name: managing-attention-deficit-disorders language: en description: Structures ADHD evaluation in children with behavioral rating scales and medication trials. Use when evaluating pediatric ADHD, interpreting Vanderbilt/Conners scales, or managing stimulant therapy. tags:
- management
- pediatrics
- valuation
metadata:
author: casemark
practice_areas:
- Pediatrics
- Neonatology
- Adolescent Medicine document_types:
- Management Report skill_modes:
- Management
- Coordination
Managing Attention Deficit Disorders
Structures the evaluation, diagnosis, and multimodal management of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) in children ages 4-18 using the AAP 2019 Clinical Practice Guideline, DSM-5 criteria, Vanderbilt Assessment Scales, evidence-based medication titration, and behavioral therapy coordination.
Why This Skill Exists
ADHD is the most commonly diagnosed neurobehavioral disorder of childhood, affecting approximately 9.4% of U.S. children ages 2-17. Despite high prevalence, it is both overdiagnosed (in populations with access) and underdiagnosed (in girls, minorities, and underserved communities). The AAP 2019 guideline mandates structured diagnostic criteria with multi-informant rating scales, age-stratified treatment recommendations, and systematic titration protocols. This skill enforces the guideline-based diagnostic pathway and treatment algorithm to prevent both missed diagnoses and inappropriate stimulant prescribing.
Checkpoint A — Intake Verification
Required Intake Questions
- What is the child's age (4-18 for AAP guideline application)?
- What are the primary concerns (inattention, hyperactivity, impulsivity, or combination)?
- In which settings do symptoms occur (home, school, social, sports)?
- When did symptoms first appear (must be present before age 12 per DSM-5)?
- Are there academic problems (grades, IEP/504, retention)?
- Is there a family history of ADHD, mood disorders, anxiety, or substance use?
- Are there symptoms of comorbid conditions (anxiety, depression, ODD, learning disability, tic disorder, ASD)?
- What is the child's sleep pattern (sleep deprivation mimics ADHD)?
- Has the child had vision and hearing screening?
- Has the child been previously treated with medication for ADHD? What was the response?
Required Documents
- Completed Vanderbilt Assessment Scales — Parent form AND Teacher form (or Conners-3, SNAP-IV)
- Academic records (report cards, standardized test scores, teacher comments)
- IEP/504 plan if applicable
- Developmental history
- Prior psychoeducational or neuropsychological testing (if done)
- Vision and hearing screening results
DSM-5 requires symptoms in ≥ 2 settings. Teacher input is essential — do not diagnose ADHD without information from the school setting.
Step 1 — DSM-5 Diagnostic Criteria
Diagnostic Requirements
To diagnose ADHD, ALL of the following must be present:
- Symptom threshold: ≥ 6 of 9 inattention symptoms AND/OR ≥ 6 of 9 hyperactivity-impulsivity symptoms (for age ≥ 17: ≥ 5 in either domain)
- Duration: symptoms present for ≥ 6 months
- Age of onset: several symptoms present before age 12
- Pervasiveness: symptoms present in ≥ 2 settings (home + school)
- Impairment: clear evidence that symptoms interfere with functioning
- Exclusion: not better explained by another mental disorder
ADHD Presentation Types
| Presentation | Criteria |
|---|---|
| Predominantly inattentive | ≥ 6/9 inattention; < 6/9 H-I |
| Predominantly hyperactive-impulsive | < 6/9 inattention; ≥ 6/9 H-I |
| Combined | ≥ 6/9 in both domains |
Inattention Symptoms (9)
- Fails to give close attention to details / careless mistakes
- Difficulty sustaining attention in tasks or play
- Does not seem to listen when spoken to directly
- Does not follow through on instructions / fails to finish tasks
- Difficulty organizing tasks and activities
- Avoids or is reluctant to engage in tasks requiring sustained mental effort
- Loses things necessary for tasks
- Easily distracted by extraneous stimuli
- Forgetful in daily activities
Hyperactivity-Impulsivity Symptoms (9)
- Fidgets with hands/feet or squirms in seat
- Leaves seat when remaining seated is expected
- Runs about or climbs in inappropriate situations
- Unable to play or engage in leisure activities quietly
- "On the go" / acts as if "driven by a motor"
- Talks excessively
