Self-Tests for ADHD, ODD, Autism, OCD, Learning Disabilities https://www.additudemag.com ADHD symptom tests, ADD medication & treatment, behavior & discipline, school & learning essentials, organization and more information for families and individuals living with attention deficit and comorbid conditions Fri, 17 Jan 2025 18:03:09 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://i0.wp.com/www.additudemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/cropped-additude-favicon-512x512-1.png?w=32&crop=0%2C0px%2C100%2C32px&ssl=1 Self-Tests for ADHD, ODD, Autism, OCD, Learning Disabilities https://www.additudemag.com 32 32 216910310 [Self-Test] Screen and Phone Addiction Screener https://www.additudemag.com/screen-addiction-test-adults/ https://www.additudemag.com/screen-addiction-test-adults/?noamp=mobile#respond Fri, 03 Jan 2025 20:32:40 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=368696 The average American checks their phone 205 times a day — about once every five minutes during waking hours.1 Nearly 45% of people report experiencing phone addiction, and about 40% of people feel panic or anxiety when their phone battery goes below 20%.

Smartphones and, by extension, social media consume more of our time and attention than most of us realize. This isn’t accidental; devices and apps are designed to keep us hooked. It’s why many of us experience “FOMO” (fear of missing out) and other negative feelings when we’re not connected — all signs of unhealthy screen use. For people with ADHD, the risk of developing unhealthy digital habits may be even greater due impulsivity, altered reward processing, and difficulty with boredom.

Answer these questions to see how your digital habits measure up and how you can cultivate healthier screen habits.

I spend more time on my smartphone, computer, or device than I want to each day.

I am often distracted by notifications on my smartphone, computer, or other devices.

I check my phone compulsively, often without thinking — it feels automatic.

I worry about what I’m missing if I don’t check my smartphone or social media accounts.

I become irritable, anxious, or sad when I don’t have access to my devices or can’t check social media.

I am unhappy with my social media presence.

I use social media as a substitute for real-life social interactions.

After I go on social media, I often feel inadequate or disappointed with my life.

It is difficult for me to resist looking at my device(s) when I’m doing other things, like working, studying, spending time with others, walking, or driving.

I am a passive social media user; I lurk without much interaction, mindlessly scroll, and seldom post.


Can’t see the self-test questions above? Click here to open this test in a new window.

The questions in this resource were derived from ADDitude’s ADHD Experts webinar titled, “The Journey to Independence: A Parent’s Guide to Delayed Adulthood with ADHD” [Video Replay & Podcast #503] with Anthony Rostain, M.D., M.A., which was broadcast on May 1, 2024.


Screen Addiction and ADHD: Next Steps


SUPPORT ADDITUDE
Thank you for reading ADDitude. To support our mission of providing ADHD education and support, please consider subscribing. Your readership and support help make our content and outreach possible. Thank you.

Sources

1 Wheelwright, T. (2024, Dec. 16). Cell Phone Usage Stats 2024: Americans Check Their Phones 205 Times a Day. https://www.reviews.org/mobile/cell-phone-addiction/

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“How I Dismantle My RSD with Mindfulness” https://www.additudemag.com/overcoming-rejection-sensitivity-adhd-mindfulness/ https://www.additudemag.com/overcoming-rejection-sensitivity-adhd-mindfulness/?noamp=mobile#respond Mon, 30 Dec 2024 10:36:13 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=368143 Rejection sensitive dysphoria (RSD) is by far the most debilitating aspect of living with ADHD for me. It manifests as extreme anxiety around possible criticism, embarrassment, or disapproval from others. Minor interactions can send me spiraling with self-doubt for hours as I obsessively analyze every word and facial expression for traces of negativity.

RSD makes everyday, non-threatening social encounters incredibly stressful. Because of RSD, I’ve missed one too many social activities to avoid dealing with the emotional fallout of potential rejection. Horrified that I would say or do something wrong, I would decline invitations from friends or skip optional work activities. My friendships and intimate relationships suffered as a result.

A change of plans, even if rational, would send me into a panic. My mind raced with catastrophic worst-case scenarios – beyond “this person doesn’t like me.” I scanned facial expressions for the slightest hint of negativity to confirm my irrational thoughts. At work, I second-guessed every decision and comment from coworkers, constantly fearing I’d be fired. As someone highly sensitive to feedback due to ADHD, perceived rejection or even constructive criticism felt unbearable and left deep emotional wounds.

Overcoming Rejection Sensitivity with Mindfulness

It took realizing that I was experiencing RSD in the first place for things to improvement to begin. Awareness of the biological roots of my intense reactions helped reduce my shame over what felt like a personal failing. But knowledge alone doesn’t always curb anxious thoughts in the moment. That’s where mindfulness steps in.

Mindfulness teaches you to observe your thoughts and feelings in the present moment without judgment. The idea is this: Pausing to observe calms intense emotions and provides space to avoid getting carried away by them. Below, I share a few mindfulness practices that have helped me cope with RSD.

[Get This Free Download: Understanding Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria]

1. Get Moving

At first, I struggled to literally sit still with racing RSD-fueled thoughts for more than a few minutes. I learned that it’s easier to enter a state of mindfulness while I walk. As I walk, I notice physical sensations to anchor my attention to, like my every inhale and exhale and the contact my feet make against the ground. Tracking small details is such an effective distraction from worrying narratives. Over time, I was able to sustain non-reactive awareness for longer periods.

2. Thoughtfully Question

Mindfulness also helps me recognize the cognitive distortions behind RSD. I learned to question whether my perceptions line up with facts. Was someone really angry at me just because their voice sounded off? Why assume the worst with little evidence? Approaching each situation with the willingness to question my reactions, again and again, eventually grew easier.

3. Write It Out

What is writing, if not a pure exercise in mindfulness? The process of channeling thoughts onto paper forces me to slow down, name what I’m feeling, and eventually look for a balanced perspective rather than stew in emotion.

4. Kind Self-Talk

Whether you’re walking or writing, kind self-talk is part of mindfulness. The trick is breaking patterns of harsh criticism after setbacks and replacing those with a thought or two about what went well. Learning to notice and appreciating small social wins boosted my confidence and made future interactions easier.

[Read: The Power of Positive Self-Talk — Increase Productivity and Happiness]

Today, RSD still comes, but I’m armed with coping skills. When anxiety rises, I breathe deeply and shift focus outward rather than spiraling inward. I try my best to pause before I react and stretch the space between desire and action. I accept uncertainty instead of constantly seeking reassurance that only prolongs distress. I don’t always get it right, and RSD sometimes gets the best of me, but regularly practicing mindfulness has undoubtedly upped my emotional resilience. Most importantly, I’m learning to be gentle with myself.

Overcoming Rejection Sensitivity with ADHD: Next Steps


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“15 Ways to Make ADHD Patients Feel Seen and Heard.” https://www.additudemag.com/listening-to-patients-adhd/ https://www.additudemag.com/listening-to-patients-adhd/?noamp=mobile#respond Thu, 26 Dec 2024 10:25:52 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=367962 The following is a personal essay, and not a medical recommendation endorsed by ADDitude. For more information about ADHD diagnosis and treatment, speak with your physician.

