Reviews of the literature on attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
(ADHD) typically begin early in the twentieth century with the descriptions
provided by paediatrician George Still. Physician Alexander Crichton,
however, described all of the essential features of the Inattentive subtype
of ADHD more than a century earlier than Still. This article presents a short
biography of Crichton, looks at his 1798 publication describing attentional
disorders in otherwise healthy individuals, contrasts his medical writing
with the moralism of Still, and shows how his thoughts and observations
are very much in accord with DSM-IV criteria for the Inattentive subtype of
ADHD.