Psychotherapy and Counselling
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Psychotherapy and Counselling
Signed in as:
filler@godaddy.com
This calculator facilitates diagnosis of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in adults based on childhood symptoms.
This is a scale used in the diagnosis of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder based on behaviour and feelings experienced during childhood.
The self-report questionnaire consists of 61-items, 25 of which are highly relevant items for ADHD (thus used in the scale for ADHD) and can help link childhood symptoms with patterns of behaviour in adulthood.
The scale is however limited by the capacity of the patient to recall memories from childhood.
Each of the questions in the retrospective scale has 4 answer choices, awarded points from 0 to 4:
The results range between 0 and 100 when the 25-item scale is used and a cut-off at 46 points was provided. This means that patients who score 46 or above are likely to be diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.
In the original study: 86% of patients with ADHD, 99% of normal persons and 81% of depressed subjects were accurately diagnosed using this cut off value.
Because adult ADHD is mostly a condition with early onset and 60% of children with ADHD continue to display symptoms in adulthood, investigation of childhood symptoms has real value in diagnosis.
It is important to note that there is also a strong genetic determinism with this mental health condition likely to be inherited.
Adults who suffer from attention deficit disorders may also experience symptoms pertaining to other mental health conditions such as anxiety, depression or substance abuse.
The manifestations of this mental disorder may not be as obvious in adults as they are in children but there are patterns of behaviour which indicate an attention deficit, such as:
McCann BS, Scheele L, Ward N, Roy-Byrne P. Discriminant validity of the Wender Utah Rating Scale for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder in adults. J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci. 2000; 12(2):240-5.
Stein MA, Sandoval R, Szumowski E, Roizen N, Reinecke MA, Blondis TA, Klein Z. Psychometric characteristics of the Wender Utah Rating Scale (WURS): reliability and factor structure for men and women. Psychopharmacol Bull. 1995; 31(2):425-33.
Ward MF, Wender PH, Reimherr FW. The Wender Utah Rating Scale: an aid in the retrospective diagnosis of childhood attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Am J Psychiatry. 1993; 150(6):885-90.
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