A study was recently conducted in Denmark, Norway, in conjunction with the Child Study Center at the Yale University School of Medicine, to determine the safety of stimulant medication to treat children with ADHD. Shockingly, a small-but-significant finding demonstrated cardiovascular events as a result of this ADHD medication in the children monitored.

Roughly 700,000 children were monitored, and out of those, 8,300 children had ADHD. Although the episodes of cardiovascular events were few, it did show a direct correlation between cardiovascular events (high blood pressure, heart palpitations, etc.) with stimulant medication used to treat ADHD.

In the United States, approximately 3 to 4 million children are prescribed stimulant medication to combat the symptoms of ADHD. According to Marilyn Wedge, Ph.D. in Psychology Today, regarding children diagnosed with ADHD, “doctors tend to extoll the virtues of stimulant drugs while downplaying the risks and side effects.” Essentially, the doctors don’t tend to prescribe those alternative solutions —  “there is little solid research on non-pharmaceutical treatment of ADHD.” Hopefully, though, this study will force us to look more seriously at these medications.