As a family physician who specializes in ADHD, I see patients who are not just frustrated by their interactions with providers but devastated by the way they have been treated. They have significant impairments that provider after provider has minimized, and they have a very hard time getting help.

I have been treating ADHD for more than 15 years and what my new patients tell me about the struggles they’ve endured while seeking care is disheartening and depressing. Many of us providers haven’t been taught about ADHD in adults and are afraid to diagnose or treat it. To help you, the provider, be part of the solution, instead of part of the problem, I offer the following points to help you understand ADHD and really see the patient in front of you.

The Person in Front of You

  • The person in your office is scared to death that you are going to judge them or invalidate their experiences. They have probably spent weeks or months debating whether they should say anything about their impairments.
  • This person likely has been let down by the medical system that minimizes their impairments and even scoffs at their pain. As they’ve learned to expect such treatment, they may feel they have to go overboard to convince you that they really are impaired.
  • At the same time, the person in front of you likely feels ashamed that they can’t “adult” — that they can’t handle the mundane details of human existence that we all have to deal with, so they may minimize their impairments. Patients, in sum, will either overstate or minimize their impairments. Both sides are normal.

[Read: Is Adult ADHD Real? Yes — and Still Heavily Stigmatized]

You, the Provider

  • Please check your filters at the door and listen to your patient with curiosity and an open mind. It may help to think, “What if everything they’re saying is true?” Remember that your patient showed up because they are sure that something is wrong with them. They feel awful, tired, and overwhelmed no matter what they do. Attend to your patient’s concerns thoroughly.
  • Pause if you catch yourself thinking, “That’s normal. I do that.” We all know what it is to experience forgetfulness, moments of impulsivity, and other behaviors that look like ADHD. What signals ADHD is the degree to which a patient’s symptoms cause impairment and suffering.
  • Treating ADHD is incredibly rewarding. Most of us went into medicine to help people and make a positive difference in someone’s life. Helping a patient manage their condition results in truly life-changing outcomes.

On Diagnosing ADHD

  • There is no one perfect way to diagnose ADHD. Most people are diagnosed with the use of rating scales like the ASRS, Barkley, or Conners, which are often sufficient to screen for ADHD alone.
  • Even if you aren’t a specialist, you can diagnose ADHD.
  • Neuropsychological tests are not a good way to diagnose ADHD. The psychologists who do those tests feel even less comfortable diagnosing ADHD than you do.
  • ADHD is more underdiagnosed than it is overdiagnosed.

[Get This Free Download: The Clinicians’ Guide to Differential Diagnosis of ADHD]

On Treating ADHD

  • Stimulants really are the best first-line treatment for ADHD.
  • The Schedule II controlled substance classification for stimulants makes them sound more addictive than they actually are. After all, consider the fact that many patients who take prescribed stimulant medication for ADHD frequently miss doses and, in my experience, days of medication. How often do you think your patients who take opiates or benzodiazepines forget to take their medication? Not very often because they get physical withdrawal symptoms if they miss a dose.
  • There is no way to know ahead of time what stimulant and dosage will work best for a patient. Trust what the patient says about how their medication is working. My experience shows that, if left to make the decision on their own, most patients will choose too low of a dose.
  • Stimulants need to work for as long as possible during the day, not just for a few hours. A patient shouldn’t have to pick and choose the hours during which their medication should work in order for them to function and meet life’s demands. Would you want that for yourself? Would you present your most focused, productive self only to your morning patients? What about your afternoon patients and your family? Is it fair that they see your most irritable, unfocused self? These are the kinds of decisions patients have to make if their stimulant doesn’t last all day long.
  • Most patients are not drug seeking. They are desperately trying to find a way to function like adults and gain control over their lives. What they seek most is your understanding and support.

Listening to Patients with ADHD: Next Steps


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Thank you for reading ADDitude. To support our mission of providing ADHD education and support, please consider subscribing. Your readership and support help make our content and outreach possible. Thank you.

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Stimulant Medication Normalizes Brain Structures in Children with ADHD: New Study https://www.additudemag.com/stimulant-meds-adhd-brain-development-study/ https://www.additudemag.com/stimulant-meds-adhd-brain-development-study/?noamp=mobile#respond Thu, 19 Dec 2024 17:25:38 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=368405 December 19, 2024

Stimulant medication may normalize certain brain regions impacted by ADHD in children, according to a cross-sectional neuroimaging study of 7,126 children aged 9 to 10 recently published in Neuropsychopharmacology.1

Study participants were divided into three groups. The “no-med ADHD” group included 1,002 children with severe ADHD symptoms who were not taking stimulant medication. The “stim low-ADHD” group included 273 children whose ADHD symptoms were mild and well-managed with stimulant medication. The “TDC” group included 5,378 typically developing controls.

ADHD symptoms experienced by the no-med ADHD group were associated with brain structure abnormalities not seen in the TDC or stim low-ADHD group, including:

  • lower cortical thickness in the insula (INS), a brain area associated with saliency detection or the ability to prioritize information
  • less grey matter volume in the nuclear accumbens (NAc), a brain area associated with reward processing and motivation

Children in the stim low-ADHD group showed no significant differences in these brain areas compared to controls. This contrast in structural MRIs suggests that stimulant medication may work to normalize some (but not all) brain regions and improve symptoms in children with ADHD.

Stimulant medication was not associated with improvement in all brain regions. Among those not impacted were the following:

  • the caudate (CAU), a brain area responsible for motor control
  • the amygdala (AMY), a brain area responsible for emotions

“This result is consistent with previous studies,” the researchers wrote. “Reduced volume in children with ADHD in the CAU is one of the most replicated findings in sMRI studies. No effect of stimulant medications was found in the CAU in the participants with ADHD in several cross-sectional studies. Along the same lines, longitudinal studies on children pointed to the improvement of volumes in the CAU associated with age but not stimulant medications… and two previous studies also pointed out there was no effect of stimulant medications on the AMY.”

Non-stimulant medication did not significantly impact brain structure.

A separate validation analysis included 273 participants with high ADHD symptoms who were taking stimulant medication; the results were consistent with the main study and still suggested that stimulant medication had a positive and noticeable effect on the brain structure of children in this group compared to the no-med ADHD group, even though both groups had high symptom severity at the time of the study.

“These findings are important for the treatment of children with ADHD using stimulant medication,” the researchers wrote.

Stimulant Medication & the ADHD Brain

Stimulants are the first-line treatment for ADHD in children aged 6 and older, teens, and adults. However, some people with ADHD discontinue medication due to side effects. The most common side effects reported by caregivers in ADDitude’s 2023 treatment survey were appetite suppression, irritability or moodiness, and sleep problems.

“Our current medication treatments for ADHD work quite well, but unfortunately, many children stop the treatment or stop taking medication,” said Jonathan Posner, M.D., in his 2020 ADDitude webinar, “Secrets of the ADHD Brain: How Brain Imaging Helps Us Understand and Treat Attention Deficit.” “In fact, the majority of teenagers with ADHD will stop treatment within two years.”