- Blurts out answers before questions are completed
- Difficulty waiting turn
- Interrupts or intrudes on others
Step 2 — Vanderbilt Assessment Scale Interpretation
Parent Vanderbilt (NICHQ Vanderbilt Assessment Scale — Parent Informant)
- 55 items covering: inattention (9 items), hyperactivity/impulsivity (9 items), ODD (8 items), conduct disorder (14 items), anxiety/depression (7 items), and performance (8 items)
- Symptom scoring: 0 = Never, 1 = Occasionally, 2 = Often, 3 = Very Often
- Symptom is "positive" if scored 2 (Often) or 3 (Very Often)
- ADHD screen positive: ≥ 6 of 9 inattention AND/OR ≥ 6 of 9 H-I items scored ≥ 2
- Performance impairment: ≥ 1 performance item scored 4 or 5 (somewhat/problematic)
Teacher Vanderbilt (NICHQ Vanderbilt Assessment Scale — Teacher Informant)
- 43 items: inattention (9), H-I (9), ODD/conduct (10), anxiety/depression (7), academic performance (3), classroom behavior (5)
- Same scoring and threshold criteria as parent form
- Academic performance: scored 1-5 (excellent to problematic)
Concordance Analysis
- Both parent AND teacher must show symptom endorsement for ADHD diagnosis
- If only one setting endorses symptoms: investigate setting-specific factors (classroom structure, teacher expectations, home environment)
- If discordant: consider alternative diagnoses (anxiety, learning disability, trauma)
Comorbidity Screening (Built Into Vanderbilt)
- ODD screen: ≥ 4 of 8 items scored ≥ 2 + performance impairment
- Conduct disorder screen: ≥ 3 of 14 items scored ≥ 2 + performance impairment
- Anxiety/depression screen: ≥ 3 of 7 items scored ≥ 2 + performance impairment → warrants formal evaluation
Step 3 — Age-Stratified Treatment (AAP 2019)
Ages 4-5 (Preschool)
- First-line: parent-administered behavior therapy (evidence-based parent training programs)
- Medication: methylphenidate may be prescribed if behavioral therapy is insufficient and symptoms cause moderate-to-severe functional impairment
- Avoid amphetamines as first-line in this age group (less evidence)
Ages 6-11 (School-Age)
- First-line: FDA-approved medication for ADHD AND/OR evidence-based behavioral therapy (preferably both)
- AAP recommends medication + behavioral therapy as optimal combined treatment
- Teacher-delivered behavioral strategies (daily report card, classroom accommodations)
Ages 12-18 (Adolescent)
- First-line: FDA-approved medication with assent from the adolescent
- Behavioral therapy should be offered, but medication is the primary treatment
- Address driving safety, substance use risk, and organizational skills
- Discuss medication continuity through transitions (college, employment)
Step 4 — Medication Management
Stimulant Medications (First-Line)
Methylphenidate Formulations
| Formulation | Brand Examples | Duration | Starting Dose |
|---|---|---|---|
| Immediate-release | Ritalin | 3-4 hours | 5 mg BID-TID |
| Extended-release (OROS) | Concerta | 10-12 hours | 18 mg QAM |
| Extended-release (beaded) | Ritalin LA, Aptensio XR | 8-10 hours | 10-20 mg QAM |
| Transdermal patch | Daytrana | 10-12 hours | 10 mg/9 hr patch |
| Liquid | Quillivant XR | 10-12 hours | 20 mg QAM |
Amphetamine Formulations
| Formulation | Brand Examples | Duration | Starting Dose |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mixed amphetamine salts IR | Adderall | 4-6 hours | 5 mg QD-BID |
| Mixed amphetamine salts XR | Adderall XR | 10-12 hours | 5-10 mg QAM |
| Lisdexamfetamine | Vyvanse | 12-14 hours | 20-30 mg QAM |
| Dextroamphetamine | Dexedrine | 4-6 hours | 2.5-5 mg BID |
Titration Protocol
- Start at the lowest recommended dose
- Titrate every 1-2 weeks based on response and side effects
- Use Vanderbilt Follow-Up scales (parent + teacher) to assess response
- Target: symptom reduction to < 6 positive items in affected domains + improved performance
- If one stimulant class fails (methylphenidate): switch to amphetamine class (and vice versa) before moving to non-stimulant
Non-Stimulant Medications (Second-Line)
| Medication | Class | Starting Dose | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Atomoxetine | NRI | 0.5 mg/kg/day × 3 days → 1.2 mg/kg/day | Onset 4-6 weeks; FDA black box: suicidal ideation monitoring |
| Guanfacine XR | Alpha-2 agonist | 1 mg QHS | Sedation, hypotension; do not abruptly discontinue |
| Clonidine XR | Alpha-2 agonist | 0.1 mg QHS | Similar to guanfacine; also treats tics |
