Can I stop taking my medication when I’m not in school?

Usually, no. The reason is that ADHD is not only a superficial lack of concentration in class and inefficient listening, but it is actually an important executive function of the child that is affected, and the executive function of the child when they are still small, mainly in the impact on their learning, and as they grow up, it affects their partnership, parent-child relationship, teacher-student relationship, and then grow up a little more, it affects their own arrangement and planning of their own academic life, resulting in academic achievement, career achievement is affected, and then affect the economic and social status, marital relationship, and even their own health. As they grow up, it affects their partnerships, parent-child relationships, teacher-student relationships, and as they grow older, it affects their ability to organize their own academic lives, which in turn affects their academic and career achievements, and in turn affects their economic and social status, marital relationships, and even their own health. Yang Liangzheng of the Children’s Health Center of Jinan Children’s Hospital said that ADHD symptoms are not differentiated between the school day and the end of the school year; they follow the child around the clock, and while they may be more noticeable at school, it doesn’t mean that at home they don’t have a functional impact on the child. Therefore, the usual recommendation for most children is to try to stick to daily medication 7 days a week, 365 days a year, regardless of weekends and summer and winter vacations. Don’t I have to take medication if I don’t attend school?