Understanding the parts of the brain that are impacted by stimulant medication can help refine treatment and determine “which of those changes are responsible for symptom improvement versus side effects,” Posner said.

“One of the things that brain imaging has shown is that the development of the brain in children with ADHD seems to be somewhat delayed,” Posner said. “But the overall course of development in children with ADHD versus without ADHD is very similar. It’s almost as if the ADHD brain is a couple of years behind. The very optimistic part of this is that it ultimately does catch up for most children with ADHD.”

For the majority of patients, ADHD symptoms do continue into adulthood, and the prevalence of ADHD in adults is rising. 2, 3 However, the present study confirmed Posner’s observations and found that children with even severe ADHD caught up developmentally for the region of the brain responsible for prioritizing information.

MRI scans showed greater cortical thickness in the INS region for the stim-low ADHD group and TDC group compared to the no-med ADHD group. However, data from a two-year follow-up analysis showed these differences were no longer present. Development of the INS is complicated, the researchers noted, but they suggested that “the No-Med group has delayed INS development at baseline, which eventually catches up to the other children.” Researchers theorize that stimulant medication may speed up this process and will continue to follow up with children over the next few years.

Limitations & Future Research

Participant data was obtained from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study, an ongoing study since 2019 that will follow children over 10 years. Data was obtained via structural MRIs and symptom questionnaires and analyzed using linear mixed-effects models (LMM). The study included measures of cortical thickness, cortical area, cortical and subcortical volumes, and total intracranial volume.

The ABCD study lacked diagnostic information for ADHD; therefore, researchers grouped participants using latent class analysis (LCA) and 18 ADHD symptoms from the K-SADS — a moderately reliable test of affective disorders and schizophrenia. Children with bipolar disorders and anxiety disorders, oppositional defiant disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorders, and conduct disorders were excluded from the study.

Results indicate that stimulant medication may enhance brain structure and alleviate ADHD symptoms; however, this study was cross-sectional and did not establish clear causation. Information on the mean dose and duration of participants’ stimulant medication use was missing from the study. Additionally, researchers warned that the study did not fully capture the association between brain structure and ADHD severity. The stim-low ADHD group was much smaller than the other two groups, which may have hindered the study’s results. The two-year follow-up (in line with ABCD study release 4.0) included fewer participants (3,992 after exclusion criteria). Results should be interpreted with caution.

Future research should further incorporate supplemental data on stimulant use, study stimulant use by patients with severe ADHD, and include more longitudinal data.

Sources

1Wu, F., Zhang, W., Ji, W. et al. (2024). Stimulant medications in children with ADHD normalize the structure of brain regions associated with attention and reward. Neuropsychopharmacol, 49, 1330–1340. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41386-024-01831-4

2U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2024, October 4). ADHD in adults: an overview.
https://www.cdc.gov/adhd/articles/adhd-across-the-lifetime.html

3American Psychiatric Association. (2019, November 15). ADHD increasing among adults.
https://www.psychiatry.org/news-room/apa-blogs/adhd-increasing-among-adults

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“5 Ways to Escape ADHD Paralysis” https://www.additudemag.com/how-to-get-out-of-adhd-paralysis/ https://www.additudemag.com/how-to-get-out-of-adhd-paralysis/?noamp=mobile#respond Thu, 19 Dec 2024 10:35:46 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=368328 ADHD paralysis is executive dysfunction in its most notorious form. It often looks like scrolling on your phone for hours even though your mind is screaming at you to get up and cross that thing off your to-do list.

As a therapist, I treat so many people with ADHD who struggle to meet intention with action. It results in draining, self-sabotaging habits and forgotten goals. It makes my clients feel like they have no control over their lives.

Though executive dysfunction is a part of living with ADHD, there are ways around it. The following tools have helped my clients with ADHD break free from its grip and take action in their everyday lives.

How to Get Out of ADHD Paralysis: 5 Tools to Beat Executive Dysfunction

1. The Countdown Trick

In many of our kitchens is a handy device to propel us to action: The microwave timer.

The magic of microwave timers is that they constrain an activity, giving it a fixed end time. Bring this principle to other activities in your life! Commit to, say, tidying your kitchen until your clothes are done washing. Only scroll through social media while the pasta cooks. Get up from the couch when a podcast episode ends.

[Get This Free 2025 Calendar of Small Wins]

2. “Do It for Future Me.”

What actions of today will your future self – whether it’s the you of later today, next week, or next year – thank you for? Carry this with you to help you build motivation and accountability. For some, their future selves feel like different people, which helps even more with accountability.

If you want to get better about brushing your teeth or flossing, for example, consider leaving a sticky note in your bathroom that reads, “Do it for future you.”

3. Pair a Treat

Whether it’s filing taxes while drinking your favorite tea, jogging while listening to an audiobook, or studying with a cup of hot chocolate, add in a small treat to boost the fun factor of an otherwise boring or dreaded activity. You can even supercharge this by only letting yourself enjoy the fun activity while you’re doing the boring one.

4. Find a Buddy

The mere presence of another person, even a stranger, is a powerful tool for maintaining focus and consistency. And it doesn’t have to be in person. Video chat with a friend while doing chores. Have a tough time sticking to hobbies you enjoy? Join a club or two. Head to the library or a coffee shop to get into study mode.

[Read: Get More Done with a Body Double]

5. Do It Imperfectly

Avoid falling into the all-or-nothing trap – avoiding a task if you can’t do it perfectly or completely in one sitting. Perfectionism is the surest path to overwhelm, guilt, and paralysis. You don’t have to wash everything in the sink now or declutter your entire home. Do a dish or two. Focus on one small area of your home for 10 minutes. Commit to doing a “medium” job, not a perfect job.

How to Get Out of ADHD Paralysis: Next Steps


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Thank you for reading ADDitude. To support our mission of providing ADHD education and support, please consider subscribing. Your readership and support help make our content and outreach possible. Thank you.

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Live Webinar on January 28: How Sleep Disorders Impact Every Aspect of Life with ADHD https://www.additudemag.com/webinar/sleep-disorders-adhd-insomnia/ https://www.additudemag.com/webinar/sleep-disorders-adhd-insomnia/?noamp=mobile#respond Wed, 18 Dec 2024 16:30:22 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?post_type=webinar&p=368372

Register to reserve your spot for this free webinar and webinar replay ►

Not available January 28? Don’t worry. Register now and we’ll send you the replay link to watch at your convenience.

Sleep problems are among the most frequent co-occurring disorders in people with ADHD. Research has shown that many people with ADHD even suffer from more than one sleep disorder, often of different etiology. Science has not yet solved the questions arising from these findings, but we do know that sleep loss impairs concentration, memory, mood stability, and the immune system’s functioning, increasing risk for infections and allergies. Not surprisingly, ADHD is associated with many allergies and infections. The importance of good sleep and its association with overall health cannot be overstated.

The good news is that most sleep disorders can be treated effectively, and doing so can reduce ADHD symptoms and lead to improved health and wellness.

