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The Family ADHD Solution: A Scientific Approach to Maximizing Your Child's Attention and Minimizing Parental Stress by Bertin, Mark (2011) Paperback Paperback – February 1, 2011
Purchase options and add-ons
- Print length240 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherSt. Martin's Griffin
- Publication dateFebruary 1, 2011
- Dimensions6 x 0.54 x 9 inches
- ISBN-10023010505X
- ISBN-13978-0230105058
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“ADHD challenges a child and also a family; The Family ADHD Solution balances an expert approach to the science of understanding, managing, and living with ADHD with practical, evidence-based, and sympathetic strategies for the whole family. Dr. Bertin will help parents and children cope, understand what is happening, and live and learn together from one day to the next.” ―Perri Klass, M.D., author of Treatment Kind and Fair: Letters to a Young Doctor
“Mark Bertin has written an insightful guide to help families approach the challenges of attentional difficulties with a mindful approach. While "attention deficit" refers to a complex set of dysfunctions in much more than the focus of attention, it fills families with a wide array of issues. To support the ever-stressful journey, the author takes the important but often forgotten stance that caregivers need their own deep understanding and self-care in order to function well and offer the optimal help to their children. What this means is that parents and other caregivers of children who have executive functions not working as they should--being able to pause before acting on an impulse, sustaining attention, avoiding becoming distracted--can now have an accessible method for maintaining a calm and clear focus of their own attention to keep their families functioning as best they can. Research has suggested that learning to be mindfully aware can help reduce stress, focus the mind, keep emotions balanced, and even improve your immune function. The bottom-line of these studies is that you can learn to approach challenging situations with resilience. So why not take the small amount of time to read this wonderful book and prepare yourself and your family well for the challenges ahead?” ―Daniel J. Siegel, M.D., author, of Mindsight: The New Science of Personal Transformation and Parenting from the Inside Out
“An excellent guide for families with children with ADHD. Mark Bertin not only explains the science behind how ADHD affects the brain, but also provides real tools and techniques for parents to both help their children succeed at home and academically, as well as restore balance to their lives.” ―Edward Hallowell, M.D., author of Driven to Distraction
“The Family ADHD Solution by Mark Bertin jumps to the top of my book list for families living with ADHD. It captures the science and the human story of ADHD with clarity and specifics – and offers the first real approach to parenting a child with ADHD that doesn't blame the child or the parent. This book fills a gaping hole in the ADHD parenting bookshelf – providing a working understanding of ADHD that is accurate and accessible and giving parents a chance to literally catch their breath and recognize how hard it is for the child with ADHD and for parents trying to get their child on the right track. Compassion for the child and the adults working with the child define everything else that Dr. Bertin discusses. The book assumes that interventions will be difficult and need to be changed over time – and doesn't apply a one size fits all approach. The tools provided are different than those found elsewhere – and the science supports the tools. Strategies that parents learn from this book are specific enough to try right away – and flexible enough to modify for different children and over time with the same child. I love this book and cannot wait to be able to recommend it to my patients and families.” ―Candida Fink, MD, author of The Ups and Downs of Raising a Bipolar Child
“I highly recommend this book. It's excellent, comprehensive coverage of practical information linked to scholarly research will help parents better understand and cope with the expectable challenges of parenting a youngster with ADHD. The author conveys in an articulate, engaging, and thoughtful manner a high level of familiarity with these challenges, and provides a clear set of empirically based techniques to manage them. Especially valuable are the emphases on the biological underpinnings of ADHD to help lessen the likelihood of blame, mindfulness techniques to manage stress and facilitate self-regulation, and guidelines to track the effects of medications and adjust dosage levels when needed.” ―Norman Brier, Professor of Pediatrics and Psychiatry and the Behavioral Sciences, Albert Einstein College of Medicine
