ADHD affects approximately one in ten children and one in twenty adults in the U.S. Children and teens with ADHD and members of their immediate families are significantly less likely to ever set foot in a church. In this workshop of interest to ministry leaders, family members and professionals, Dr. Stephen Grcevich will discuss the differences in brain functioning seen in persons with ADHD, explain how the condition impacts participation in worship services, Christian education and other common church activities, identify common pitfalls to spiritual development, share useful strategies for including persons with ADHD into church programming and provide practical ideas family members can use to promote spiritual growth in their child, spouse or loved one with ADHD.
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The Many Impacts of ADHD Upon Spiritual Development
1. The Many Impacts of ADHD
Upon Spiritual Development
Stephen Grcevich, MD
President and Founder, Key Ministry
Wonderfully Made Conference
Overland Park, KS
October 24, 2019
2. Our objectives today…
• Discuss differences in brain functioning seen in persons with ADHD
• Explore how ADHD impacts participation in worship services,
Christian education and other common church activities and useful
strategies for including them in the full range of ministry
environments
• Identify common pitfalls to spiritual development for children, teens
and adults with ADHD
• Introduce practical ideas family members can use to promote
spiritual growth in their child, spouse or loved one with ADHD.
3. What is
ADHD?
• A neurodevelopmental disorder
characterized by an age-
inappropriate degree of…
• Inattentiveness/disorganization
• Impulsivity
• Hyperactivity
• Hyperactivity goes away first as
children age, impulse control
improves next
• Adults struggle with time
management, task completion,
organization, prioritization
4. ADHD facts and figures:
• 11% of U.S. kids ages 4-17 have been diagnosed with
ADHD…88% continue to carry the diagnosis
• Highest prevalence in southeastern U.S.
• 69% are currently prescribed medication but…the
majority don’t take medication on an ongoing basis
• 42% increase in parent-reported prevalence since 2003
• Many have “comorbid” mental health conditions
Source: U.S. Centers for Disease Control
5. 35
25
29 28
33
21
8
11 11
66
32
15
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
%
Comorbidity in Pediatric ADHD
Lifetime Prevalence of Comorbid Conditions in
Pediatric Population With ADHD
Biederman J. J Clin Psychiatry. 2004;65(suppl 3):3-7.
Boys (N = 140)
Girls (N = 140)
ODD Enuresis
Major
Depression
Multiple
(>2)
Anxiety
Conduct
Disorder
Bipolar
Disorder
6. Preschool
School-age
Adolescence
College-age
Adult
Disruptive behavior
Academic failure
Poor socialization
Self-esteem issues
Injuries
Low self-esteem
Smoking
Substance use
Crime
Car accidents
Academic failure
Occupational failure
Substance abuse
Relationship failures
Poor work history
Chronic substance
abuse and dependence
Incarceration
ADHD impairment across the lifespan…
Slide courtesy ofJoseph Biederman, MD.
7. What
Causes
ADHD?
• Genetics - primary factor
• 70-80% of risk
• many genes appear to make minor
contributions
• Trauma
• Environmental toxins
• drugs, alcohol, cigarettes
• environmental toxins (lead)
• Prematurity
• Technology?
• Birthday influences diagnosis in
younger kids
8. Catecholamine Mechanisms in ADHD
Posterior
Parietal
Cortex
Prefrontal
Cortex
Striatum
Sensory
input
Cerebellum
Locus
Coeruleus
VTA
Substantia
Nigra
NE enhances
relevant
signal
NE enhances
relevant signal
DA suppresses
irrelevant signal
Posner MI, et al. Images of Mind. 1st ed. New York, NY: Scientific American Library; 1997.
9. Executive
functioning
as the
fundamental
difference in
persons
with ADHD
• Cognitive abilities involved in
controlling and regulating
other abilities and behaviors.
• Necessary for
• initiating goal-directed
behavior,
• regulating emotions
• delaying gratification
• learning from one’s mistakes
• planning future behavior.
• Struggle to adapt to new
situations and foresee
outcomes of their behavior.
10. Five Key Executive Functions
• Behavioral inhibition
• Verbal working memory
• Non-verbal working memory
• Emotional self-regulation
• Reconstitution
12. How might having ADHD impact
church participation?
