Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADD/ADHD) is a common childhood behavioural disorder that affects a child's ability to focus, organise, and finish a task. They frequently act impulsively and are easily distracted.
Though this type of behaviour is common in children, what distinguishes ADHD from normal children is the persistence of symptoms, which has an impact on the child's academic and social life. Inattention (lack of focus), hyperactivity (restlessness), and impulsiveness are the primary symptoms of ADHD. The severity of symptoms varies from child to child, but ADHD is classified as Predominately Inattentive, Predominately Hyperactive, or Combined based on the dominant indications.
ADHD Symptoms
Easily distracted.
Forgetting or being absentminded
Does not pay attention to his or her work and makes numerous errors
Has difficulty focusing and is easily distracted.
Has trouble following instructions.
Things are easily misplaced or lost.
Does not enjoy tasks that require concentration.
Hyperactivity – or agitation.
To diagnose ADHD, there is no single test that can be used. It is based on trained doctors or psychologists analysing and assessing a child's behaviour pattern, cognitive skills, and development based on the persistence of symptoms, the child's age, and the severity of the symptoms.
autism
Infantile Autism is when a baby or toddler (an Infant) has autism.
Biologial. Autism is neurodevelopmental. There are hereditary and genetic ties to autism.
No, Jedward do not have autism.
Autism can be inherited from parents with genes for autism. Autism can also be the result of the spontaneous mutation of a gene. It is suspected that a person with the genes for autism might need an environmental factor (in the womb or shortly after birth) to trigger the development of autism.
he does have autism
No, autism is rare and not contagious.
Autism is not an intellectual or a psychological problem. Autism is a neurological difference.
no it did not cause autism, birth defects cause autism
the condition is autism Autism is a disibilty itself
Autism isn't a disease or a virus, thus there are no strains of autism. Autism is just autism, it was previously split up into Autism Spectrum Disorder (Classic Autism), Asperger Syndrome, Pervasive Developmental Disorder Not Otherwise Specified (PDD-NOS), childhood disintegrative disorder, and Rett Syndrome - now all are merged under the Autism Spectrum Disorder diagnosis.
Autism isn't located in the brain, autism is a type of brain. Autism is a neurological variation, we don't say that autism is in the brain in the same way that we don't say that African-American is in the skin.