In this webinar, you will learn:

  • Why people with ADHD commonly suffer with sleep problems and disorders
  • About the different kinds of sleep disorders, including the circadian sleep-wake disorder, delayed sleep phase type, insomnia, restless legs, periodic limb movement disorder and sleep apnea
  • How researchers are working to better understand the close relationship between ADHD and sleep disorders
  • About treatment study findings that show low-dose melatonin, bright light therapy and other interventions may help reduce ADHD symptoms and lead to better overall health.

RegisterNow_236x92

Have a question for our expert? There will be an opportunity to post questions for the presenter during the live webinar.


Meet the Expert Speaker

J.J. Sandra Kooij is a psychiatrist at PsyQ, psycho-medical programs, and Head of the Expertise Center Adult ADHD, in the Netherlands. She is a professor of adult ADHD studies at the Department of Psychiatry, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam. She has published more than 100 peer-reviewed international papers and more than 20 books or book chapters on ADHD in adults.

Since 2002, Dr. Kooij has been the head of the Dutch Expertise Center Adult ADHD, leading research, treating patients, educating professionals, informing the public, and publishing books, scientific papers, websites, webinars and podcasts. She recently launched a new ADHD app, Super Brains. Read more about Dr. Kooij here.

Join an ADHD and Women’s Health Survey!  PsyQ Expertise Center Adult ADHD, in collaboration with ADHD Europe, developed an international survey on the experiences and health of women with ADHD. Are you a woman and do you have ADHD symptoms? You are invited to participate in this survey!


ADHD and Sleep: More Resources


Webinar Sponsor

The sponsor of this ADDitude webinar is…

 

ADHD and disordered sleep can disrupt daily life, but you can take back control. Play Attention, inspired by NASA technology and backed by Tufts University research, helps you strengthen executive function and gain cognitive control. By combining mindfulness training with cognitive exercises, our program empowers you to manage focus, emotions, and routines—building the foundation for better sleep and overall well-being.

Start our online ADHD assessment now or schedule your 1:1 consultationwww.playattention.com 828-243-9291

ADDitude thanks our sponsors for supporting our webinars. Sponsorship has no influence on speaker selection or webinar content.


Certificate of Attendance: For information on how to purchase the certificate of attendance option (cost $10), register for the webinar, then look for instructions in the email you’ll receive one hour after it ends. The certificate of attendance link will also be available here, on the webinar replay page, several hours after the live webinar. ADDitude does not offer CEU credits.

Closed captions available.

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High Emotional Dysregulation Common in Children with Sensory Processing Disorder: New Study https://www.additudemag.com/sensory-processing-disorder-emotional-dysregulation-adhd-autism/ https://www.additudemag.com/sensory-processing-disorder-emotional-dysregulation-adhd-autism/?noamp=mobile#respond Tue, 17 Dec 2024 14:34:26 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=368293 December 17, 2024

Emotional dysregulation is an invisible string linking sensory processing, anxiety, and ADHD in children, according to new research that explores the relationship between sensory processing subtypes and self-regulation in children with neurodevelopmental disorders. Researchers found that, while some sensory subtypes were associated with elevated anxiety and others with elevated ADHD symptomatology, all sensory processing subtypes were associated with higher emotional dysregulation compared with sensory-typical children.

The study, published in Nature, enrolled 117 participants from a community-based specialty clinic; all participants were children aged 8 to 12 years old with various neurodevelopmental diagnoses, including autism and ADHD.1 The researchers uncovered five distinct sensory processing profiles in this group:

  • Typical Sensory Processing (30% of the sample)
  • Sensory Under-Responsive (20%): Child often does not respond to verbal information or what is around them
  • Sensory Over-Responsive (19%): Child is bothered by wearing certain garments or by loud sounds
  • Sensory Seeking (19%): Child has a persistent desire for fast movement and often cannot stop touching things or people
  • Mixed Sensory Processing (11%): A combination of the above, depending on context or the stimuli

The study highlights the “wide range of heterogeneity in sensory experiences among populations with neurodevelopmental concerns,” say the study’s authors.

Elevated Emotional Dysregulation, Anxiety, ADHD

The researchers investigated the prevalence of behavioral and emotional regulation challenges in the group as a whole and in different sensory subtypes. They also considered the following comorbidities:

  • 62% of the group exhibited ADHD symptoms
  • 39% exhibited emotion dysregulation
  • 19% exhibited anxiety

They also studied patterns associated with specific sensory subtypes:

  • Children in the sensory over-responsive subtype reported significantly elevated anxiety levels.
  • Children in the sensory seeking and sensory under-responsive subtypes reported the highest levels of ADHD behaviors.
  • All subtypes, apart from typical sensory processing, reported elevated levels of emotion dysregulation.

These findings offer insights into the complicated relationship between sensory processing and self-regulation challenges, which researchers hope will help clinicians better serve neurodivergent children through targeted interventions that address overlapping symptomology.

“Not many people realize that the sensory systems are foundational to development, functioning and wellbeing. Differences in sensory processing may undermine the acquisition of skills of a higher order – from behavior to learning,” explains Candace Peterson MS, OTRL, in her ADDitude article. “What Is Your Child’s Sensory Profile?” “This is why sensory challenges in kids often manifest in school, show up as behavior problems, and make daily living difficult.”

An ADDitude reader who struggles with sensory over-responsiveness explains: “Sounds seem to overstimulate me the most frequently and easily. It feels like the sounds are physically pushing me into a corner and squishing me.” Another reader with sensory over-responsiveness says clothing tags and seams are her “mortal enemies.” “On good days, they’re a slight annoyance,” she says. “On bad days, it feels like they’ve come alive with tiny needles for fingers, incessantly poking at me, causing repeated stings.”

Sources

1Brandes-Aitken, A., Powers, R., Wren, J. et al. Sensory processing subtypes relate to distinct emotional and behavioral phenotypes in a mixed neurodevelopmental cohort. Sci Rep 14, 29326 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-78573-2

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Top 10 ADHD News & Research Headlines of 2024 https://www.additudemag.com/adhd-research-news-stimulant-shortage-vyvanse-medication/ https://www.additudemag.com/adhd-research-news-stimulant-shortage-vyvanse-medication/?noamp=mobile#respond Fri, 13 Dec 2024 23:25:43 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=368183 1. Adult ADHD Guidelines Forthcoming

The diagnostic criteria for ADHD are largely based on studies of young white boys — and do not reflect the lived experiences of many adults with the condition. This gap between clinical guidance and real-life symptoms has contributed to a decades-long problem with misdiagnosis, missed diagnoses, and inadequate treatment for individuals who slipped under the ADHD radar in childhood.

ADHD persists into adulthood for up to 90% of children with the condition, however, only 33% of pediatricians, 30% of family practitioners, 25% of nurse practitioners, and 22% of internists said that they received adequate training on ADHD in medical school, according to data presented by the American Professional Society of ADHD and Related Disorders (APSARD) at its 2024 conference. APSARD is now working to remedy this obstacle to care with the first-ever guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of ADHD in adults. In 2023, it established a 27-member task force that is devising clinical practice guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of ADHD in adults. According to David Goodman, M.D., who is leading the medical subcommittee for the task force, the adult ADHD guidelines have the greatest chance at widespread adoption if they are research-based, clinically informed, and patient-focused. APSARD hopes to publish the guidelines in 2025.

