| |
Q. My son is 4 years old and is very violent. He has been diagnosed with
ADHD and has recently started taking ritalin. He has been kicked out of
one daycare and is struggling in his new daycare, where he has been for
1 year. The daycare has hired two paraprofessionals to help him.. I am
very concerned about his aggressive, violent behavior. He hurts other
children, teachers, his sister and myself. We have tried therapy which
has not worked. He has no respect for others and no remorse for most of
his actions. Am I alone, or are there other children with the same
problems? What is wrong with him? He is a very smart child, but I am
so scared of what he will become. The daycare workers are worried that
he won't make it in the school system because his violent behavior is so
severe.
A. The idea which most doctors follow (or should) is called parsimony of
diagnosis. Simply put, your four year old son's aggressive behavior likely
is
one of many behaviors which are problematic. All of these behaviors likely
arise from a single biological cause. There is no advantage to these
behaviors, and like all other painful stimuli--burning himself, wearing
shorts in the middle of a snowstorm, going hungry, not sleeping--he will
change these behaviors to help himself. In the aforementioned examples this
would include not touching an iron, wearing a coat, eating food, or
sleeping.
Since he is getting only negative feedback from his behavior, it is not only
illogical to continue if he had any choice in the matter, but out of context
with the rest of his life since he changes things that hurt.
The behavior is likely heritable, and thus it is genetic. I would medicate
him with the same medications known to be effective in other impulse control
disorders, and choose the one which will cover all of his symptomatic
behaviors. There is a wealth of data on aggression and treatment in the
literature. Most, but not all, good child psychopharmacologists are
associated with universities and larger institutions. A good university
based
psychiatric program would be a good starting point.

|