Cape Town-based psychiatrist, Dr Renata Schoeman, and businessperson and South African athlete, Nic de Beer, has launched the Goldilocks and The Bear Foundation, which will offer the country’s first non-profit ADHD screening and early intervention mobile clinic in underserved communities.
The initiative aims to screen 500 children per month - of the estimated 200 000 in the Western Cape who currently have no access to such services - with plans to broaden the reach nationally.
In an effort to raise funds to purchase the two small vehicles needed, and to employ four nurses to start the school visits and screening, de Beer and Dr Schoeman completed the 91km Cell C African X Trail run recently in fancy dress costume. The foundation is now calling on business and community-based organisations to assist further in their fundraising efforts.
Dr Schoeman says many children who suffer from ADHD do not have access to medical care, especially those in rural areas.
“Although mental health clinics exist in the public sector, children with ADHD often never reach this point of diagnosis and treatment due to a lack of awareness and knowledge in their communities. They are never screened for ADHD, and may be labelled as naughty, or ‘stupid’, or just silently fall out of the educational system and only come to our attention when absorbed in the criminal justice system.”
ADHD, if not treated, can cause personal, interpersonal and social burdens - impacting negatively on their overall quality of life. Children could suffer from learning disabilities, anxiety, depression, conduct disorder, oppositional defiant disorder, Tourette’s syndrome and substance abuse.
Furthermore, educational attainment is negatively affected by ADHD and research has shown that those diagnosed with ADHD completed on average two years less of formal schooling and attained a lesser employment status than those without.
“Inattention manifests behaviourally in ADHD as difficulty sustaining focus, wandering off tasks, lacking persistence, paralysing procrastination, poor time management, inefficiency and being disorganised. Hyperactivity refers to excessive motor activity when it is not appropriate or excessive fidgeting, tapping, or talkativeness; impulsivity refers to hasty actions that occur in the moment without forethought and that have high potential for harm to the individual. This may reflect reward dependence and a need for immediate gratification. Impulsive behaviours may manifest as social intrusiveness, a low frustration tolerance, mood lability, losing one’s temper, making important decisions without consideration of long-term consequences and addictive behaviours,” says Dr Schoeman.
Nurses and psychologist interns will be trained to screen the rating scales for children to identify possible symptoms of ADHD, followed by a more in-depth screening to confirm probable ADHD.
For more information, visit www.gb4adhd.co.za. Alternatively, connect with them on Facebook or on Twitter.