Continue reading “The State of Adult ADHD Today” to learn more.

2. ADHD Medication Use Lowers the Risk of Death, Hospitalization

Treating ADHD with medication can lower the overall risk of mortality by 19% and overdose by 50%. It also reduces hospitalizations, both psychiatric and non-psychiatric, according to two large-scale Swedish studies.1, 2 These findings highlight the importance of ADHD medication use for long-term health and longevity, underscoring the urgent need to end the stimulant shortage that has prevented U.S. patients with ADHD from consistently accessing medication since the Fall of 2022.

Continue reading “ADHD Medication Use Lowers the Risk of Death, Hospitalization” to learn more.

3. Massive Study Ties Leaded Gasoline Exposure to 150 Million Mental Health Diagnoses in U.S.

Leaded gasoline and exposure to its exhaust may help explain an estimated 151 million U.S. cases of psychiatric disorders, including ADHD, depression, and anxiety, according to a new cross-sectional study spanning the last 75 years.

Exposure to leaded gasoline from car exhaust was tied to population-wide cases of mental health disorders from 1940 to 2015 in the study, published in December in the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry.3 It estimated that more than half of the current U.S. population was exposed to harmful levels of lead in childhood, resulting in profound effects on their mental health, personality traits, and overall well-being. People born between 1966 and 1986 (referred to as Generation X) experienced the highest rate of lead exposure and are at the greatest risk for anxiety, depression, ADHD, and personality changes.

Continue reading “Massive Study Ties Leaded Gasoline Exposure to 150 Million Mental Health, ADHD Diagnoses in U.S.” to learn more.

4. High and Low Estrogen Exacerbate ADHD Symptoms in Females

The impact of rising and falling hormone levels on ADHD symptoms is compounded for females beginning in puberty, according to the multiple hormone sensitivity theory explained in a review article published in January in Hormones and Behavior.4 The theory offers valuable insight into how hormones — namely, high and low estrogen levels — may influence ADHD symptoms in females across the lifespan, including during the menstrual cycle, puberty, pregnancy, and menopause.

Per the theory, females may be more likely to engage in risk-taking and reward-seeking behaviors in the days leading up to ovulation. These behaviors coincide with a steady rise in estrogen levels that drops off during ovulation. In contrast, withdrawal and/or depletion of estrogen at a cycle’s end may be characterized by increased negative affect, avoidant behaviors, and reduced executive functioning.

Continue reading “High and Low Estrogen Exacerbate ADHD Symptoms in Females: New Theory.” to learn more.

5. ADHD Medication Costs Soar

ADHD medication costs have nearly doubled or tripled for doses of Ritalin, Concerta, and Focalin since the Adderall shortage began in October 2022, according to a report published in USA Today in late 2023. The newspaper analyzed the prices that retail community pharmacies pay for common ADHD prescriptions. For specific dosages of methylphenidate (i.e., Ritalin and Concerta), the average price paid by small to mid-sized independent and chain pharmacies nearly doubled from late 2022 to December 2023. The average cost of certain versions of dexmethylphenidate (Focalin) more than doubled during that period.

Continue reading “ADHD Medication Costs Soar: Price Report” to learn more.

6. ADHD Traits May Have Provided an Evolutionary Advantage

ADHD traits such as distractibility and impulsivity may have benefited our ancestors as they foraged for food, and they continue to play a crucial role in how people with ADHD adapt and survive, suggests research published in February in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences.5

“We speculate that ADHD serves as an adaptive specialization for foraging, thus explaining its widespread prevalence and continued persistence in the human population,” the researchers said. “This tendency to explore while foraging might extend to other behaviors such as cycling more frequently between information sources in the classroom or sources of stimulation in the home environment.”

Continue reading “ADHD Traits May Have Provided an Evolutionary Advantage” to learn more.

7.

In June, the Justice Department charged two top officers at the telehealth company Done Global with allegedly distributing Adderall and other stimulants for ADHD to patients who officials said did not merit a proper diagnosis. While health officials warned that the “disruption” to Done could affect as many as 50,000 adult patients6, many of whom were already impacted by the ongoing ADHD medication shortage, this criminal action highlights another important issue: the limited access to clinical care for people with ADHD in the United States.

Continue reading “Done ADHD Investigation Sparks Worry of Inadequate Care” to learn more.

8. Boredom Triggers High Stress Response in Impulsive People

Boredom causes a heightened stress response in impulsive people, as evidenced by the elevated cortisol levels documented in research published in Physiology & Behavior in October.7 The research deepens the scientific community’s understanding of the interplay between impulsivity and boredom, suggesting that this relationship may be mediated by the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis.

“This research suggests that the lived experience of boredom feels more intense and aversive for people who are highly impulsive, transforming into an overwhelming need to escape that boredom,” explained Matt Parker, Ph.D., the study’s senior author and a neuroscientist at the University of Surrey.

Continue reading “Boredom Triggers High Stress Response in Impulsive People: New Study” to learn more.

9. DEA OKs Expanded Production of the ADHD Medication Vyvanse

Vyvanse and its generic equivalents (lisdexamfetamine dimesylate) became more readily available at pharmacies following a decision in September by the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to allow expanded production of the stimulant medication used to treat ADHD and moderate-to-severe binge-eating disorder (BED) in adults. The DEA approved a 24% production increase in response to the ongoing stimulant shortage.

“These adjustments are necessary to ensure that the United States has an adequate and uninterrupted supply of lisdexamfetamine to meet legitimate patient needs both domestically and globally,” the DEA said in a letter on September 5.

Continue reading “Vyvanse Shortage Update: DEA OKs Expanded Production of the ADHD Medication” to learn more.

10. ADHD Medication Prescriptions Spiked Ahead of Adderall Shortage

Prescriptions for ADHD medications increased significantly during the COVID-19 pandemic, especially for women and for adults aged 20-39, according to a study published in January in JAMA Psychiatry. The most significant increases were found among prescriptions for adults aged 20-39, up 81% for non-stimulants and 30% for stimulants; and for women, up 59% for non-stimulants and 25% for stimulants.8 By contrast, researchers found a decrease or no change in rates of prescriptions during the pandemic for medications used to treat other behavioral health disorders, including anxiety, depression, and opioid use disorders.

Continue reading “ADHD Medication Prescriptions Spiked Ahead of Adderall Shortage: New Report” to learn more.

