Out of Control Behavior: Should I Medicate My Child?
Legacy signals
Legacy popularity: 2,051 legacy views
Legacy rating: 2.8/5 from 4 archived votes
It’s natural for parents to look to the medical system when they are faced with out-of-control behavior. If the child is diagnosed as having some medical condition -- Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), for example, or depression -- the parents may breathe a sigh of relief. "At last! We know what's wrong, and there's medication for it."
Unfortunately, a diagnosis and medication aren’t always a solution. Medications that target behavior problems are at best a shot in the dark and at worst can have many undesirable side effects and alter the child’s personality. Often, the medication that works on one child won't work on the next one, so a period of trial and error may have to take place, requiring patience from the parent and the child. Even the diagnoses can be slippery when it comes to adolescents. Depression, which can be treated medically, can look like Oppositional Defiant Disorder, which cannot be treated medically.
Parents need to know that medications aren't meant to change specific behaviors. What they may do is rebalance some chemicals in the brain to give the child who is taking them a longer fuse or a little more flexibility in thinking about a situation. Kids who are acting out often turn to a fight-or-flight response. If a medication is working well, it won’t change this tendency toward “fight or flight,” but it may give these kids a little extra time to consider the best thing to do.
If you and your doctor determine that medication is the best choice for your child, be observant as your child starts the medication. Look for signs of behavior change. It is possible that they may occur. More likely what you may find is an increased receptivity to alte ate problem-solving techniques. A longer fuse or more patience, for example. Then realize that the pills don't teach the actual problem-solving techniques; it’s up to the adult to teach them and up to the child to learn them.
If a medication is working well, parents should see an increase in ability to focus on tasks such as homework and chores. Conversely, a child who simply becomes lethargic or unemotional is probably not benefiting from the medication, because he is not receptive to learning new problem-solving skills and may need a different medication, a different diagnosis or even a different approach to the problem.
For some young people, psychoactive medications can mean the difference between being functional and doing the work of growing up, and being a constant behavior problem, with all the consequences that implies. I’ve also seen children and teenagers be put on medication who didn’t need it. Their problem didn’t have a medical basis. They needed to learn problem-solving skills, and their parents were not properly trained to teach them these skills.
The key thing to remember is this: With or without medication, many young people who have behavior problems are best treated by creating very structured situations in which to learn appropriate behaviors. Generally, school is a structured environment, so a child may perform better and cooperate better at school where things are more structured. Behavioral change is hardest to measure in the unstructured environment of home. You can teach problem solving skills by starting small and setting limits and offering coaching around one problem you want your child to change at home. Focus in on one thing: doing spelling homework, doing one nightly chore, or talking nicely to your sister. Coach your child toward success with this one thing. Then move on to the next behavioral issue.
As parents, it’s important that we manage our expectations around medication. It can help your child to focus and accept another way to work through is behavioral issue. But it will not solve the problem. Only you and your child, working in a structured, problem-solving environment, can do that.
Article author
About the Author
James Lehman is a behavioral therapist and the creator of The Total Transformation Program for parents. He has worked with defiant teens and children for three decades. James holds a Masters Degree in Social Work from Boston University. For more information, visit www.thetotaltransformation.com.
Further reading
Further Reading
Article
Child Discipline: Consequences and Effective Parenting
Remember how you felt when you brought your baby home from the hospital for the first time? When your child was an infant, you probably acknowledged that you were anxious and unsure of what you were doing at times—most new parents are. In my experience, those kinds of feelings continue as we raise our kids—we just stop expressing them to others.
Related piece
Article
The Greatest Lesson In Life
When you are at peace with having a baby or not having a baby, then what will be, will be. You will either have one (as you were supposed to) or you will not have one (as it was not meant to be). Accept the fact that God has a plan for your life, which may not include children. If you don’t ...
Related piece
Article
Dealing with Anger in Children and Teens, Part 1: Why Is My Child So Angry?
Have you found yourself asking the question, “Why is my child always so angry at me?” Do you feel like your adolescent surrounds himself with a force field of anger and hostility? In part one of this frank Q&A, James Lehman explains the difference between hostility and anger—and tells you where these emotions often come from. EP: James, why do some kids seem to be so angry all the time? Where is the hostility coming from?
Related piece
Article
Sassy Kids: How to Deal with a Mouthy Child
Are you tired of disrespectful talk from your kids? Do your children respond with eye-rolling and sarcasm to everything you say? Most—if not all—kids go through phases when they are sassy, mouthy, or disrespectful. As a parent, it’s hard to know when to let it slide—and when to address the problem. James Lehman explains where to draw the line—and tells you how you can manage sassy talk in your home.
Related piece