Driven to Distraction: Recognizing and Coping with Attention Deficit Disorder from Childhood Through Adulthood

Driven to Distraction: Recognizing and Coping with Attention Deficit Disorder from Childhood Through Adulthood

by Dr. John J. Ratey (Author), Ned Hallowell (Author)

Synopsis

Millions of children and adults tell themselves or are told by others to stop procrastinating, start concentrating, sit still, finish what they started, and get organized. But what appears to be a matter of self-discipline is for many a neurological problem. Now two doctors reveal the impact precise diagnosis and treatment can have.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 336
Edition: Reprint
Publisher: Touchstone
Published: 01 Mar 1995

ISBN 10: 0684801280
ISBN 13: 9780684801285

Media Reviews
The New York Times Book Review

A very readable, highly informative and helpful book.


Judith L. Rapoport, M.D.

Chief, Child Psychiatry Branch, National Institute of Mental Health, author of The Boy Who Couldn't Stop Washing

A wonderfully readable and, most important, practical and useful book on ADD.


Jane M. Healy, Ph.D.

author of Endangered Lives

This is an important and much-needed book! Wise, practical, and reassuring....A must-read for anyone who knows, treats, or is an underachiever -- in school or in life.


Priscilla L. Vail

author of Smart Kids with School Problems

The highest order of helping and healing glows through this book. Informative, compassionate, practical, and -- yes -- funny, it draws the reader in as it throws confusion out.


Peter D. Kramer, M.D.

author of Listening to Prozac

Conversational in tone, encyclopedic in content, and, best of all, utterly convincing because of its grounding in clinical experience, Driven to Distraction should make Attention Deficit Disorder comprehensible even to the most distractible reader.


Sandra Freed Thomas, R.N.

former president of CH.A.D.D. (Children and Adults with Attention Deficit Disorder)

This rich resource has it all -- education, family perspectives, diagnosis and treatment, subtypes -- but throughout there is a joyful and pervading sense of hope. One cannot read this book without developing a great sense of how it feels to live with ADD -- to compensate for, even to benefit from, its characteristics.