What Parents Can Do
Parenting is as important as any other part of ADHD treatment. The way parents
respond can make ADHD better — or worse.
If your child has been diagnosed with ADHD:
Be involved. Learn all you can about ADHD. Follow the treatment
your child's provider recommends. Keep all recommended therapy appointments. If your
child takes ADHD
medicines, give them at the recommended time. Don't change the dose without checking
with your doctor. Keep your child's medicines in a safe place where others can't get
to them.
Know how ADHD affects your child. Every child is different. Identify
the difficulties your child has because of ADHD. Some kids need to get better at paying
attention and listening. Others need to get better at slowing down. Ask your child's
therapist for
tips and ways you can help your child practice and improve.
Focus on teaching your child one thing at a time. Don't try to
work on everything at once. Start small. Pick one thing to focus on. Praise your child's
effort.

Discipline with purpose and warmth. Learn what discipline approaches
are best for a child with ADHD and which can make ADHD worse. Get coaching from your
child's therapist on ways to respond to your child's behaviors. Kids with ADHD might
be sensitive to criticism. Correcting their behavior is best done in a way that's
encouraging and supportive rather than punishing.
Set clear expectations. Before you go somewhere, talk with your
child to explain how you want him to behave. Focus more energy on teaching your child
what to do, rather than reacting to what not to do.
Talk about it. Don't shy away from talking with your child about
ADHD. Help kids understand that having ADHD is not their fault, and that they can
learn ways to improve the problems it causes.
Spend special time together every day. Make time to talk and enjoy
relaxing, fun activities with your child — even if it's just for a few minutes.
Give your child your full attention. Compliment positive behaviors. Don't over-praise,
but do comment when your child does something good. For example, when your child waits
her turn, say, "You're taking turns so nicely."
Your relationship with your child matters most. Kids with ADHD
often feel they're letting others down, doing things wrong, or not being "good." Protect
your child's self-esteem
by being patient, understanding, and accepting. Let your child know you believe in
him and see all the good things about him. Build resilience by keeping your relationship
with your child positive and loving.
Work with your child's school.
Talk with your child's teacher to find out if your child should have an IEP.
Meet often with your child's teacher to find out how your child is doing. Work with
the teacher to help your child do well.
Connect with others for support and awareness. Join a support
organization for ADHD like CHADD to get updates on treatment and info, etc.
Find out if you have ADHD. ADHD is often inherited. Parents (or
other relatives) of kids with ADHD might not know they have it too. When parents with
ADHD get diagnosed and treated, it helps them be at their best as parents.
Date reviewed: November 2017