Based on statistical research of Dr. Russell Barkley, Ph.D.6
- On average, there are 1 to 3 children who have ADHD in every classroom of 30 students
- Three to six more boys are diagnosed than girls
- The rate of emotional development for children with ADHD is 30% slower than their non-ADD peers. For example, a 10-year-old with ADHD operates at the maturity level of about a 7-year-old; a 16-year-old beginning driver is using the decision-making skills of an 11-year-old
- 65% of children with ADHD have problems with defiance, non-compliance and other problems with authority figures, including verbal hostility and temper tantrums
- 25% of students with ADHD have other serious learning problems in one or more of these areas: oral expression, listening skills, reading comprehension, and math
- Half of all ADHD students have listening comprehension problems
- About one-third of these students have one or more of the following: Language deficits (poor listening comprehension, poor verbal expression, poor reading comprehension), poor organizational skills, poor memory, and poor fine motor skills
- Students with ADHD are two to three times more likely to have problems with expressive language than their non-ADD peers
- 75% of boys with ADD are hyperactive; 60% of girls with ADD are hyperactive
- 40% of children who have ADHD have at least one parent who has ADHD
- 50% of children who have ADHD also have sleep problems
- Parents of a child who has ADHD are three times as likely to separate or divorce as parents of non-ADD children
- Teenagers with ADHD have almost four times as many traffic citations as their non-ADD peers
- Teens with ADHD have four times as many car wrecks and are seven times more likely to have a second accident
- 21% of teens with ADHD skip school repeatedly
- 35% eventually drop out of school
- 45% have been suspended
- 30% have failed or had to repeat a year of school