Running on Ritalin: A Physician Reflects on Children, Society, and Performance in a Pill
By (Author) Lawrence H. Diller
Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group Inc
Bantam USA
15th October 1999
United States
General
Non Fiction
Paediatric medicine
Schools and pre-schools
Health and safety in the workplace
Psychopharmacology
Teaching of students with social, emotional or behavioural difficulties
618.928589
Paperback
404
Width 152mm, Height 229mm, Spine 21mm
553g
In a book as provocative and newsworthy as Listening to Prozac and Driven to Distraction, a physician speaks out on America's epidemic level of diagnoses for attention deficit disorder, and on the drug that has become almost a symbol of our times: Ritalin.
In 1997 alone, nearly five million people in the United States were prescribed Ritalin--most of them young children diagnosed with attention deficit disorder.Use of this drug, which is a stimulant related to amphetamine, has increased by 700 percent since 1990.And this phenomenon appears to be uniquely American: 90 percent of the world's Ritalin is used here.Is this a cause for alarm--or simply the case of an effective treatment meeting a newly discovered need Important medical advance--or drug of abuse, as some critics claim
Lawrence Diller has written the definitive book about this crucial debate--evenhanded, wide-ranging, and intimate in its knowledge of families, schools, and the pressures of our speeded-up society.As a pediatrician and family therapist, he has evaluated hundreds of children, adolescents, and adults for ADD, and he offers crucial information and treatment options for anyone struggling with this problem.
Running on Ritalin also throws a spotlight on some of our most fundamental values and goals.What does Ritalin say about the old conundrums of nature vs.nurture, free will vs.responsibility Is ADD a disability that entitles us to special treatment If our best is not good enough, can we find motivation and success in a pill Is there still a place for childhood in the performance-driven America of the late nineties
"A vitally important topic--and a constructive, hopeful message."
--Daniel Goleman, Ph.D.
"Running on Ritalin describes in vivid detail the performance pressures on America's children, their parents, and teachers that result too often in a prescription for Ritalin--and nothing else."
--Ramon C. Cortines, Executive Director, Pew Network for Standards-Based Reform at Stanford University
"No parent who has ever considered medication use for their child should make the decision without first reading Running on Ritalin."
--Stanley Turecki, M.D., author of The Difficult Child and Normal Children Have Problems, Too
"Balanced and thoughtful, yet it sounds a powerful alarm."
--Kirkus Reviews
Lawrence H. Diller, M.D., attended the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, and trained at the renowned Child Study Unit of the University of California, San Francisco, and the Mental Research Institute of Palo Alto.In addition to professional publications, he has written for Family Therapy Networker and for the Hastings Center Report, where his 1996 article on Ritalin became national news.He practices in Walnut Creek, California, and lives nearby with his wife and two young sons.