www.englishmed.com - Home
Technical support forums
 Search
 Log In
Login with your account

Create new account
Forgot your password?
 Top 10 Exercises
 Collocations85125
 Doctor and patient vo..80421
 Collocations78601
 Multiple-Choice Quest..77546
 Look at the following..65031
 Look at the following..65025
 Words and Expressions..56039
 Diarrhoea52557
 Arrange the following..51714
 Collocations and Expr..47496
Start > Doctors > Resource centre > Articles > Children on the go Part 3

The cause of this extreme overactivity depends on many factors, ranging from problems at birth, slow language learning, clumsiness and behavioural difficulties. Parents often think hyperactivity stems from something in the diet. This is frequently misleading as they miss other avenues of help.

Food allergies causing hyperactivity are rare. Special diets only help a few but the results are dramatic and are usually seen in children who are exhibiting other symptoms of allergy, such as wheezing and rashes. Doctors tend to under-diagnose these problems.

All over-active children need psychiatric and educational assessment and parents need counselling and advice on how to manage the tricky problem. Paradoxically, stimulant drugs - which you'd expect to make things worse - sometimes bring an improvement.

Teacher: Michael
Many articles taken from 'A word with the doctor', by Dr. John Windsor.


Exercises on this article:
Recreate this article
Reconstruct this article Irregular verbs
Articles (a, an, the) Determiners Replace missing verbs
Medical English

 Latest articles for doctors
Dialogue - Sprained Angle
The dreaded mosquito Part 1
The dreaded mosquito Part 2
The dreaded mosquito Part 3
St James Hospital Eye Centre: A new conc..
St James Hospital Eye Centre: A new conc..
St James Hospital Eye Centre: A new conc..
St James Hospital Eye Centre: A new conc..
St James Hospital Eye Centre: A new conc..
St James Hospital Eye Centre: A new conc..
Losing Weight the lipase way Part 1
Varicose veins Part 2