logo
Oxfordshire musician celebrates ADHD differences in new book

Oxfordshire musician celebrates ADHD differences in new book

BBC News16-02-2025

Musician Rachel Fuller was diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) two years ago but says she was seen as "a bit of a headache" as a child.Realising she had a talent for music at nine-years-old was an outlet for her to channel her differences."When I started playing the piano and I had this aptitude for it, I think everyone was relieved: 'well, at least she's really good at something,'" she says."There really was nothing like ADHD. You were just labelled a naughty, disruptive kid. I don't think I came across as someone who had something wrong with me. I think I came across as a child who was naughty."
Zoom along to today and her book BEE celebrates people's differences and is based on her ballet that was co-produced with the Royal Ballet and Opera."It's very easy to see external differences – hair colour, skin colour, eye colour, how tall you are. But we have these differences on the inside as well," she says."We all have our own unique talent and our own sort of superpower. I love that word: I hear children using it a lot. If they're a little bit different, it's a superpower."So really [BEE is] about how we're all different. I think every child at some point has felt that they're a bit left out or they're a bit different but for neurodiverse children it can feel a lot greater."
Since 2015, the number of patients in England prescribed drugs to treat ADHD has nearly trebled, and BBC research last year suggested it would take eight years to assess all adults who were on waiting lists.The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) only officially recognised ADHD in adults 17 years ago and it is thought about 3 to 4% of adults in the UK have it.For Fuller, who lives in Uffington, Oxfordshire, her diagnosis had a significant impact on her life."Suddenly all the things I thought were bad aspects of my personality, things I thought were just defects in my character – like being impatient and interrupting people when they were talking – I could see that actually [ADHD's] a physical condition where your brain does not make enough dopamine," she told BBC Radio Berkshire.BEE, written by Fuller and illustrated by Emilia Wharfe, explores difference and acceptance and the importance of individuals' talents being shared. And Fuller and Wharfe seem set to take their work to festivals over the summer. "I have an old 1965 split-screen VW Camper, because I am essentially a big child myself. I like to go camping, I like to mess around on boats. "I said to a friend and to Emilia: in the summer, decorate it with ivy and flowers and lights and get kids to sit on beanbags and read the books and play some of the music [from BEE] and maybe encourage them to to do some movement and workshop stuff," Fuller added."I feel like I might have more fun than the children!"
You can follow BBC Oxford on Facebook, X, or Instagram.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

ADHD drug mix-up led to my son, 6, receiving lethal dose of highly addictive meds... my warning to parents
ADHD drug mix-up led to my son, 6, receiving lethal dose of highly addictive meds... my warning to parents

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

ADHD drug mix-up led to my son, 6, receiving lethal dose of highly addictive meds... my warning to parents

A mix up at a pharmacy proved nearly fatal after a six-year-old's ADHD medication was accidentally swapped with a lethal dose of opioids. Sarah Paquin, a mother-of-three from British Columbia in Canada, said her son Declan had been taking dextroamphetamine to treat his attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder for years. Paquin picked up his prescription as she always did from a local Shoppers Drug Mart pharmacy, and didn't notice anything unusual. However, when her husband David went to give Declan his daily medication the next morning, he noticed the pills were a different color. When he checked the label on the bottle, he realized it contained a high dose of the opioid hydromorphone and the name on the prescription was of a woman the family didn't know. Hydromorphone is around four times more potent than morphine. The medication has the possibility of causing life-threatening breathing problems. This risk is particularly high for children due to their smaller size and weight. 'It's just terrifying. We put our trust in these local professionals to be upholding their end,' Paquin said. She's urging people to double-check their medication labels. She told CTV News: '[The pills] were in his hands. 'He would have had this high dosage of morphine and been sent off to school, unknowingly... I think this was entirely avoidable.' Mr Paquin immediately returned the medication to the pharmacy, where the pharmacist gave him a refund but she was unable to find the correct prescription. The order had to be refilled. Commenting on the matter, a spokesperson for Shoppers Drug Mart's parent company, Loblaw PR, told 'Upon review with the store, we have learned this was a case of human error, one that never should have happened. 'We have controls in place to minimize risks like this - where the patient was handed the wrong prescription bag - and the associate will review these with employees to avoid a similar situation in the future. 'The owner of this location has reached out to the patient's parents to apologize for any undue stress this may have caused, and to outline the corrective steps.' The Paquin family say they have also been informed the pharmacist responsible for the error has been suspended. They now want to make their story public in a bid to warn other parents about the importance of being vigilant. Mrs Paquin says: '[Patients and parents should] double, triple, quadruple-check every prescription you pick up, whether you've been going to that pharmacy for years, whether it's a medication you've been on for years.' The Paquins have also filed a complaint with the College of Pharmacists of British Columbia about the incident. The organization regulates all pharmacies in the province. The FDA receives over 100,000 reports related to medication errors annually, with these contributing to up to 9,000 deaths. In 2022, a former Tennessee nurse was found guilty of criminally negligent homicide in the death of a patient who was accidentally given the wrong medication. RaDonda Vaught, 37, was also convicted of gross neglect of an impaired adult in a case that fixed the attention of patient safety advocates and nurses' organizations around the country. Vaught injected the paralyzing drug vecuronium into 75-year-old Charlene Murphey instead of the sedative Versed on December 26, 2017.