“With compassion and insight, in language that is easy to understand, Dr. Bertin has taken on the task of explaining ADHD to families struggling to make sense of this difficult topic. And he succeeds brilliantly, shining light on difficult concepts and offering tools for dealing with the challenges in children's lives. It is a book that should be on the bookshelf of every parent and grandparent of a child with ADHD.” ―Robert Marion, M.D., Director of the Children's Evaluation and Rehabilitation Center at Albert Einstein College of Medicine and author of Genetic Rounds: A Doctor's Encounters in the Field that Revolutionized Medicine
“This book offers parents of children with ADHD a truly unique combination of medical expertise and compassion-- compassion for themselves, and for their children. Dr. Bertin applies his knowledge of cutting edge neuroscience and his experience of mindfulness to offer specific practices and advice for responding to the challenges of adhd and to enhance the joys of parenting.” ―Amy Saltzman M.D., co-founder/director Association for Mindfulness in Education
“Dr. Bertin has hit a home run with The Family ADHD Solution! A noted expert in developmental pediatrics, Dr. Bertin addresses a potentially overwhelming subject with not only clear clinical expertise and guidance, but also with reassurance and compassion. He has taken the mystery out of this condition…it is a wonderful resource for families.” ―Peter L. Richel, MD, FAAP, Clinical Assistant Professor, Department of Pediatrics, New York Medical College
“This is a comprehensive manual for parents and families of a child with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder that undoubtedly can be useful in understanding the nature of the disability and practical approaches toward treatment.” ―Dr. Herbert Cohen, Professor of Pediatrics, Albert Einstein College of Medicine
“Finally, something new for ADHD! Along with lots of great information about ADHD, Dr. Bertin's mindfulness approach is the missing piece that will enable parents to make better use of that information. The constant crises of raising a child with ADHD can drive even the most patient parents to their limits. Fortunately, Dr. Bertin presents specific, practical strategies to ride through those stressful moments with greater poise and wisdom. The parents will be calmer and the kids will be better behaved--everybody wins!” ―Ari Tuckman, PsyD, author of More Attention, Less Deficit: Success Strategies for Adults with ADHD
“The Family ADHD Solution is a wonderful tool for parents with an ADHD child. Grounded in science and rich clinical experience, Dr. Mark Bertin discusses ADHD in an insightful way and highlights mindfulness meditation as an effective way to deal with parenting stress. A gift to parents (and their children) and a truly mindful book!” ―Lidia Zylowska, M.D., Co-Founder and Assistant Clinical Professor, UCLA Mindful Awareness Research Center
“Dr. Bertin's book couldn't be more timely for my practice. As a primary care pediatrician, I have been searching for the missing link in helping families with ADHD. His clear presentation, combined with evidence based medicine, has already started helping me help families with ADHD. It will be a prominent asset in my toolkit not only for ADHD management, but also for helping all families live happier lives.” ―Elio Gizzi, M.D., Site Chief, Kaiser Richmond Pediatrics
“Dr. Mark Bertin's compassionate, informed guidance for families affected by ADHD combines sound science and practical tips with a mindfulness-based approach. An invaluable addition to the ADHD library.” ―Gina Pera, author of Is It You, Me, or Adult ADD?
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The Family ADHD Solution
A Scientific Approach to Maximizing your Child's Attention and Minimizing Parental Stress
By Mark BertinPalgrave Macmillan
Copyright © 2011 Mark BertinAll rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-230-10505-8
Contents
Acknowledgments,Introduction: A Thoughtful Approach to ADHD,
Part I ADHD: A Practical Guide,
Chapter 1 ADHD, Parenting, and the Brain,
Chapter 2 The Path to Diagnosis,
Chapter 3 ADHD Beneath the Surface,
Part II Mindfulness in ADHD Care,
Chapter 4 Attention Training and the Brain,
Chapter 5 The Science of Mindfulness,
Chapter 6 Taking Care of Yourself: Mindfulness in Action,
Part III Promoting Well-Being: Comprehensive Support for Families and Children,
Chapter 7 Behavior: Avoiding the "No, David" Approach,
Chapter 8 Education: Rallying the Team,
Chapter 9 Medical Options for ADHD,
Chapter 10 Supporting the Whole Family,
Suggested Resources,
Notes,
Index,
CHAPTER 1
ADHD, Parenting, and the Brain
You're reading this book because you want something in your family's life to be different. Maybe you know your child has attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), or you suspect it. Perhaps a parent, teacher, or close friend has drawn your attention to what they feel is a problem with your child's behavior. Or you believe your child is absolutely perfect as they are—but you would like them to be more at ease outside the family.
