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Meditation Helps Students With
ADHD
By Rick Nauert, Ph.D.
The Transcendental Meditation
technique may be an effective and safe non-pharmaceutical aid for
treating attention deficit disorder (ADHD), according to a promising
new study.
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The pilot
study followed a group of middle school students with
attention deficit disorder (ADHD) who were meditating twice
a day in school. After three months, researchers found over
50 percent reduction in stress and anxiety and improvements
in ADHD symptoms.
“The effect was much
greater than we expected,” said Sarina J. Grosswald, Ed.D.,
a George Washington University-trained cognitive learning
specialist and lead researcher on the study.
“The children also showed
improvements in attention, working memory, organization, and
behavior regulation.”
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Grosswald said that after
the in-school meditation routine began, “teachers
reported they were able to teach more, and students were
able to learn more because they were less stressed and
anxious.”
Prior research shows
ADHD children have slower brain development and a
reduced ability to cope with stress. “Stress interferes
with the ability to learn—it shuts down the brain,” said
William Stixrud, Ph.D., a Silver Spring, Maryland,
clinical neuropsychologist and co-author of the study.
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“Medication for ADHD is very
effective for some children, but it is marginally or not effective
for others. Even for those children who show improved symptoms with
the medication, the improvement is often insufficient or accompanied
by troubling side effects,” Stixrud said.
“Virtually everyone finds it
difficult to pay attention, organize themselves and get things done
when they’re under stress. So it stands to reason that the TM
technique which reduces stress and organizes brain function would
reduce ADHD symptoms.”
While in some cases a child cannot
function without medication, there is growing concern about the
health risks and side effects associated with the common ADHD
medications, including mood swings, insomnia, tics, slowed growth,
and heart problems. In 2006 the FDA required manufacturers to place
warning labels on ADHD medications, listing the potential serious
health risks.
These high risks and growing
concerns are fueling parents’ search for alternatives that may be
safer for their kids.
The study was conducted in a
private K-12 school for children with language-based learning
disabilities. Participation was restricted to 10 students, ages
11-14, who had pre-existing diagnoses of ADHD. About half of the
students were on medication. The students meditated at school in a
group for 10 minutes, morning and afternoon.
To determine the influence of the
TM technique, at the beginning and end of the three-month period,
parents, teachers and students completed standard ADHD assessment
inventories measuring stress and anxiety, behavior and social
competency, and executive function. Students were also given a
battery of performance tests to measure cognitive functioning.
”The results were quite
remarkable”
Andy and Daryl Schoenbach’s
daughter was diagnosed with ADHD in second grade. Like most ADHD
children she was taking medication.
“The medication helped but had
mixed results—she still lost focus, had meltdowns, and the
medications affected her sleep and appetite,” said Andy, who lives
with Daryl in Washington D.C.
“She was not performing close to
her potential and we didn’t see the situation improving. So at the
end of seventh grade when her doctor recommended increasing the
medication, we decided it was time to take a different
course—stopping the medication and using Transcendental Meditation.”
“The results were quite
remarkable,” Daryl said. “The twice-daily meditations smoothed
things out, gave her perspective, and enabled her to be in greater
control of her own life when things started falling apart. It took
some time, but it gradually changed the way she handled crises and
enabled her to feel confident that she could take on greater
challenges —in her own words, ‘climb a mountain.’”
“Everyone noticed the change,” Andy
added.
Grosswald explained that there is
substantial research showing the effectiveness of the TM technique
for reducing stress and anxiety, and improving cognitive functioning
among the general population.
“What’s significant about these new
findings is that among children who have difficulty with focus and
attention, we see the same results. TM doesn’t require
concentration, controlling the mind or disciplined focus. The fact
that these children are able to do TM, and do it easily shows us
that this technique may be particularly well suited for children
with ADHD,” she said.
This study was funded by the
Abramson Family Foundation and the Institute for Community
Enrichment.
A second, recently completed
TM-ADHD study with a control group measured brain function using
electroencephalography (EEG). Preliminary data shows that three
months practice of the technique resulted in significant positive
changes in brain functioning during visual-motor skills.
Changes were specifically seen in
the circuitry of the brain associated with attention and
distractibility. After six months TM practice, measurements of
distractibility moved into the normal range.
A third TM-ADHD study, to be funded
by a $2 million grant from the David Lynch Foundation (DavidLynchFoundation.org),
will more fully investigate the effects of the technique on ADHD and
other learning disorders.
The study is published this month
in the peer-reviewed online journal Current Issues in Education.
-- Courtesy
of Psychcentral.com
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