Children with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are at increased risk of being hit by a vehicle when crossing a street, according to new research from the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
The findings, published July 25, 2011, in Pediatrics, indicate that children with ADHD don’t process information as well as non-ADHD children and tend to make incorrect decisions on when to begin crossing a street to a greater extent than non-ADHD children. According to the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, one of the leading causes of unintentional injury in middle childhood is pedestrian injury.
“The kids with ADHD in our study displayed the behaviors parents want to see – they stopped at the street and looked both ways. But that doesn’t mean they are ready to cross a street by themselves,” said the study’s first author,Despina Stavrinos, Ph.D., assistant professor in the UAB Injury Control Research Center.
ADHD Kids at Increased Risk When Crossing the Street
Announcements
CAS News
July 25, 2011
More News
-
Understanding aphantasia: Research examines why some minds cannot visualizeAphantasia is the inability to create mental images, and many individuals with the condition remain unaware until adulthood.
-
Mother-daughter duo, inspirational mentor graduate with UAB’s AI in Medicine certificates and hope to better care for patientsA decade after losing her mother to a rare brain virus, UAB graduate Julie Schifanella is learning to use artificial intelligence to help other patients.
-
UAB to host summer commencement Aug. 16More than 926 graduating students will participate in two ceremonies, which will be livestreamed.