Maybe your child has been acting out. Or they are well behaved but struggling in school, and no one can explain exactly why. Even if you've received an ADHD diagnosis and some kind of plan, life may feel out of control. Perhaps you're wondering why, in spite of doing everything you can imagine, the same behavioral and academic problems persist. You've read every book and followed the advice of more people than you can remember, and still another call comes from the teacher: Your child is brilliant but never hands in their work. Your child pushed someone at recess again.
Maybe you're not overwhelmed and you have an easy relationship with your child, but you wish that life could be easier for them. You're sure they have the potential to succeed without so much effort or without so much support from you and their teachers. You're looking for a different perspective, and there's a nagging sense that life does not have to be so hard.
The Politics of ADHD
Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, often called ADHD or ADD, is one of the most common behavioral conditions affecting children today—and one of the most polarizing. Parents of children who struggle in school and have behavior issues are swamped with information—and misinformation—about ADHD. There is a deluge of unsubstantiated lore about the most effective ways to treat symptoms that often hint that parents or society are to blame. You may have been led to think that if only you could parent better, your child's ADHD symptoms would vanish. Poof. Just like that. But ADHD is a medical condition—would anyone expect asthma to disappear because of parenting changes?
ADHD care has devolved into factions. Some people, ranging from doctors to psychologists to news personalities and neighbors, believe ADHD is a myth, nothing more than a catch-all label for badly behaved children. Others suggest to parents—often aggressively—that medications are dangerous and they'll turn children into zombies. Parent groups and Internet sites swear that only their particular behavioral or alternative option will work safely—and suggest that other choices are useless.
And to complicate matters, what is ADHD anyway? Some people say it's real. Some people say it isn't. But as a developmental pediatrician specializing in children with behavioral disorders, I will tell you that ADHD is real—very real.
Decades of research have defined what ADHD is (a specific biological condition) and what it is not (a deficit of parenting or a figment of our collective imagination). Nevertheless, a morass of misinformation has muddled the perception of ADHD in the modern world.
Sensationalist authors make broad claims that a certain lifestyle intervention will "cure" ADHD, suggesting that our modern culture is perhaps the cause. Or that like fragile flowers, children with ADHD blossom only when raised "well"—whatever that means. Yet there are endless numbers of well-meaning, hard-working parents raising children who battle problems with focus, impulsivity, hyperactivity, and all the related disruptions ADHD triggers—and it has nothing to do with anything that happened or failed to happen at home. Because of these baseless societal claims, parents often end up blaming themselves: If only I could come up with a new plan, or figure out how to motivate my child, ADHD would go away. Through no fault of their own, parents often become blinded to the straightforward biological facts.
Stepping beyond the politics requires a return to the basics, with a clear vision of ADHD science. ADHD is a medical condition in which the part of the brain responsible for monitoring behavior and thoughts isn't working efficiently. ADHD is far more than a behavioral or academic problem; it has the potential to disrupt relationships, lower self-esteem, hinder social skills, and interfere with many other areas of life. Only through understanding the underlying biology of ADHD and its effects on brain development can you begin to make clear choices for your child.
ADHD by the Numbers
ADHD is not a product of our modern society; descriptions date back to the early 1900s. More recently, various studies in the United States show that around one in twenty children have ADHD, regardless of socioeconomic class or location. Other studies show this average, to be slightly higher, rarely slightly lower, but, it is always close to this number.
Wherever ADHD has been tracked—in Europe, South America, the United States, and most everywhere else—the incidence is near 5 percent. How could an environmentally caused or culturally biased diagnosis have such a similar pattern, however and wherever children are raised? It is unlikely that a behavioral phenomenon could be so consistent.