Sources

1Li, L., Zhu, N., Zhang, L., et al. (2024). ADHD Pharmacotherapy and Mortality in Individuals With ADHD. JAMA. https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2024.0851

2Tipale, H., Bergström, J., Gèmes, K., et al. (2024). Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Medications and Work Disability and Mental Health Outcomes. JAMA Netw Open. 7(3):e242859. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.2859

3McFarland, M.J., Reuben, A. and Hauer, M. (2024). Contribution of Childhood Lead Exposure to Psychopathology in the US Population Over the Past 75 Years. J Child Psychol Psychiatr.https://doi.org/10.1111/jcpp.14072

4Eng, A.G., Nirjar, U., Elkins, A.R., Sizemore, Y.J., Monticello, K.N., Petersen, M.K., Miller, S.A., Barone, J., Eisenlohr-Moul, T.A., & Martel, M.M. (2024). Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder and the Menstrual Cycle: Theory and Evidence. Hormones and Behavior. 158(105466).https://doi.org/10.1016/j.yhbeh.2023.105466

5Barack, D.L., Ludwig, V.U., Parodi, F., Ahmed, N., Brannon, E.M., Ramakrishnan, A.M., and Platt, M.L. (2024). Attention Deficits Linked with Proclivity to Explore While Foraging. Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2022.2584

6CDC. Disrupted Access to Prescription Stimulant Medications Could Increase Risk of Injury and Overdose. June 13, 2024. https://emergency.cdc.gov/han/2024/han00510.asp

7 Clay, J.M., Badariotti, J.I., Kozhushko, N., Parker, M.O. (2024). HPA Activity Mediates the Link Between Trait Impulsivity and Boredom. Physiology & Behavior. 284, 114637. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.physbeh.2024.114637

8Chai, G., Xu, J., Goyal S, et al. (2024). Trends in Incident Prescriptions for Behavioral Health Medications in the US, 2018-2022. JAMA Psychiatry. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2023.5045

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Massive Study Ties Leaded Gasoline to 150 Million Mental Health Diagnoses in U.S. https://www.additudemag.com/leaded-gasoline-exposure-adhd-anxiety-depression/ https://www.additudemag.com/leaded-gasoline-exposure-adhd-anxiety-depression/?noamp=mobile#respond Fri, 13 Dec 2024 03:37:22 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=368163 December 13, 2024

Leaded gasoline and exposure to its exhaust may help explain an estimated 151 million U.S. cases of psychiatric disorders, including ADHD, depression, and anxiety, according to a new cross-sectional study spanning the last 75 years published in the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry.1

Exposure to leaded gasoline from car exhaust was tied to population-wide cases of mental health disorders from 1940 to 2015 by researchers from Duke University, Florida State University, and the Medical University of South Carolina. They estimated that more than half of the current U.S. population was exposed to harmful levels of lead in childhood, resulting in profound effects on their mental health, personality traits, and overall well-being. People born between 1966 and 1986 (referred to as Generation X) experienced the highest rate of lead exposure and are at the greatest risk for anxiety, depression, ADHD, and personality changes.

“Research on lead as a developmental neurotoxicant is robust,” says Joel Nigg, Ph.D., a clinical psychologist and a professor in the departments of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Oregon Health & Science University. “Its correlation with ADHD is also well established. Even low levels of exposure have an effect on ADHD.”2, 3

Nigg was the principal investigator on several studies suggesting that lead exposure has a causal role in ADHD. One study published in Psychological Science found that children with ADHD who had the HFE C282Y gene mutation exhibited significantly more symptoms of hyperactivity and impulsivity than did children with ADHD who lacked the mutation.4

“Because the C282Y gene helps to control the effects of lead in the body, and the mutation was spread randomly in the children, it is difficult to explain these findings unless lead is, in fact, part of the cause of ADHD, not just associated with it. Numerous animal studies also support a link,” he says.

Leaded Gasoline Exposure Is a Public Health Crisis

Nigg’s study and others have linked lead exposure to life-long mental, physical, and behavioral issues; lowered IQ points; and personality changes.5, 6, 7, 8 However, the findings from the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry’s study highlight the historic and pervasive effects of lead exposure on the cognitive and psychological health of a staggering slice of the U.S. population.

“Lead’s potential contribution to psychiatry, medicine, and children’s health may be larger than previously assumed,” the researchers wrote.

The study analyzed lead levels in children’s blood collected for the CDC’s National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (NHANES) and correlated that with historic leaded-gasoline data. The researchers calculated “mental illness points” based on the fraction of changes in the mental health of Americans born in different years and the population elevations of mental health symptoms associated with lead exposure.

The researchers identified a cumulative increase of 602 million general psychopathology points across the population, corresponding to an estimated 151 million additional mental disorders. They found that lead exposure heightened the risks for anxiety, depression, and ADHD; increased neuroticism, associated with negative emotionality; and decreased conscientiousness, reflecting less self-control and goal-oriented behavior.

While the study’s results do not prove causation, the researchers say that their findings will provide doctors with insights about their patients’ symptoms and underscore the need for expanded lead testing in patients and the recognition of lead poisoning as a neurodevelopmental disorder within a psychiatric diagnostic framework.

Leaded Gasoline Exposure: Next Steps

Lead was added to gasoline in the 1920s to improve engine performance. During the early childhood years of Generation X, leaded gasoline became the predominant fuel type in the U.S. In the mid-1970s, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) began phasing out leaded gasoline, but a U.S. ban did not go in effect for on-road vehicles until 1996. Lead is still found in some paints, children’s toys, and deteriorating water pipes.

According to The CDC, high levels of lead exposure can lead to seizures, vomiting, memory loss, and even death. Exposure to even small amounts of lead can be harmful. Children 6 years or younger are most vulnerable to lead poisoning, which can cause development and growth delays, hearing and speech problems, difficulty learning and paying attention, and serious illness and death.

Symptoms of lead poisoning can be hard to recognize in children. The CDC recommends discussing possible lead exposure with a child’s healthcare provider and testing children ages 1 to 5 for lead if they:

  • Live in a home built before 1978
  • Receive Medicaid services
  • Are an immigrant, refugee, or adopted from another country
  • Live near a known source of lead, such as a lead smelter or mine

Sources

1McFarland, M.J., Reuben, A. and Hauer, M. (2024). Contribution of Childhood Lead Exposure to Psychopathology in the US Population Over the Past 75 Years. J Child Psychol Psychiatr.https://doi.org/10.1111/jcpp.14072

2Sanders, T., Liu, Y., Buchner, V., Tchounwou, P.B. (2009). Neurotoxic Effects and Biomarkers of Lead Exposure: A Review. Rev Environ Health. https://doi.org/10.1515/reveh.2009.24.1.15

3Nigg, J. T., Knottnerus, G. M., Martel, M. M., Nikolas, M., Cavanagh, K., Karmaus, W., & Rappley, M. D. (2008). Low Blood Lead Levels Associated with Clinically Diagnosed Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder and Mediated by Weak Cognitive Control. Biological Psychiatry. 63(3), 325–331. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsych.2007.07.013

4Nigg, J. T., Elmore, A. L., Natarajan, N., Friderici, K. H., & Nikolas, M. A. (2016). Variation in an Iron Metabolism Gene Moderates the Association Between Blood Lead Levels and Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder in Children. Psychological Science.https://doi.org/10.1177/0956797615618365

