The first article in this two-part series reviews and describes the vulnerability teenagers with ADHD experience due to their difficulty developing effective self-discipline, self-regulation, and self-control. ADHD acts as a catalyst, increasing the probability that “non-thinking” behavior will lead teens with ADHD to take risks similar to their peers but at a significantly higher rate. As discussed in my earlier article, engaging in risky behavior isn’t a problem of not knowing what to do. For example, researchers have demonstrated that teenagers with ADHD clearly understand the risks of school failure, driving, sexual activity, and substance use. Rather, these teens seem unable to efficiently regulate their behavior and safely negotiate what for them is a gauntlet of adolescence. This article will provide a brief overview of several types of risky behaviors teenagers with ADHD typically engage in.

Struggling in school

Growing up with ADHD appears to take a significant toll on many teenagers’ educational functioning and final educational attainment. Within the educational realm, disciplinary problems are common in youth with ADHD. Sometimes these problems result from purposeful behavior, but often their actions are not intentional. Citizenship grades are marked down and disciplinary action taken when youth with ADHD are repeatedly late to class, lose textbooks, speak out of turn in class, or cause other minor disruptions. Such behavior occurs when youth with ADHD struggle with conduct problems that may be fueled by poor impulse control.

Teenagers with ADHD are more likely to repeat a grade, receive extra tutoring, underperform relative to their intellect and academic abilities (as measured by group achievement tests), drop out of school earlier, and be suspended from school for disciplinary problems, they are expelled at a rate two-and-a-half times that of unaffected teenagers. Youth with ADHD fail to complete high school at a rate that is four times the norm (nearly 40 percent versus 9 percent). Their class rankings are usually in the bottom third and their grade point averages in the bottom half. In one longitudinal study of youth receiving treatment for ADHD, only 20 percent of teenagers with ADHD attempted a college program of any sort and just 5 percent completed a college degree compared to 40 percent or more of normal teens entering college and 35 percent eventually completing some form of college degree. (Study by Dr. Russell Barkley and colleagues in Milwaukee.)

It appears that growing up with ADHD takes a significant toll on educational functioning and final educational attainment; which ultimately affects the occupational status and life stability of these individuals in adulthood.

Dangerous and distracted driving

Teenagers diagnosed with ADHD in clinic settings who were followed over a three- to five-year-period were found to experience a significantly higher rate of automobile accidents, moving violations (particularly speeding), and license revocations and suspensions compared to unaffected teenagers. The reaction times of teens with ADHD (as measured on driving simulators) are also slower than those of their unaffected peers. Slower reaction times certainly increase risk for accidents. Parents have rated their teens with ADHD as using less sound driving practices than other teenagers, which likely leads to this pattern of vulnerability. Some accidents may be the result of driving too fast (due to poor impulse control) or daydreaming (due to inattention) rather than attending to the road. This is an emerging field of study and thus there are many unanswered questions about the driving behavior of teenagers with ADHD.

Sexual activity

Although at this time there is limited scientific research concerning the sexual behavior of teenagers with ADHD, preliminary studies that have followed teenagers with ADHD into young adulthood have found a higher rate of sexual activity at a younger age and with more sexual partners. The young adults with ADHD studied reported that, throughout their teen years and into young adulthood, they were less likely to use contraception and more likely to have conceived a teenage pregnancy. In the Milwaukee study just cited, nearly 40 percent of teens with ADHD were involved in an unwed pregnancy. They were also more likely to have contracted a sexually transmitted disease (not HIV).

Substance abuse

It has been demonstrated that up to 50 percent of teens with ADHD, particularly in the late teen years, abuse substances such as alcohol, marijuana, and cocaine; many of them become dependent upon such substances. Some of these youth may be self-medicating in an effort to improve their attention span while others may be trying to escape their unhappiness. Still others, due to their lack of inhibition, may be unable to stop doing something that provides pleasure.

However, youth consistently treated for ADHD with medication have been found to be less vulnerable for subsequent substance use and dependence. This may be the added protection offered by medication treatment or may reflect other variables such as factors that predict which families will take the time and spend the resources to make certain their teens with ADHD receive the appropriate treatment.

Juvenile delinquency

The exact relationship between ADHD and antisocial and criminal behavior has not been well studied. Early studies found a high incidence of such behavior in teens with ADHD. However, many of those studies did not take into consideration co-existing problems such as Conduct Disorder (CD) or chronic delinquency. When these variables are controlled for, ADHD may be one of many risk factors leading to juvenile justice problems. For the moment it can be reported that teenagers with ADHD, either because of the ADHD alone or because of a combination of ADHD and other disorders, are much more likely to find their way into juvenile court repeatedly. Unfortunately, the penal system generally provides punishment but little support to help these youth develop more effective and efficient life skills and success in daily life and thus the ability to stay out of trouble.

Meeting the challenge

ADHD appears to be associated with significant risk for global impairment in all major areas of life for affected teenagers. Yet some teens with ADHD fare significantly better than others. The key appears to be approaching treatment from a long-term perspective, balancing symptom relief with strategies to help teens with ADHD develop stress-management skills and resilient qualities. Symptom-relieving treatments for ADHD, including medication, education, and therapeutic interventions are necessary to ensure present day success for teens with ADHD.

However, symptom relief, while necessary, is not sufficient to help these teenagers transition happily and successfully into adult life. Teenagers with ADHD also need help if they are to develop safe and sound driving habits, learn responsible sexual behavior, and achieve educational success. Such help is often provided by multiple professionals (e.g., counselors and educators) in a variety of settings. Best of all, parents can play a large part in helping their teens with ADHD develop a resilient mindset and avoid high-risk behaviors. I will explore effective parenting strategies in the next article in this series.

References

  • Barkley, R.A. (1998). Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (2nd Edition). New York, NY: Guilford.
  • Goldstein, S. & Goldstein, M. (1998). Managing attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in children: A guide for practitioners (2nd Edition). New York, NY: Wiley.
  • Goldstein, S. & Ellison, P.A. (2002). Clinician’s Guide to Adult AD/HD: Assessment and Intervention. New York, NY: Academic Press.
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