“…With a worldwide-pooled prevalence of 5.3% among children (Polanczyk, de Lima, Horta, Biederman, & Rohde, 2007) and 2.5% among adults (Simon, Czobor, Bálint, Mészáros, & Bitter, 2009), attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a mental illness of high epidemiological, clinical, and cultural importance. In recent years, controversial discussions about diagnostic labels (Asherson et al, 2010; Moncrieff & Timimi, 2010), etiology (Batstra, te Meerman, Conners, & Frances, 2017; Dehue et al, 2017; Hoogman et al, 2017), and pharmacotherapy (Boesen et al, 2017; Gerlach, Banaschewski, Coghill, Rohde, & Romanos, 2017; Häßler, 2019; Kölch, 2019; Romanos, Coghill et al, 2016; Romanos, Reif, & Banaschewski, 2016; Storebø et al, 2015) have dominated a large part of academic debates surrounding this disorder. Thus, the authors of a recent mega-analysis of subcortical structures and intracranial volumes using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) brain scans, covered widely in the media, concluded thatpatients with ADHD have altered brains; therefore, ADHD is a disorder of the brain.
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