5Reuben, A., Schaefer, J.D., Moffitt, T.E., Broadbent, J., Harrington, H., Houts, R.M., Ramrakha, S., Poulton, R., Caspi, A. (2019). Association of Childhood Lead Exposure With Adult Personality Traits and Lifelong Mental Health. JAMA Psychiatry. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2018.4192

6Heidari, S., Mostafaei, S., Razazian, N. et al. (2022). The Effect of Lead Exposure on IQ Test Scores in Children Under 12 Years: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Case-Control Studies. Syst Rev. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13643-022-01963-y

7Roy, A., Bellinger, D., Hu, H., Schwartz, J., Ettinger, A.S., Wright, R.O., Bouchard, M., Palaniappan, K., Balakrishnan, K. (2009). Lead Exposure and Behavior Among Young Children in Chennai, India. Environ Health Perspect. https://doi.org/10.1289/ehp.0900625

8Schwaba, T., Bleidorn, W., Hopwood, C.J., Gebauer, J.E., Rentfrow, P.J., Potter, J., Gosling, S.D. (2021). The Impact of Childhood Lead Exposure on Adult Personality: Evidence from the United States, Europe, and A Large-Scale Natural Experiment. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2020104118

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Free Guide: How ADHD and Schizophrenia Overlap https://www.additudemag.com/download/what-is-schizophrenia-adhd-symptoms/ https://www.additudemag.com/download/what-is-schizophrenia-adhd-symptoms/?noamp=mobile#respond Tue, 10 Dec 2024 20:55:11 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?post_type=download&p=367949

Schizophrenia and ADHD share some similarities and may co-exist. For example, trouble with focus and emotional dysregulation are symptoms of both conditions.

However, schizophrenia is defined as a severe, chronic mental disorder characterized by disturbances in cognition, perception, emotions, and behaviors. ADHD is a developmental disorder characterized by symptoms of inattention and/or hyperactivity and impulsivity.

Find out more about the similarities and differences between schizophrenia and ADHD in this ADDitude Patient Resource.

In this download, you will learn about:

  • featured characteristics of schizophrenia
  • overlapping symptoms of schizophrenia and ADHD
  • age of onset for schizophrenia and ADHD
  • prevalence rates of comorbid ADHD and schizophrenia
  • treatment options for both conditions
  • and more!

Additional Resources

For more information about schizophrenia, support groups, and resources, visit:

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“From Battles to Bonding: A Parent’s Guide to Trading Defiance for Cooperation” [Video Replay & Podcast #539] https://www.additudemag.com/webinar/defiant-child-parenting-strategies-adhd/ https://www.additudemag.com/webinar/defiant-child-parenting-strategies-adhd/?noamp=mobile#respond Mon, 09 Dec 2024 17:05:15 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?post_type=webinar&p=367886 Episode Description

Family life brings smiles and struggles, but when persistent tantrums, resistance, or negativity dominate, they can strain relationships and household harmony. In this transformative webinar, psychologist Jeffrey Bernstein, Ph.D., shares a proven program to help caregivers reduce conflict and eliminate disruptive behaviors in children, teens, and even struggling adult children.

This webinar explores the underlying causes of oppositional defiance, offering practical tools to restore peace and connection. Moving from battles to bonding will empower you to put those fruitless power struggles behind you by turning emotional reactivity into opportunities for connection and cooperation.

Critical handouts will be included for registrants in this webinar to help caregivers learn the strategies that prevent emotionally dysregulated children from becoming defiant.

In this webinar, you will learn:

  • How to foster empathy by building stronger connections with children through understanding and compassion
  • How to regulate your emotions and model calm responses for your child
  • About the power of emotion regulation coaching to transform resistance into collaboration
  • How to navigate parenting in an era of heightened anxieties and societal challenges
  • About cooperative, connection-building games to foster trust, communication, and teamwork

Watch the Video Replay

Enter your email address in the box above labeled “Video Replay + Slide Access” to watch the video replay (closed captions available) and download the slide presentation.


Defusing Defiance in Children with ADHD: More Resources

Obtain a Certificate of Attendance

If you attended the live webinar on January 16, 2025, watched the video replay, or listened to the podcast, you may purchase a certificate of attendance option (cost: $10). Note: ADDitude does not offer CEU credits. Click here to purchase the certificate of attendance option »


Meet the Expert Speaker

Dr. Jeffrey Bernstein is a psychologist with more than 34 years of experience specializing in child, adolescent, couples, and family therapy. He completed his post-doctoral internship at the University of Pennsylvania Counseling Center and holds a Ph.D. in Counseling Psychology from the State University of New York at Albany. He has appeared on the Today Show, Court TV as an expert advisor, and CBS Eyewitness News Philadelphia, 10! Philadelphia — NBC and public radio.

Dr. Bernstein has authored several books, including The Anxiety, Depression, & Anger Toolbox for Teens, The Stress Survival Guide for Teens, Mindfulness for Teen Worry, 10 Days to a Less Defiant Child, 10 Days to Less Distracted Child, Liking the Child You Love, and Why Can’t You Read My Mind? He has also published the Letting Go of Anger Therapeutic Card Deck.

#CommissionsEarned As an Amazon Associate, ADDitude earns a commission from qualifying purchases made by ADDitude readers on the affiliate links we share. However, all products linked in the ADDitude Store have been independently selected by our editors and/or recommended by our readers. Prices are accurate and items in stock as of time of publication.


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Autism in Girls: Why Signs of Neurodivergence are Overlooked https://www.additudemag.com/autism-in-girls/ https://www.additudemag.com/autism-in-girls/?noamp=mobile#respond Wed, 04 Dec 2024 21:45:03 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=367747

Autism in Girls: Key Takeaways

  • Autism in girls is overlooked because symptoms manifest differently across genders, and because of persistent gender bias in clinical and research settings.
  • Compared to boys, autistic girls are more socially motivated, which may make their social challenges less apparent and thus more likely to be missed by clinicians.
  • Autistic girls seldom demonstrate repetitive movements, and their special interests are more likely to be seen as typical.
  • In-depth evaluations are often necessary to identify or rule out autism in girls. Other supports — from therapy to emotional regulation skill-building — can significantly help.

Autism in Girls Looks Different

About one in 36 children in the U.S. is autistic, a diagnosis that is four times more common in boys than in girls.1 What explains this gender gap?

Science is working to determine factors that may explain autism’s diagnostic prevalence in males, but many clinicians who specialize in autism in girls and individuals assigned female at birth clearly see that gender bias — in referrals, diagnostic criteria, and tests — plays a role in diagnostic outcomes.

Autism is more readily identified in boys than in girls because, historically, the clinical and research focus has been on boys almost exclusively. Many clinicians who are trained in diagnosing autism are unaware how its traits can uniquely manifest in girls. Failing to realize that girls and women don’t always demonstrate the more stereotypical signs of autism, many clinicians end up overlooking behaviors that are indicative of autism. This is part of why girls and women are often diagnosed as autistic later in life than boys.

Signs of Autism in Girls

Social Motivation

Autism is characterized, in part, by difficulties and differences with social communication and interaction. Some autistic children may have trouble initiating or engaging in social interactions, which can result in them feeling left out or different. Some children, meanwhile, may prefer solitary activities.

