kipp adhd presentation kurtz

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Page 1: KIPP ADHD presentation Kurtz
Page 2: KIPP ADHD presentation Kurtz

ADHD & Disruptive Behaviors:What to Look for in the Classroom

Steven M.S. Kurtz, PhD, ABPPSenior Director

ADHD & Disruptive Behavior DisordersChild Mind Institute

[email protected]

Page 3: KIPP ADHD presentation Kurtz

Portrait of a child with ADHD

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Classic Triad of ADHD

Inattention Hyperactivity

Impulsivity

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Hyperactive/Impulsive Symptoms

1. Fidgeting and squirming

2. Leaves seat

3. Running or climbing excessively

4. Trouble playing quietly

5. “On the go” or “driven by a motor”

6. Talking excessively

7. Blurting out answers

8. Trouble taking turns

9. Interrupting or intruding

Page 6: KIPP ADHD presentation Kurtz

Inattentive Symptoms1. Making careless mistakes

2. Trouble paying attention to a task

3. Not listening

4. Not following instructions

5. Trouble organizing

6. Avoiding or disliking sustained effort

7. Losing things

8. Easily distracted

9. Forgetful

Page 7: KIPP ADHD presentation Kurtz

Overlap of Symptoms and Diagnoses

ADHD Anxiety ODD ???

Attention

Concentration

Anxiety

Sadness

Opposition

Fidgetiness

Impulsivity

Appetite

Sleep

Page 8: KIPP ADHD presentation Kurtz

Overlap of Symptoms and Diagnoses

ADHD Anxiety ODD ???

Attention

Concentration

Anxiety

Sadness

Opposition

Fidgetiness

Impulsivity

Appetite

Sleep

Page 9: KIPP ADHD presentation Kurtz

Overlap of Symptoms and Diagnoses

ADHD Anxiety ODD ???

Attention

Concentration

Anxiety

Sadness

Opposition

Fidgetiness

Impulsivity

Appetite

Sleep

Page 10: KIPP ADHD presentation Kurtz

Overlap of Symptoms and Diagnoses

ADHD Anxiety ODD ???

Attention

Concentration

Anxiety

Sadness

Opposition

Fidgetiness

Impulsivity

Appetite

Sleep

Page 11: KIPP ADHD presentation Kurtz

Co-occurring Disorders

• Oppositional defiant disorder - 40%

• Anxiety or mood disorders - 25-34%

• Learning disabilities - 20%

• Conduct disorder- 10-60%

• Tic disorders

Page 12: KIPP ADHD presentation Kurtz

Gender Differences and ADHD• ADHD also affects girls and even adult women.

• Girls with ADHD tend to be more inattentive than H/I.

• Parents and teachers often overlook ADHD in girls.

• Girls with untreated ADHD are at risk for low self-esteem, underachievement, depression, and anxiety.

• Without treatment girls are also more likely to engage in risky behaviors like smoking and unprotected sex while in middle or high school.

• Girls with ADHD often continue struggling into adulthood if they don’t receive treatment.

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Areas of Brain Affected

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PET Scans

Alan Zametkin et al., NIMH

Xavier Castellanos, NYU CSC

Approx. 3% difference in brain volumes

Less asymmetrical

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Developmental Trends of ADHD Symptoms

before 17 yo

Impairm

ent

Hyper/Imp

Age

Page 16: KIPP ADHD presentation Kurtz

Developmental Trends of ADHD Symptoms

Impairm

ent

Hyper/Imp

Age

Impairm

ent

Inattention

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Banerjee, Middleton, Faraone. Acta Paediatria, 2007,

96, 1269-1274.

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Page 19: KIPP ADHD presentation Kurtz

before 17 yo

Sx I

mp

airm

ent

Inattention

Hyper/Imp

Developmental Trends ofH/I vs. Inattention Symptoms

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How come they can…

Watch TV for hours?

Build with legos?

Sit through a movie without getting up?

Sit through morning meeting one

day but not the next?

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Refining the understanding of ADHD

• Variability is the rule, not the exception

• Dull, boring, repetitive tasks not of their choosing

Page 22: KIPP ADHD presentation Kurtz

Refining the understanding of ADHD

ADHD

ATTENTION SURPLUS DISORDER

ATTENTION MODULATION DISORDER

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Controversies in Diagnosis

• Poor kids diagnoses more than wealthy kids?

• Teacher/school easy way out?

• Why do rates differ across countries?

• False positives?

– What if tomorrow 7 million new cases diabetes?

Page 24: KIPP ADHD presentation Kurtz

The Immediate Effects of Not Treating ADHD

• Interferes with learning and social development

• Family stress

• Reduces instructional time in class

– Interferes with their learning and the learning of others

• Drains resources

• Maintains or exacerbates ADHD behaviors

• We hate to see kids fail at being kids!

