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Australian study says a child’s birth date predicts whether they’ll be medicated for ADHD

Study finds children born towards the end of the school year more likely to be prescribed ADHD medication

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The youngest children in the class are significantly more likely to be medicated for ADHD. Photo: Fairfax

By Kate Aubusson

At face value it sounds too arbitrary to be possible.

A child’s birth date is a powerful predictor of whether they will be medicated for ADHD, an Australian study suggests.

In reality, the findings show children who are younger and less mature than their classmates are being misdiagnosed and prescribed ADHD drugs, its lead author argues.

The new research published Monday wades into a fierce decades-long debate over ADHD diagnosis and whether unruly children are being medicated inappropriately.

The analysis of more than 300,000 Western Australian school children found the youngest in the class were significantly more likely to have been given drugs to treat ADHD compared to their older classmates.

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