Compared to the general population, when someone in the immediate family has ADHD, their parents and siblings have a three- or four-fold increased risk of the same. An identical twin lives with at least a fifty-fifty chance of ADHD when the other twin has it, and most studies suggest an even greater likelihood. This increased incidence persists even if they were not raised in the same household, revealing that the tendency is genetic. Non-identical twins have a one in three chance—again, even when raised separately. Even the fact that boys are several times more likely to have ADHD than girls points us toward a genetic cause.
Through tracking ADHD in families, scientists have begun to identify genetic markers for the condition. Genes have been found that increase the likelihood that someone will develop ADHD, and others may one day predict responses to different treatments. Just as some kids are born destined to be tall, or develop asthma or seasonal allergies, some children are born destined to have ADHD. Genetic evidence continues to mount; a 2010 study found a much higher risk of chromosomal variants in people with ADHD, compared to the general population. However, as dozens of genes influence brain development, there is no genetic test to diagnose ADHD (and there probably never will be).
Biological factors affect the brain well before the potential impact of home life or culture. Premature birth, fetal exposure to alcohol, or lead toxicity in early childhood have been identified as ADHD risk factors and all make ADHD more probable. These external factors also interact with genetics, as studies suggest that exposure to certain toxins causes trouble only when a disposition towards developing ADHD already exists.
So in spite of all the media-hyped controversy, when correctly diagnosed ADHD is a medical disorder like any other.
Brain Basics
The frontal lobes of our brains are responsible for what we call executive function—the brain's ability to think, react, and modulate emotion. Executive function skills, which are reviewed further in chapter three, act like the brain's manager. Through pathways starting in the frontal lobes, the brain watches over behavior and emotions, monitoring, motivating, anticipating, and planning. The frontal lobes also regulate impulses and allow us to pause before acting. They determine how we organize our thoughts. They supervise how we think and act. They manage information, help us learn from mistakes, and influence dozens of related abilities.
In both children and adults with ADHD, the frontal lobes of the brain are smaller than in the general population. Research using mental imaging has also found decreased activity in these areas when people with ADHD perform certain mental tasks, while in the general population the frontal lobes leap into action in the same situation. When there is decreased activity in the frontal lobes, the effects on daily life can be profound.
Doctors now say with confidence that these functional brain differences are the medical root of a behavioral condition and the cause ADHD. The differences do not stop with the frontal lobes, as they involve much more complex, detailed findings in various areas throughout the brain. While research is ongoing, these pathways likely include regions responsible for learning, emotional control, motor coordination, time management, and other mental abilities. Keep in mind, these findings all represent trends—not every child with ADHD will have each of these problems, and they do not define any individual's long-term potential. (For simplicity's sake, I'll refer to overall brain findings as relating to the frontal lobes through the remainder of the book.)
As you can see, ADHD is far more than an attention deficit. ADHD is a disorder of self-regulation and a set of skills called "executive function." The stereotypical symptoms of ADHD—hyperactivity or distractibility, fidgeting or daydreaming—occur as a part of these broader issues. When these abilities lag, as happens in ADHD, children cannot effectively organize their thoughts or coordinate actions. The manager is asleep on the job, so to speak, and a child gets off task and becomes disorganized and inefficient.
A more descriptive name for ADHD might be "attention management, self-regulation, organization, and planning disorder." Challenges with self-monitoring, distractibility, irritability, and memory influence all aspects of life. Unchecked, ADHD affects brain development, how children learn and relate to others, and other far-reaching parts of their worlds, and it disrupts relationships with parents, social development, and schooling. ADHD symptoms cause intense suffering not only for children diagnosed with ADHD but for their parents and family as well. Everyone involved deserves equal support from the start.
Parenting Children with ADHD
I'm starting to get it. I got tired of all the energy I spent pushing them to do what I thought they should be doing. I was upset. I felt like I shouldn't have to make a behavioral plan. They should always behave like they know how to behave, like we teach them.
Now I'm starting to see, maybe they can't. It's their ADHD. They're not bad kids. They try, most of the time.
They aren't behaving like I want. For whatever reason, they aren't. Now when I go there in my head, I stop. What can I do that might help? How can I teach them something new? There are still behavioral issues—plenty of them—but the fighting stopped, and we're working on it together.