• Same is true for undertreating

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The long-term consequences of not treating ADHD

Untreated kids face:

– Less schooling & poorer grades

– Higher expulsion rates

– Fewer friends

– Lower self-esteem

– Higher arrest rates

– Lower occupational rank

– Higher job termination rates

– Riskier driving

– More accidents

– Relationship difficulties

– Higher STD 4x

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Assessment• Primary or “core” domains: the symptom triad

– Attention

– Activity level

– Impulse control

• Secondary

– Compliance

– Anxiety and mood

– Frustration tolerance

– Executive functions

– Organizational skills

– Learning issues

– Parental functioning

– Family functioning

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Treatment & Intervention

What do we know in 2012 that we did not know in

1977?

– A lot!

• “If I did now for ADHD what I was taught to do

in 1977 I would call it malpractice.”

– That intensifying the dosing of all treatments

likely affords children the best outcomes

• Behavioral interventions are also dosed

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Treatment Recommendations

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Treatment Recommendations

Medicine Behavior Therapy

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Treatment & Intervention• Psychopharmacology

• Psychotherapy– Behavior therapy

• Structuring time: down time is bad time• Maximizing predictability and routines• Increasing immediate positive attention

– Parent training• Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT)• Groups

– School-based interventions• Daily Report Card• Training professionals and paraprofessionals

– TCIT

– Organizational skills training

Page 31: KIPP ADHD presentation Kurtz

Treatments for ADHD

• Who do we target?

• What do we target?

• Where do we target?

• When to apply tx?

– Serial vs Concurrent

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Parent-Child Interaction Therapy

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Teacher-Child Interaction Therapy

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Unproved or untested treatments

• Social skills groups*• Play therapy or talk therapy• Biofeedback• Dietary changes, elimination diets• Ginkgo biloba & other supplements• Meditation• Exercise• Metronome • Vision training• Sensory integration therapy

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MTA Study: Parent-Reported Parent-Child Arguing

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“MY WHAT IS DUE WHEN?”(AND, Where Is It?)

ORGANIZATIONAL SKILLS TRAINING

SKILLS

DEFICIT

PERFORMANCE

DEFICIT

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Oh No !!!!

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9 Principles to Guide ADHD Behavior

• More immediate consequences

• Increased frequency of consequences

• Increased saliency of consequences

• Incentives < punishments (9:1)

• Act, Don’t Yak

• Strive for consistency

• Plan for high risk situations

• Keep a disability perspective

• Practice forgiveness

…adapted from Barkley

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Daily Report Cards (DRCs)

SpecificObservableMeasurable

Frequent & ImmediateBluegrass? Opera? Rap?

Football? Wild Wadi?

Page 40: KIPP ADHD presentation Kurtz

Daily Report Cards (DRCs)

Page 41: KIPP ADHD presentation Kurtz

Daily Report Cards (DRCs)

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Daily Report Cards (DRCs)

Page 43: KIPP ADHD presentation Kurtz

Daily Report Cards (DRCs)

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Daily Report Cards (DRCs)

Target Behaviors

Following Directions Yes No N/A Yes No N/A Yes No N/A Yes No N/A Yes No N/A Yes No N/A

(2 Prompts)

Good Risks Yes No N/A Yes No N/A Yes No N/A Yes No N/A Yes No N/A Yes No N/A

Use your words Yes No N/A Yes No N/A Yes No N/A Yes No N/A Yes No N/A Yes No N/A

when frustrated

Daily Percentage= # Yes = =

#(Yes+No)

Comments: % or better earns choice of reward from Prize List

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Page 46: KIPP ADHD presentation Kurtz

Daily Report Card

Name: ______________ Social Skill of the Day: _________________________

Day and Date: _______________________ Coping Skill of the Week: ______________________

Period: Morning and

Math

ELA and

Bathroom

Lunch Read aloud

and Recess

Activity Afternoon

Target Behavior 1: YYY will comply with directions, requests,

and commands with 80% accuracy during all

periods with 2 prompts.

Yes No

N/A

Yes No

N/A

Yes No

N/A

Yes No

N/A

Yes No

N/A

Yes No

N/A

Target Behavior 2:

When frustrated or angry, YYY will use a

coping skill and will rejoin the group within

10 minutes with 2 prompts.

Yes No

N/A

Yes No

N/A

Yes No

N/A

Yes No

N/A

Yes No

N/A

Yes No

N/A

Point System Letter Grade:

A B C D F

A B C D F

A B C D F

A B C D F

A B C D F

A B C D F

Sticker Percentage Today’s Average Letter Grade: _____

= %

Level 1 (80% - 100%)

Level 2 (66% - 79%) No DRC Reward

Comments:

Signature: ___________________________________

Page 47: KIPP ADHD presentation Kurtz
Page 48: KIPP ADHD presentation Kurtz
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Prize Box

Page 51: KIPP ADHD presentation Kurtz
Page 52: KIPP ADHD presentation Kurtz