe a state of being much like

an autistic child. Do you believe, as many others do, that ADD is on the

autism spectrum?

> Sheri B.

I'm not Kay, but I know that it is.

Here is what I see that happens

vaccine-induced encephalitis - the varying degrees of the encephalitis

range from:

1. irritability

2. intractable crying

3. seizures

4. hyperactivity

5. ADD/ADHD

6. autism

7. death (SIDS & other)

And anything else in between - its because of the

inflammation of their little brains.

>

>kyness@... wrote:

>

>>>

>>>Please consider being a little more open-minded on this.

>>>

>>>Out of the millions of children " diagnosed " with ADHD, I'd venture

>>>that a conservative 50% have exhausted every " parenting " technique in

>>>the books, visited half a dozen medical and educational " specialists, "

>>>and made what they think are valiant attempts at changing diets.

>>>

>>>They are probably putting in a hell of a lot more " parenting " hours

>>>than those of us blessed with healthier kids, or those of us lucky

>>>enough to have found the needle in the haystack as to what is causing

>>>the problem.

>>>

>>>They need our help and support, more than our judgment.

>>>

>>>

>

>I agree with both overdiagnosis and that there are really distractible

children. Our approach is to address the causes - along with metabolic.

>

>Here's a paper I wrote a few years ago on this subject:

>

>ADD: A Neurodevelopmental Approach

>Kay Ness, Certified Neurodevelopmentalist

>

> Attention Deficit Disorder is a common diagnosis of school age

children. With the prevalence of this diagnosis, approximately 5 to 10% of

the school-aged children according to the Merck Manual of Diagnosis and

Therapy, it is important that parents understand exactly what this label

is, what it means, how it is determined and alternatives that are available

for their children.

>

> ADD is defined as " a persistent and frequent pattern of

developmentally inappropriate inattention and impulsivity, with or without

hyperactivity. " The DSM-IV criteria for ADD include nine signs of

inattention, six signs of hyperactivity, and three signs of impulsivity.

All signs do not have to be present for a child to receive the diagnosis of

this permanent mental disability. It is important to note the subjectivity

of this diagnosis: there are no objective medical tests, no brain scans,

no blood tests, no scientifically objective criteria to establish that

anyone has this permanent psychological disorder. The Merck Manual states,

" diagnosis is difficult. No particular organic signs or set of

neurological indicators is specific, and no specific test has been

validated. " Diagnosis is based on observation by parents, psychological

professionals and teachers who complete a checklist. Based on a checklist,

an individual is labeled with a mental disorder.

>

> So, the parent is confronted by a situation where their child has

been saddled with a label based on symptoms. Treatment consists of

psychostimulant drugs combined with counseling to best control symptoms.

Some educational accommodations may be recommended. It looks like a

hopeless case.

>

> It has been stated that if the only tool you have is a hammer, the

entire world is a nail. With the tool of evaluating mental disabilities

based on symptoms, that the brain is static and fixed, that compensation

and training and controlling with drugs are the only possible treatments,

then indeed, it is hopeless. But, using the tools of scientifically

validated brain plasticity and neurological organization achieved by

neurodevelopmental programs, remediation and elimination of these symptoms

that result in the diagnosis is possible.

>

> Some react to the subjectivity of the diagnosis of ADD by saying

that it does not exist. For some children, this may be the case. But some

children are very distractible, cannot sit still, are impulsive and

overstimulated in noisy environments and do have trouble learning because

of these issues. But, the question is: why is this child distractible?

Why does this child fidget, put his hands over his ears, not process what

is said to him, not visually focus on printed material, have to get up and

move constantly? What are the underlying causes of these symptoms?

>

> The neurodevelopmental model of evaluating how the brain receives,

processes, stores and utilizes information is a powerful tool to evaluate

underlying causes of distractibility. Room does not allow detail

discussion of the theory and complete evaluating process using this model,

but we will give parents indications of possible causes.

> It is VERY important to understand brain plasticity. Psychological

models assume the brain to be fixed and unchangeable. Since the 1940's,

the true nature of the brain has emerged. The structure, function and even

the chemistry of the brain is changed by specific stimulation. New brain

cells grow, " rewiring " takes place, and brain chemistry actually changes

with stimulation. Stimulation has a very specific meaning in this context.

Specific stimulation is designed to impact the central nervous system to

achieve improved function. With wisdom and knowledge, we can improve how

brains function: from the severely brain injured, autistic,

developmentally delayed, mentally retarded, the learning disabled or

dyslexic and of course, the ADD or ADHD child.

>

> Some possible causes are as follows: sensory (over or under

sensitivity to touch, sound, visual stimulation, smells or tastes),

processing (inability to properly process visual or auditory information),

storage (mixed dominance - being right or mixed-handed and left or mixed

eye/ear/hand/foot), utilization (lack of development in the ability to

think visually or logically). Each of these parameters has a world of

information behind it but should be carefully evaluated as possibly

influencing the inability of a child (or adult) to focus and learn

normally. All of these areas can be remediated.

>

> Once causes of learning and distractibility problems are evaluated,

a program can be designed to normalize these areas. Normal or superior

function becomes possible.

>

> All children benefit from a well balanced diet of real foods.

Removing processed foods from the diet and limiting or eliminating sugar is

often very beneficial - to all of us!

>

>For Further information contact:

>

>Kay Ness

>SENC

>4920 Hwy 9, PMB 351

>Alppharetta, Ga. 30004

>770 619 9843

>kyness@...

>www.icando.org

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

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Share on other sites

" ...vaccine-induced encephalitis - the varying degrees of the encephalitis

range from:

1. irritability

2. intractable crying

3. seizures

4. hyperactivity

5. ADD/ADHD

6. autism

7. death (SIDS & other)

And anything else in between - its because of the

inflammation of their little brains. "

Poor little angels! All this and then hard to be around, too. What a cruel

fate!

Beverle

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