• Difficulty sitting through adult worship service,
• Struggles keeping hands to self at children’s worship/Sunday
School
• Prone to immediate, negative reactions to authority figures
• Teens may struggle with time management, prioritizing
church activity
• Misses youth group when homework is unfinished
13. The more stimulation they have to process, the less
capacity they have for self-control
14. Unique
challenges
presented to
the church
by kids with
ADHD:
• Church environments are generally
less structured than school
• Churches rely upon ministry volunteers
who lack training as educators
• Parents, physicians often withhold
effective ADHD medication for
weekends
• Many church activities occur when
ADHD medication has worn off
15. How does
ADHD
present
challenges
to
internalizing
faith?
• More difficulty living a spiritually
disciplined life
• More difficulty with quiet
reflection, meditation
• Difficulty sustaining Bible study,
worship, spiritual practices that
becomes tedious
• More difficulty delaying
immediate gratification for long-
term spiritual outcomes
16. How
instability of
spiritual
growth
might arise
from ADHD
• Vulnerable to negative peer,
environmental influences
• Effects of intense spiritual experiences
(VBS, retreats, mission trips) fade
when context is gone
• “Roller-coaster” spirituality
• Shunned for volunteer, leadership
opportunities if perceived as
undisciplined, disorganized
• Drawn to more participatory, action-
oriented, relational religious contexts
17. Seven strategies for promoting mental
health inclusion (TEACHER)
• Assemble your inclusion team
• Create welcoming ministry environments.
• Focus on ministry activities most essential to
spiritual growth
• Communicate effectively
• Help families with their most heartfelt needs
• Offer education and support
• Empower the people of your church to
assume responsibility for ministry
18. ADHD inclusion strategies (children/youth)
• Registration/sign-in needs to be orderly
• Staffing for transition times before/after services
• Use of color, lighting
• Engaging, not overwhelming
• Communication strategies
• Reinforce key point(s)
• Use of personal stories, experiences
• System for getting helps, resources to parents
• Family worship experiences geared to kids?
19. ADHD inclusion strategies (adults)
• Clear signage, direction
• Use of music, technology
• Remove distraction in
worship, adult education
spaces
• Flexibility in dress code
• Simple communication
• Disproportionately found in
AA, substance abuse ministries
20. Discipleship strategies for children, youth with
ADHD
• Church, parents as partners in teaching kids about God
• Learn and retain more in 1:1, small group situations
• Ministry resources need to be sent directly to parents - role
for technology?
• Where can they be involved in meaningful service?
• Better loading trucks at food bank vs. sitting in a circle
21. Discipleship strategies for adults with ADHD
• Connections with others in the church especially important
• Small groups offer multiple accountability partners
• Break Scripture into smaller, manageable parts
• Study guide format for sermon notes
• They’re doers as opposed to listeners
• You have to remind them if you want them to come
22. How can I help my child with ADHD grow in
faith?
• Spend time with your child one on one or as a family…
• praying together
• studying the Bible together
• Make Jesus, Scripture interesting by sharing how you’ve
applied what you’ve learned
• Seek opportunities for your child to serve using their talents,
gifts
• Attend church regularly!
23. What can I do to help my spouse, sibling or friend with ADHD
to come to faith, grow in faith?
• Invite them to church (or remind them to come)
• Go with them to a church where they’re more likely to have
a positive experience
• Pray, study the Bible, serve with them
• Connect them to others in the church who will accept them,
follow up with them
24. What
advantages
might ADHD
provide a
follower of
Christ?
• Willing to take chances for God
• Energized by ministry activities
that capture their imagination
• Effective on ministry teams when
others have complimentary
organizational skills
• Good at identifying trends
• Overrepresented among senior
pastors, student pastors?
25. Key Ministry promotes meaningful connection
between churches and families of kids with
disabilities for the purpose of making
disciples of Jesus Christ.
Free training, consultation, support and resources
What Does Key Ministry Do?
26. Help from Key Ministry
• Training
• Conferences
• Video training
• Roundtables
• Consultation to church teams
• Resources
• Networking with other ministries
• Social media, sermon videos, research to
support your ministry
• Someone to come alongside your
ministry!
27. Connect with Key Ministry
Catherine Boyle –Director of Mental Health Ministry
• www.keyministry.org
• Twitter: @KeyMinistry
• www.facebook.com/keyministry
• www.keyministry.org/contact/
• steve@keyministry.org
• catherine@keyministry.org