1. Headline
  1. Headline
updated 8/17/2010 1:18:02 PM ET 2010-08-17T17:18:02

How mature a child is compared to his peers may partly determine how likely he is to be diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), according to a new study. This finding validates concerns that the condition is misdiagnosed, researchers say.

  1. More from TODAY.com
    1. Butter coffee: Will it give you extra energy -- or just make you fat?

      Still sleepy after your third cup of coffee this morning? A new fad promises to give your daily cup of joe an extra kick o...

    2. Duchess Kate to give birth in same hospital as Princess Diana
    3. Principal: Retirement flash mob 'meant everything'
    4. Jenna Wolfe: Bestie babymoons aren't a thing yet, but they should be
    5. Best-selling author Vince Flynn dies at 47

North Carolina State University researchers found that children born just after the kindergarten eligibilty cutoff date were 25 percent less likely to be diagnosed with ADHD than children born just before the cutoff date. Children born just after the cutoff date are among the oldest in their class, and those born just before the cutoff date are among the youngest in their class.

For example, in schools where the cutoff date is Sept. 1, children born on Aug. 31 make the cutoff and are the youngest in their class; children born on Sept. 2 will wait an additional year to enter school and be among the oldest in their class.

Children born just a few days apart should have the same underlying risk of having ADHD, according to the researchers, so this significant difference in diagnosis rates is strong evidence that medically inappropriate diagnoses are being given.

    1. Snow-vember Surprise: Why Deep South Is Seeing Frosty Weather
    2. Creative Thinkers More Likely to Cheat
    3. How Morning Snacking Could Damage Your Diet
    4. 'UFOs' Disrupting Search for 'God Particle'
    5. 'Perfect' Celebrity Photos to Get Reality Check

"We believe that younger children may be mistakenly diagnosed as having ADHD, when in fact they are simply less mature," study researcher Melinda Morrill said in a statement.

The characteristic behaviors associated with ADHD are inattention, hyperactivity and impulsivity, according to the National Institutes of Health. Rising rates of ADHDand large differences in diagnosis rates have led to fears that the condition is not accurately diagnosed.

Accurate diagnosing is crucial, the researchers say, because stimulant medicationsare often prescribed as a treatment for ADHD. The stimulants have side effects, including insomnia, stomachache, headache, dizziness and decreased appetite, and they have been shown to increase heart rates and blood pressure. Little is known about their long-term effects.

Youngest are 50 percent more likely to get ADHD diagnosis
The new findings are consistent with those of another forthcoming study that suggests children born just before the kindergarten cutoff date are 50-percent more likely to be diagnosed with ADHD than those born just after, Morrill and her colleagues write in a forthcoming issue of the Journal of Health Economics.

The findings indicate that there are children who are diagnosed, or who are not diagnosed, because of something other than underlying biological or medical reasons, according to Morrill.

"We are not downplaying the existence or significance of ADHD in children," Morrill said. "What our research shows is that similar students have significantly different diagnosis rates depending on when their birthday falls in relation to the school year."

In the study, the researchers examined data from two national health surveys and a national private health insurance claims database to evaluate rates of ADHD diagnosis and treatment in children. The data sources covered different time periods ranging from 1996 to 2006.

The findings will be published in a forthcoming issue of the Journal of Health Economics.

Top 10 Controversial Psychiatric Disorders

Focus on ADHD: A Deficit of Understanding

10 Things You Didn't Know About the Brain

© 2012 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

Discuss:

Discussion comments

,

More on TODAY.com

None
  1. Courtesy of Jenna Wolfe

    Jenna Wolfe: Why bestie babymoons are great 

    6/19/2013 2:20:50 PM +00:00 2013-06-19T14:20:50
None
  1. featurepics.com

    Butter coffee: Give you energy — or make you fat?

    6/19/2013 3:18:26 PM +00:00 2013-06-19T15:18:26
None
  1. TODAY

    Principal: Retirement flash mob 'meant everything'

    6/19/2013 5:26:00 PM +00:00 2013-06-19T17:26:00
None
  1. Kate to give birth in same hospital as Princess Diana

    New details about the highly anticipated birth of the new heir to the throne were disclosed by an official of St.James Palace.

    6/19/2013 4:53:25 PM +00:00 2013-06-19T16:53:25
  2. What her ‘maternity leave’ means
  3. slideshow Duchess Kate’s maternity style
  4. Getty, Reuters file
None
  1. Getty Images stock

    Working from home? Boss may still be watching

    6/19/2013 9:11:00 AM +00:00 2013-06-19T09:11:00