Skip to main content

Is it a mistake to allow a general pediatrician diagnose ADD

Submitted by an LD OnLine user on

My daughter was diagnosed with mild dyslexia last year at the end of Kindergarten. We chose to place her at a highly respectged, large LD school because our local school district was providing next to nothing for 1st grade. Her teacher for 1st grade this year sends home notes to parents every friday. She always comments that she has to constantly refocus my daughter in the classroom. I’ve talked with the teacher and I do agree that she needs to be evaluated for ADD.

The school gave me a list of developmental pediatricians and pediatric neurologist that they have worked with. I was told it takes about 2-3 months to get in to see any of them. My husband brings it up with our pediatrician (personal friend) about referring us (insurance requirement) and she comments on how she handles ADD evaluations and medication all of the time.

Has any used their regular pediatrician? What do developmental peds and ped neurologist do any different? It all seems that they have one kind of form or another for parents and teachers to fill out. Do the specialist have a better handle on any of it over a regular pediatrician? Thanks for any input!!

Suzi

Submitted by andrea on Sat, 09/13/2003 - 7:32 PM

Permalink

Suzi,

IMHO, you should NEVER use a general pediatrician to diagnose ADHD. They simply lack the expertise and broad range of experience necessary to make this complicated diagnosis. There is a lot involved in diagnosing ADHD and a good evaluation will include much more than parents and teachers filling out Connors forms. I would recommend consulting a pediatric neurologist who specializes in diagnosing ADHD and LD. Have your regular pediatrician do an exam and some testing to rule out things like allergies, thyroid disease and sleep apnea that can sometimes mimic ADHD, but let the neurologist deal with the ADHD diagnosis. My son was evaluated by a doctor who is both a neurologist and a psychiatrist, which allowed us to consider other conditions such as depression that also can look like ADHD. She gave him a neurological exam and did extensive testing with all kinds of different instruments, along with considering parent and teacher forms. The neuro exam took three hours and cost $1400. I think it was worth every cent!

Andrea

Submitted by Anonymous on Sat, 09/13/2003 - 8:20 PM

Permalink

Depends entirely on the exact physician you see. Some pediatricians make a correct diagnosis, others don’t.

Regarding ADHD, it can often take a number of years to sort out what is going on with a child/what’s really there - what isn’t there. Some children are ADHD but dyslexia-free; some children have dyslexia but are ADHD-free.

Best wishes.

Submitted by Suzi on Sat, 09/13/2003 - 9:29 PM

Permalink

PGD-

I’m also concerned because my daughter also have APD, which I’ve read can mimic ADD and can be difficult to sort out between the two. I’ve been thinking about it all night and reading everything I can get my hands on. I now realize I really need to have her see a specialist and not a pedi. Thanks for your reply!

Suzi

Submitted by Suzi on Sat, 09/13/2003 - 9:30 PM

Permalink

Andrea-

Thanks for your reply. I read alot on the subject last night and just don’t have a good feeling about our pediatrician doing the evaluation. There are just too much else going on with my daughter (dyslexia and APD) to have someone so generalized doing the eval. Thanks!! I’ll look for a specialist

Suzi

Submitted by Anonymous on Sun, 09/14/2003 - 12:08 AM

Permalink

My son’s pediatrician prescribes his meds but did not perform the initial diagnosis. ADHD symptoms can mimic other condition that a pediatrician is not trained to evaluate. My son’s child psychologist had myself, both his kindergarten and first grade teacher’s fill out evaluation forms, and finally performed an in class evaluation (before he had met her so that he did not know who she was). A pediatrician is not qualified to diagnose ADHD any more than an oncologist is qualified to diagnose a heart condition.

Submitted by Anonymous on Sun, 09/14/2003 - 8:52 PM

Permalink

A pediatrician can certainly rule out some things and provide the specialist with good information. He could say he suspects ADHD or patient exhibits symptoms.

I think like me a lot of pediatricians are not comfortable with the ADHD diagnosis.

Back to Top