TY - JOUR
T1 - What children and young people learn about ADHD from youth information books
T2 - A text analysis of nine books on ADHD available in Dutch
AU - Batstra, Laura
AU - Foget, Linda
AU - van Haeringen, Caroline
AU - Meerman, Sanne te
AU - Thoutenhoofd, Ernst Daniel
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is not a singular concept. For the purposes of this study, understandings of ADHD are assumed also to spread along a conceptual dimension that includes some combination of biomedical and psychosocial knowledge. Biomedically, ADHD may be considered a somatic affliction causing inattention and hyperactivity, amenable to pharmaceutical treatment. Psychosocially, ADHD ranks among adverse behaviour patterns that are amenable to psychosocial and pedagogical intervention. Considering both biomedical and psychosocial factors are associated with the ADHD construct, it seems self-evident that young people should be offered information that gives equal consideration to both ways of addressing ADHD, but the question is just how balanced the information available to young people is. This study investigated nine information books on ADHD available in the Netherlands in Dutch, aimed at children and young people up to age 17. Thirteen perspective-dependent text elements were identified in qualitative content analysis. Eight attributes associate with a biomedical view: ADHD as cause, biological factors, clinical diagnosis, brain abnormality, medication, neurofeedback, heritability and persistence. Five text elements associate with a psychosocial view: ADHD as perceived behaviour, environmental factors, descriptive diagnosis, behavioural intervention and normalisation. The most frequent text passages encountered describe ADHD as a brain abnormality, along with medical and behavioural treatment. Providing the main focus for information in eight out of nine books, biomedical information about ADHD predominates in the available youth information books, while psychosocial information about ADHD is far less well covered.
AB - Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is not a singular concept. For the purposes of this study, understandings of ADHD are assumed also to spread along a conceptual dimension that includes some combination of biomedical and psychosocial knowledge. Biomedically, ADHD may be considered a somatic affliction causing inattention and hyperactivity, amenable to pharmaceutical treatment. Psychosocially, ADHD ranks among adverse behaviour patterns that are amenable to psychosocial and pedagogical intervention. Considering both biomedical and psychosocial factors are associated with the ADHD construct, it seems self-evident that young people should be offered information that gives equal consideration to both ways of addressing ADHD, but the question is just how balanced the information available to young people is. This study investigated nine information books on ADHD available in the Netherlands in Dutch, aimed at children and young people up to age 17. Thirteen perspective-dependent text elements were identified in qualitative content analysis. Eight attributes associate with a biomedical view: ADHD as cause, biological factors, clinical diagnosis, brain abnormality, medication, neurofeedback, heritability and persistence. Five text elements associate with a psychosocial view: ADHD as perceived behaviour, environmental factors, descriptive diagnosis, behavioural intervention and normalisation. The most frequent text passages encountered describe ADHD as a brain abnormality, along with medical and behavioural treatment. Providing the main focus for information in eight out of nine books, biomedical information about ADHD predominates in the available youth information books, while psychosocial information about ADHD is far less well covered.
KW - ADHD
KW - psychoeducation
KW - youth information books
KW - biomedical perspective
KW - psychosocial perspective
KW - DEFICIT HYPERACTIVITY DISORDER
KW - ATTENTION-DEFICIT/HYPERACTIVITY DISORDER
KW - BRAIN VOLUME DIFFERENCES
KW - FOLLOW-UP
KW - ADOLESCENTS
KW - PARTICIPANTS
KW - METAANALYSIS
KW - MEDICATION
U2 - 10.21307/sjcapp-2020-001
DO - 10.21307/sjcapp-2020-001
M3 - Article
SN - 2245-8875
VL - 8
SP - 1
EP - 9
JO - Scandinavian journal of child and adolescent psychiatry and psychology
JF - Scandinavian journal of child and adolescent psychiatry and psychology
ER -