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Tag Archives: productivity
Thousands of children are being medicated for ADHD – when the condition may not even exist – Will Sutcliffe
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/thousands-of-children-are-being-medicated-for-adhd–when-the-condition-may-not-even-exist-10509842.html Thoughtful and useful article by Will about the ‘ADHD’ label, its implications and consequences. The writer too believes the exponential increase in diagnosis and drug treatment makes sense in political and financial terms, rather than in terms of the … Continue reading →
Posted in blaming, child development, civil rights, cognitive, communication, compulsive behaviour, creativity, cultural questions, diagnoses of ADHD, Disconnection, diversity, education, emotions, empathy, encounter, equality, ethics, external locus, family systems, fear, Gender & culture, generational trauma, growing up, human condition, masculine, medical model, non-conforming, paradigm shift, parenting, perception, physical being, political, power and powerlessness, psychiatric abuse, psychiatric drugs, psychiatry, relationship, research evidence, scapegoating, shame, shaming, therapeutic growth, therapeutic relationship, trauma, values & principles, vulnerability
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Tagged achievement culture, ADHD, affordable counselling exeter, aggressive child, attainment, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, behavioral control, behaviour modifying drugs, behavioural control, behavioural signs of distress, Big Pharma, biological abnormality, blame culture, child psychiatry, coercive conformity, Concentr8, concentration, conformist educational system, conformist schooling, conformity in school, Controversial History of ADHD, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, Cracked, cultural attitudes, cultural attitudes to childhood, cultural attitudes to children, cultural barometer, cultural colonisation, cultural values, daydreaming, delinquency, demonisation, demonization, diagnosis and disorder model, diagnostic test for ADHD, diagnostic threshold for ADHD, diagnostic thresholds, Disability Living Allowance, disruptive child, distracted parenting, DLA and ADHD, DSM, educational underperformance, emotional problems, excessive screen time, expectation, fear, food additives, formal schooling, Frederick Goodwin, friendship anxiety, group therapy, Has Ritalin replaced the rod, Hyperactive, hyperactivity, hyperkinetic disorder, inattentiveness, intolerance, James Davies, Joseph Biederman, judgemental culture, labelling, labelling children, lack of exercise, lack of impulse control, low cost counselling exeter, Matthew Smith, medical orthodoxy, medicating children, mental disorder, mental health model, methylphenidate hydrochloride, myth of ADHD, neo liberalism, neo-liberal economics, neurological abnormality, NHA, NICE clinical guidelines, non-conforming, Nurtured Heart Approach, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, parenting, pathologising children, pathologising distress, pathologising human experience, pathologising maleness, pathologizing children, pathologizing distress, pathologizing human experience, pathologizing maleness, peer pressures, performance culture, person centred counselling exeter, philosophical tautology, productivity, psychiatric medication of children, psychiatric orthodoxy, psychiatry doing harm, recreational drugs, relationship building, Ritalin, Sami Timimi, self esteem, social media, social values, success, Tim Kendall, tunnel vision, unconditional love, unconditionality, uncooperative child, underperformance, Will Sutcliffe, William Sutcliffe, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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