* * *
Almost certainly, we want more for our children than just the absence of ADHD symptoms. We want true well-being, whatever that means to each of us. Well-being can mean a stable, comfortable relationship with family and friends. It could be an internal state of confidence and self-esteem, or maybe an ability to face the ups and downs of life with equanimity and resolve.
Parenting a child with ADHD presents concrete challenges. Endless energy is poured into getting from breakfast to the bus, or from dinner to bedtime. Your children may misbehave with other children, fail to listen to adults, or struggle in school. You may need to supervise schoolwork excessively, or hover over every social interaction. Your family or friends may not understand what's going on, and you might begin to feel alienated socially.
You love your children without reservation and still, ADHD symptoms may push you to be more punitive or inconsistent in your discipline than you might otherwise choose. It may be hard to imagine easy times are even possible. At home you might feel like you are doing no more than putting out fires.
Parenting a child with ADHD challenges the hardiest parents, as the effort required to watch over a child's behavior exhausts. Trying to maintain consistent routines in the midst of the chaos is draining. Children with ADHD learn new behaviors slowly, leading many parents to assume traditional techniques are not effective, or to doubt their own ability to manage their children.
While most parents recognize the value of setting limits, or have read about it in parenting books, ADHD itself pushes them toward inconsistency, further amplifying the behavioral cycles. Parents may set limits when they feel strong enough but skip them when they are tired or out in public, where the stakes seem too high. And managing all of these ADHD-related issues over the years—it is no wonder that parents report feeling less in control of their lives than other families.
Yet the catalyst for change is parents, not their children with ADHD. Parents have the broader perspective, and when they regain control, their children benefit. Parents are at the center of most interventions, whether they are addressing their influence on behavior, collaborating with schools, or making treatment decisions. While, the bottom line is the long-term health of a child, intervention often hinges on adults.
Effective parenting of ADHD requires both patience and vigilance. To teach a child with ADHD skills and change behaviors, parents must maintain their resolve over far longer stretches of time than they would with other children. Under stress, or with the wrong information, decision making is difficult—but children flourish when their parents remain open-minded about expectations and discovering new solutions.
A Stacked Deck
I hate the word "focus." I really hate it. My dad is always yelling at me, "Focus, Larry! Focus!"
* * *
Many of the symptoms of ADHD—such as acting without thinking, getting off task, or failing to sit still—can appear to be under a child's control, but are not. Kids with ADHD experience biological distractibility and have problems remembering responsibilities; they don't intentionally duck chores any more or less than anyone else. When caregivers mistake poor impulse control for deliberate "badness," children may become marginalized—on one occasion in my practice, a teacher even implied a preschool child might be "evil." Any advice that comes from the skewed perspective that a child with ADHD is bad or unmotivated is doomed to fail.
When writing off ADHD as "only" a personality trait instead of a biologically driven set of symptoms, children and parents end up being blamed for the problems. ADHD is no one's fault, but many people make this assumption when watching the erratic, impulsive behavior of a child with it. Parents feel judged, like they should be doing something different to control their child's actions. Yet while parenting will certainly influence how ADHD symptoms are expressed, it cannot overturn basic neurology.
Most often, children with ADHD try as hard as they can—even when their behavior appears intentionally difficult, poorly motivated, or maddeningly inconsistent. They could list all the rules in the book themselves, but do not have the skills to follow them. As Dr. Russell Barkley, one of the world's leading ADHD researchers, has said, "ADHD is not a disorder of knowing what to do but of doing what you know."
ADHD is as frustrating for the children who have it as it is for adults trying to raise them. After they've acted out, children may calm down and realize, "I'm not supposed to yell." Or once it's pointed out they forgot their homework—again—they make up a story to cover up. They know exactly what they should have done and that they've let their parents down. And then they find themselves in trouble both for not doing their school work and for lying.
Most children with ADHD recognize their differences as they get older. They may notice that other children are not corrected in class as often by their teacher. Or that other siblings at home aren't in so much trouble. Or that their parents are frustrated with their behavior, day after day.
