The Molecule of More

(Jacob Rumans) #1
THE MOLECULE OF MORE

with ADHD have difficulty making friends. Who wants to  be  around 
someone who interrupts, grabs things, and doesn’t wait their turn?
They often have to read homework assignments over and over again
before they understand the material. This happens as a result of con-
stant distractions. Spending that much time on homework doesn’t leave
much time for extracurricular activities, such as sports and clubs. With
few  friends, poor grades, and  cut  off  from healthy sources of pleasure, 
children living with untreated ADHD become more willing to pursue
unhealthy sources of pleasure. In addition to drugs, they may also have
problems with early sexual activity and overeating, particularly “plea-
sure foods” that are high in salt, fat, and sugar.
A massive study involving 700,000 children and adults, including
48,000 with ADHD, found that children with ADHD were 40 percent
more likely to be obese, and adults were 70 percent more likely to be
obese. At nearly three-quarters of a million participants, with data
taken from cultures around the world, the study was not only greater
in  size  than most investigations of its  type but  also  far more diverse, 
allowing the  scientists to  compare the  results from different countries 
where one  finds a  variety of diets and  eating rituals. Yet,  in  spite of the 
differences in  diets among, for  instance, Qatar, Taiwan, and  Finland, 
the  findings were the  same. Country of residence did  not  affect the 
relationship between ADHD and  obesity. There was also  no  difference 
between men and women.
Despite the strengths of this study, there are weaknesses as well. Just
because we  find  that  people with ADHD are  more likely to  be  obese 
doesn’t necessarily mean that having ADHD causes obesity. What if it
was  the other way  around? What if being overweight somehow affected 
the  brain in  a  way  that  caused ADHD? The  fancy scientific term way 
of saying this is association does not imply causation. Just because two things
are found together doesn’t necessarily mean that one caused the other.
We’d have more confidence that  ADHD leads to  obesity if we  could 
show that people develop symptoms of ADHD before they become obese.
So researchers from the Universities of Chicago and Pittsburgh eval-
uated nearly 2,500 girls  to  find  out  if there was  a  connection between 
unhealthy weight and problems with impulsivity. The lead researcher

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