Multimodal behavior program for ADHD incorporating yoga and implemented by high school volunteers: a pilot study

Sanjiv Mehta, Vijay Mehta, Sagar Mehta, Devesh Shah, Ashok Motiwala, Jay Vardhan, Naina Mehta, Devendra Mehta, Sanjiv Mehta, Vijay Mehta, Sagar Mehta, Devesh Shah, Ashok Motiwala, Jay Vardhan, Naina Mehta, Devendra Mehta

Abstract

A low-cost resource approach to ADHD therapy would be a practical approach to treating children in developing countries. Research has shown that ADHD is prevalent in all areas of the world, and yet treatment for children in more impoverished countries is still lacking. The approach taken was to combine yoga and meditation combined with multimodal behavioral therapy program for children ageing 6 to 11. The program was kept low cost by using trained high school volunteers and integrating the program within the public school. After 6 weeks of the program, 90.5% of children showed improvement as measured by their performance impairment score, a measurement of academic performance. Parent and Teacher evaluations of behavior also found improvement as 25 of the 64 children (39.1%) improved into the normal range as measured by the Vanderbilt questionnaire. Moreover, children could successfully learn both yoga and meditation from high school students irrespective of their age, ADHD type, or initial performance impairment. The results demonstrate efficacy of a multimodal behavioral program incorporating yoga and meditation. The use of high school volunteers from schools in the area demonstrates an effective low-cost and universally applicable approach.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Performance Improvement after 6 weeks. We measured improvement in school performance as rated by the teacher. This shows the distribution of performance improvement in the children after the 6-week program. Overall, 90.5% showed some improvement in these scores.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Performance impairment at diagnosis and yoga score. We compared the children's ability to learn yoga with their initial impairment in academic performance. We show that children could learn yoga irrespective of their initial impairment. The slight trend for lower yoga scores with a higher performance impairment score was not significant (R = 0).
Figure 3
Figure 3
Performance impairment at diagnosis and meditation score. We compared the children's ability to control their breathing with their initial impairment in academic performance. We show that children could learn meditation and control their breath irrespective of their initial impairment score. The slight trend for lower meditation scores with a higher performance impairment score was not significant (R = 0.14).

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Source: PubMed

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