Relative Age Effect in Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder at Various Stages of the Medicalization Process

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2022

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  • handle:  10670/1.2hztf6
  • Brault Marie-Christine, Degroote Emma, Jean Mireille et Van Houtte Mieke. (2022). Relative Age Effect in Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder at Various Stages of the Medicalization Process. Children, 9, (6), p. 1-14.
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Ce document est lié à :
https://constellation.uqac.ca/id/eprint/8342/

Ce document est lié à :
http://dx.doi.org/doi.org/10.1080/07481187.2022.20 [...]




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Marie-Christine Brault et al., « Relative Age Effect in Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder at Various Stages of the Medicalization Process », Constellation - Université du Québec à Chicoutimi, ID : 10670/1.2hztf6


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Diagnosis and pharmacological treatment of ADHD are more common among the youngest children in a classroom, born in the months immediately preceding the school entry cutoff date. The mechanisms behind this phenomenon, called the relative age effect (RAE), are not yet well understood. Nearly all hypotheses involve the school system, various teachers’ actions, and concern children’s immaturity. However, most previous studies have been based on reports of health professionals’ diagnoses and prescriptions found in official databases rather than on reports of teachers’ behavior identification or suspicion of ADHD, despite their being at the first stages of the medicalization process. Our study overcomes this limitation by using reports of parents’ and teachers’ behavior identification or suspicion of ADHD within a three-level multilevel survey design, comprising 1294 children, 130 teachers, and 17 elementary public schools. The goal of our study was to investigate whether RAE stems (1) from adults’ judgement of the child’s expression of immaturity or (2) from the consequences associated with the child’s double burden of being immature and exhibiting ADHD behaviors. Our multilevel analyses put forward the first hypothesis only, supporting the medicalization of immaturity. RAE in ADHD seems mostly initiated by teachers’ pre-diagnostic actions toward younger children.

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