| Viloxazine XR | NRI | 100 mg QAM (6-11y); 200 mg QAM (12+) | Newer; less data on long-term outcomes |
Side Effect Monitoring
- Every visit: weight, height, heart rate, blood pressure
- Appetite suppression: most common side effect; counsel on high-calorie breakfast, after-medication meals, bedtime snacks
- Growth: plot height and weight on growth chart at every visit; calculate height velocity annually; temporary growth deceleration is common
- Sleep: stimulants may cause insomnia; consider earlier dosing, shorter-acting formulation, or melatonin adjunct
- Cardiovascular: routine ECG NOT recommended for healthy children; obtain ECG only if cardiac history, family history of sudden death, or abnormal cardiac exam
- Tics: stimulants may unmask but generally do not cause tics; tics are not an absolute contraindication
- Mood/behavior: monitor for rebound irritability, emotional lability, new anxiety
Step 5 — Behavioral and Academic Interventions
Evidence-Based Behavioral Therapy
- Parent training programs: Triple P, Incredible Years, Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT)
- Classroom interventions: daily report card (DRC), preferential seating, extended time, reduced homework load, frequent breaks
- Social skills groups: peer interaction training (for children with social impairment)
- Organizational skills training: for ages 8+ (homework routines, planner use, time management)
School Accommodations
- Section 504 plan: ADHD qualifies as a disability under Section 504
- IEP: if ADHD causes specific learning disability requiring specialized instruction (under IDEA category "Other Health Impairment")
- Common accommodations: extended time on tests, preferential seating, reduced homework, movement breaks, behavior intervention plan
Checkpoint B — ADHD Management Review
- DSM-5 criteria systematically evaluated and documented
- Symptoms confirmed in ≥ 2 settings (parent + teacher Vanderbilt)
- ADHD presentation specified (inattentive, H-I, combined)
- Comorbidities screened (ODD, conduct, anxiety, depression, learning disability)
- Age-appropriate treatment initiated (behavioral therapy for 4-5; medication ± behavioral for 6+)
- Medication selected, dose documented, titration plan specified
- Side effect monitoring documented (weight, height, HR, BP)
- Follow-up Vanderbilt scales collected from parent AND teacher
- School accommodations addressed (504 or IEP discussion)
- Driving safety discussed (if adolescent)
- All [VERIFY] flags resolved or escalated
Quality Audit
| Item | Requirement | Pass? |
|---|---|---|
| Multi-informant data | Parent AND teacher Vanderbilt/Conners completed | |
| DSM-5 compliance | All 6 diagnostic criteria explicitly addressed | |
| Presentation specified | Inattentive / H-I / Combined documented | |
| Comorbidity screen | ODD, anxiety/depression at minimum screened | |
| Age-appropriate Tx | Behavioral therapy first for 4-5; combined for 6+ | |
| Titration plan | Starting dose, target, timeline for reassessment | |
| Growth monitoring | Weight and height plotted at each medication visit | |
| Vital signs | HR and BP documented at each medication visit | |
| School coordination | 504/IEP addressed or discussed | |
| No unexplained [VERIFY] tags | All flagged items resolved or escalated |
Guidelines
- Follow AAP 2019 Clinical Practice Guideline: Diagnosis, Evaluation, and Treatment of ADHD in Children and Adolescents
- Use DSM-5 criteria for ADHD diagnosis (APA 2013)
- NICHQ Vanderbilt Assessment Scales: recommended by AAP for initial evaluation and follow-up monitoring
- Stimulant titration: start low, go slow, use rating scales to measure response objectively
- MTA study (Multimodal Treatment Study of ADHD): combined medication + behavioral therapy superior to either alone for school-age children
- AAP: no routine ECG for ADHD medication initiation in healthy children without cardiac risk factors
- FDA black box: atomoxetine — monitor for suicidal ideation, particularly in first months
- Alpha-2 agonists: do not abruptly discontinue (rebound hypertension risk)
- Substance abuse: treated ADHD reduces substance abuse risk; untreated ADHD increases it
- ADHD is a chronic condition: treatment should not be discontinued without structured medication holiday and reassessment
- This skill produces clinical documentation; it does not replace clinical judgment