In a 2008 study, researchers analyzed college student interviews about growing up with ADHD. Participants recalled "a childhood and adolescence shaped by feelings of difference, isolation, and misunderstanding." They said that, as children, they felt frequent tension around household responsibilities, academics, and peers. They craved understanding. They wanted to discover a sense that the adults in their world recognized their challenges and the reality of ADHD and were reaching out to support them and intervene.
Children with ADHD have their strengths and weaknesses like the rest of us, and ADHD does not define a person any more than any other medical condition or physical characteristic. Some people are skilled at paying attention, some at playing an instrument, and some are adept at physics. However, a fundamental difference from many medical disorders is that ADHD affects so many aspects of life, including traits and mental abilities often assumed to occur separately from their biological roots. Supporting a child with ADHD begins with recognizing this reality in their daily experience.
Quality ADHD treatment must address this truth, while never eliminating or altering a personality, or limiting someone's skills. Successful intervention allows a creative person to not only have a radical idea, but follow it through to completion. It allows an extroverted person to be social and entertaining but respect other people's boundaries, and maintain their own.
Treatment needs to protect children's strengths and at the same time target where kids could benefit from support. Children with ADHD have poorly functioning frontal lobes. They require care that builds from understanding what is willful versus what is a neurologically based lack of a particular skill. Well-being then grows from looking beyond the stereotypical list of symptoms and instead focusing on whole children, families, and communities.
(Continues...)Excerpted from The Family ADHD Solution by Mark Bertin. Copyright © 2011 Mark Bertin. Excerpted by permission of Palgrave Macmillan.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Product details
- Publisher : St. Martin's Griffin; 1st edition (February 1, 2011)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 240 pages
- ISBN-10 : 023010505X
- ISBN-13 : 978-0230105058
- Item Weight : 8 ounces
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.54 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #131,417 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #129 in Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity
- #173 in Medical Child Psychology
- #317 in Parenting Books on Children with Disabilities
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Dr. Bertin is a developmental pediatrician and author of How Children Thrive, Mindful Parenting for ADHD and The Family ADHD Solution, which integrate mindfulness into the rest of evidence-based pediatric care. He is also a contributing author for the book Teaching Mindfulness Skills to Kids and Teens. Dr. Bertin is on faculty at New York Medical College and the Windward Teacher Training Institute, and on the advisory boards for the non-profits Common Sense Media and Reach Out and Read. His blog is available through Mindful.org and Psychology Today. For more information, please visit his website at www.developmentaldoctor.com.
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Customers appreciate the book's evidence-based approach to ADHD and find it well worth their time and money. They report positive effects on stress levels, with one customer noting significant improvements in their home life.
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Customers find the book's information clear and comprehensive, providing an evidence-based approach to ADHD. One customer notes that the science is written to engage patients and families, while another mentions it offers practical advice on handling the condition.
"...This book includes a comprehensive explanation of ADHD; it covers "clinical" information (backed by dozens of scientific research studies), but is..." Read more
"I found the first half of the book very helpful in providing the stepping stones to mindfulness training...." Read more
"...of medical terms that are over the average persons head, his explainations are so clear. This book makes you feel like you are not alone...." Read more
"...That part is approachable, readable and practical. So much so, that I frequently recommend the book to my families and patients with ADHD...." Read more
Customers find the book well worth their time and money.
"...If your life is impacted by ADHD, this book will be well worth your time and money!" Read more
"I loved this book...." Read more
"...Best book I ordered by far." Read more
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Customers report positive changes in their family's stress levels, with one mentioning significant improvements in home life and another noting a well-rounded scope of treatment options.
"...FOR FAMILIES & CHILDREN: This section covers a well-rounded scope of treatment options, both medical and non-medical...." Read more
"...stress and more importantly my son is feeling less stress and more happiness. I have suggested this book to everyone who will listen to me...." Read more
"...of the suggestions offered and there have already been HUGE improvements in our home life and both of our overall happiness!..." Read more
"...information about the many facets of ADHD, it had unique and interesting solutions on how to deal with different challenges a family will inevitably..." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on September 4, 2011I've read many books on ADHD and this is one of the best! (I'm an educator and have worked with ADHD students for over 16 years. I also have a parent and child with ADHD.) This book includes a comprehensive explanation of ADHD; it covers "clinical" information (backed by dozens of scientific research studies), but is written with great compassion for struggling families.