Why switching to a gluten-free diet could help treat these common mental health conditions, say these leading psychiatrists
Why switching to a gluten-free diet could help treat these common mental health conditions, say these leading psychiatrists

Daily Mail​

time6 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Why switching to a gluten-free diet could help treat these common mental health conditions, say these leading psychiatrists

Asked to list the symptoms of coeliac disease or gluten sensitivity, and no doubt you think of tummy troubles: cramps, bloating, nausea and uncomfortable digestive issues. But what if we told you coeliac disease and non-coeliac gluten sensitivity can also affect your mind, not just your body – and could contribute to everything from anxiety to ADHD, depression to schizophrenia?

Restrict shop-bought baby food, government tells parents
Restrict shop-bought baby food, government tells parents

BBC News

time15 hours ago

  • BBC News

Restrict shop-bought baby food, government tells parents

Parents should not rely on shop-bought baby food pouches as everyday meals, new government guidance is the first time the NHS website has published advice on commercial baby food, and follows an investigation by BBC Panorama which found baby food pouches from six leading UK brands failed to meet their key nutritional critical of the way companies market their products as healthy options, have welcomed the leading baby food pouches carry labels such as "perfectly balanced for growing babies" or "packed with goodness". 'It's about time' advice introduced The NHS Start For Life website, run by the Department of Health and Social Care, also now advises parents to check food labels and choose products with the least amount of sugar, and to not let babies or children suck directly from food pouches - which can increase their risk of tooth it also says they should not feed snacks to children under one. Baby food snacks - such as puffs and sticks - have grown in popularity in recent weaning expert and author Charlotte Stirling-Reed told the BBC it was "about time that this was addressed... because food pouches and commercial baby foods are used so much by parents. It was a real gap in the NHS advice until now."Dr Vicky Sibson, director of the charity First Steps Nutrition Trust which campaigns for improvements in shop-bought baby foods, told the BBC that without clear advice it can be "confusing for parents" when they see shop-bought products marketed as being "just as good" as homemade foods. In April, BBC Panorama looked at the baby food pouches of six leading companies. The products have become a staple for many households with babies and children up to the age of two or three. They are convenient and have long shelf experts believe the products should only be used sparingly, are not replacements for homemade meals, and can cause children health problems if used as their main source of this was put to some of the leading brands, the market leader Ella's Kitchen told the BBC it agreed with all three other brands featured in the investigation – Heinz, Piccolo, Little Freddie, Aldi and Lidl - said their products were intended as a complementary part of a child's varied weaning NHS Start For Life website also now states that parents should wait until their baby is around six months old before feeding them solid foods, even if labels say the products are suitable from four among the brands investigated by Panorama, the companies Piccolo, Ella's Kitchen and Aldi promote their fruit-based pouches to babies as young as four months, despite the NHS and World Health Organization saying babies should not be given solid food until about the age of six Panorama began its investigation, all three companies said they are rebranding their products as suitable from six months. Baby food regulations 'need updating' Dr Sibson believes the government should now look to introduce stronger mandatory regulations for companies producing commercial baby foods to improve the suitability of the products for young children and regulate how they are marketed to Department of Health and Social Care told the BBC "current laws already set strong standards for baby food and we support action against any products that don't meet them".The British Retail Consortium says companies "take great care to optimise the nutritional composition of these products. All products are clearly labelled so parents can make informed decisions when feeding their baby."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store