PART I-A PRACTICAL GUIDE TO ADHD: The cost of the book is well worth Part I alone! This section provides very clear, straightforward information about: the biology of ADHD, variety of symptoms, implications, and information to ensure an accurate diagnosis. On one hand, the information in this section is not "new," but the explanations are the most thorough and clear of anything I have read.
PART II-MINDFULLNESS IN ADHD CARE: In this section, Bertin introduces the scientific approach of using "mindfulness" to improve coping skills for dealing with ADHD. I have personal experience with this strategy; I learned a version of it 15 years ago to deal with chronic pain from rheumatoid arthritis and it was life-changing! I had never thought of using the same concepts to deal with the challenges of ADHD, but it makes perfect sense. This section includes sound, practical advice!
PART III-COMPREHENSIVE SUPPORT FOR FAMILIES & CHILDREN: This section covers a well-rounded scope of treatment options, both medical and non-medical. Once again, Bertin's chapter on "Medical Options" stands out as one of the best I've read because it addresses a wide scope of issues that are inherent to the ongoing debate over medical treatment for ADHD.
I've already recommended this book to several people: family, friends, and clients. If your life is impacted by ADHD, this book will be well worth your time and money!
- Reviewed in the United States on April 17, 2022I found the first half of the book very helpful in providing the stepping stones to mindfulness training. But the 2nd half really tries to persuade the reader into putting children on medication.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 9, 2013This book is well written and speaks directly to the reader. I felt as though the author was speaking directly to me, and knew exactly what we have been going through. Concerns we have had, stresses we have feeling. We have made some of the changes suggested in the book and they have been a HUGE help. My entire family is feeling decreased stress and more importantly my son is feeling less stress and more happiness. I have suggested this book to everyone who will listen to me. Much of my family has also purchased the book after hearing my raving reviews of it.
I appreciate that the author does not speak in alot of medical terms that are over the average persons head, his explainations are so clear. This book makes you feel like you are not alone. What you are experienceing in your family and your child is experiencing is common and it can get better. This book has been the single most helpful set of information we have come across. If I could give it more then 5 stars I would.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 28, 2023Can't comment on the contents of the book yet. The book was sold as new. The pages are very yellowed and smells musty. Not stored properly. Should not have been sold as new.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 9, 2011This book is a well written, evidence-based approach to ADHD. There is an appropriate level of scientific discussion in it that bears credence to the author's claims. The science is written to engage patients and families, and to help them deepen their understanding of the science behind ADHD. It is successfully done. With that scientific foundation, the book then proceeds to build plans develop skills for families and ADHD patients to augment the traditional treatments (medication) for ADHD. That part is approachable, readable and practical. So much so, that I frequently recommend the book to my families and patients with ADHD. Since I can't discuss these things in the necessary detail in the office, I ask families to use this book to maximize the outcome if the techniques are followed.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 29, 2012This book was recommended by my pediatrician for my 8 y/o daughter with ADHD. With all the literature out there I had been hesitant in finding information that was informatative without being too biased about the struggle to decide whether to medicate or not. This book offered excellent information both pro/con medication as well as a thorough clinical explanation of ADHD that was clear in layman's terms. I just finished reading the book and have already implemented some of the suggestions offered and there have already been HUGE improvements in our home life and both of our overall happiness! Highly recommend this book for anyone who loves someone with ADHD.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 27, 2013I loved this book. Not only did it have clear and understandable information about the many facets of ADHD, it had unique and interesting solutions on how to deal with different challenges a family will inevitably have to deal with.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 24, 2013I'm about half way through this book and I'm not really getting it. I guess the author is trying to sell you on meditation in the hopes of getting the whole family calm enough to deal with their ADHD child? I'm willing to finish the book and these might be good ideas, but it's focus is on the long run. If you're looking for some solutions to getting homework done tonight, or getting your child out of the house in the morning in real time, then this is not going to help you out.