Some children may struggle to understand when and how to join a conversation. An autistic child may follow up to a peer’s question with a brief response or with nothing at all, bringing the interaction to an end. Sometimes, conversations and interactions can become one-sided; an autistic child, for example, may not realize that others want to play differently and will continue to insist that everyone play a game according to very fixed rules. Autistic children may also show differences in use of eye contact, gestures, and facial expressions or misinterpret these cues from others.

[Take This Free Screening Test: Autism in Girls]

Autistic girls may experience all of the above. However, many demonstrate more social motivation — the drive to understand, connect, and enter relationships with others — than do autistic boys, which may make their social challenges less apparent and thus more likely to be overlooked.

  • Autistic girls are more likely to want to fit in. As such, they are more likely to mask (i.e., hide or compensate for autistic traits) and mimic neurotypical behaviors.
  • Autistic girls are more socially observant, which helps them pick up on details that allow them to better fit in and mask. It’s common for autistic girls to painstakingly study patterns in how people interact to reverse engineer “normal” behavior.
  • Autistic girls are often perfectionists. The urge to fit in and flawlessly mask drives
    perfectionistic tendencies. Sensitivity to rejection is also common; when autistic girls stumble and experience social exclusion — despite their best efforts and desires to make and maintain
    friendships — the pain of rejection is profound.

Autism in Girls: The Consequences of Masking

We can’t talk about autism in girls without talking about masking. While masking often emerges as a coping strategy for socializing, especially for autistic girls without intellectual development disorder or who may not have observable behavioral or academic needs, it can create lots of issues, too.

  • Masking is mentally taxing. Constantly trying to figure out others, understand unspoken
    social rules, and fit in with changing circumstances is highly exhausting.
  • Masking interferes with self-understanding. Autistic girls often have trouble tuning into their own needs and emotions because masking has long forced them to suppress their authentic selves. Identity and self-esteem issues are common; some girls don’t even realize when they are masking. Masking can also interfere with friendships, as girls are unable to bring their full selves to these relationships or know what they want in a friend.
  • Masking can impact clinical evaluations. Autistic girls who have become accustomed to hiding their traits may struggle to express and make sense of their behaviors and experiences, which can interfere with autism evaluations and lead to underdiagnosis or misdiagnosis. (This compounds the gender bias that causes girls’ autistic behaviors to be downplayed.)
  • Masking can cause health issues. Constantly worrying about blending in with societal norms can turn into anxiety and other internalizing and physical issues. Many autistic girls tend to suppress their feelings, which causes more mental health challenges.

[Read: What Does Autism Spectrum Disorder Look Like in Children?]

Differences in Restricted and Repetitive Behaviors

Autism is characterized by restrictive, repetitive patterns of behavior, interests, or activities as demonstrated by the following signs:

  • hand flapping, finger flicking, rocking, and other stereotyped behaviors (or “stims”)
  • lining up, stacking, spinning, sorting and/or categorizing toys and objects
  • echolalia and other forms of repetitive speech
  • a strong preference for routine; resistance to change
  • rigid, perseverative thinking; insistence on adherence to rules
  • highly restricted, fixated interests (i.e., special interests)
  • hyper- or hyporeactivity to sensory input

While autistic girls can show the above signs, these behaviors may manifest differently.

  • Autistic girls are less likely to demonstrate repetitive movements. When they do, they are more likely to demonstrate different types of repetitive movements than boys, like tapping their fingers or twirling their hair, which can be easily overlooked.
  • Autistic girls’ special interests are more likely to center on animals, celebrities, or fictional characters, which can seem more socially acceptable and thus less likely to be flagged as a sign of autism.

Autism in Girls: How to Support Neurodivergent Youth

Know the Signs — and Myths

Early detection is key for autistic girls to receive the support they need so they can develop self-
understanding without shame. Parents, educators, and clinicians should be aware of the above signs of
autism in girls and these common autism myths:

Autism Myth The Truth
Autistic individuals lack empathy or compassion. The range of emotional functioning is wide in any population, and autistic individuals can feel deeply.
Autistic individuals are antisocial. They have no friends (and online friends don’t count). Autistic individuals, especially girls, are often desperate for friendship but don’t know how to connect or maintain relationships. Online friends should not be disregarded; real and genuine connections exist over the Internet.
Autistic people lack a sense of humor. We all appreciate humor differently, and it’s no different for autistic individuals, who have the capacity to be funny and see the funny side of things.
Autistic individuals can’t make eye contact. Some individuals don’t struggle at all with eye contact or have trained themselves to keep eye contact. Eye contact can feel intense and stressful for some autistic individuals, and forcing eye contact is never okay.
Autistic people aren’t smart and can’t achieve in school. Autistic individuals have a wide range of intellectual abilities. Some may have intellectual disabilities, while others may be gifted. Many autistic people achieve highly in school, particularly in subjects that align with their interests and strengths. Appropriate support and accommodations can help autistic children succeed.

Clinicians: Peel Back the Layers

Clinicians overlook autism in girls, especially in those without intellectual or language disorders, because these girls can be adept at camouflaging. Their symptoms tend to be more internalizing, and they may have trouble verbalizing their experiences and what they need. Even when girls do show signs of autism, to the untrained eye, these girls can appear “not autistic enough.”

  • Dig deep. Ask about relationships when evaluating girls for autism. How does your patient experience friendships and connecting with others? How does your patient feel about their ability to make friends and maintain them? How does this experience connect to her self-esteem? What is the toll of social interactions on your patient? Watch for cues that your patient finds social interactions exhausting and effortful. You may need to carry out longer assessments and observe your female patients over time so you can dive deep into their experiences. If they do not show signs of or report impairment across settings, watch for signs of subjective distress.
  • Screen for comorbid conditions. Autism and ADHD co-occur at high rates, and the symptom overlap cannot be overstated. Anxiety and specific learning disorders are also common.
  • Actively educate yourself on autism in girls. Seek out training and review the latest literature. Listen and learn from patients with lived experience.

More Ways to Support Autistic Girls

  • Seek interventions and supports. From speech, physical, and occupational therapy to IEPs or 504 plans, secure the services that support your child’s individual needs. Medications are available to help support mood and reactivity. Talk to an autism specialist about the best interventions for your child and seek a second opinion if your provider makes you feel disrespected or unheard.
  • Provide structure and routine. Stability and predictability reduce anxiety, stress, and overwhelm in autistic children, who often struggle with rigidity, inflexibility, and stress during transitions.
  • Support executive functions. The cognitive skills that allow us to plan, prioritize, organize, manage time, start tasks, and self-regulate are often impaired in autistic individuals and can significantly impact daily functioning. Scaffolding in the classroom and at home can help.
  • Teach healthy coping skills. Emotional dysregulation is very much a part of autism. What’s more, girls are socialized to suppress their emotions, which can accumulate and lead to intense emotional outbursts. Autistic girls must be taught emotional awareness, including how to monitor, label, and understand their emotions. Breathing exercises, mindfulness, muscle relaxation techniques, and other strategies can help improve emotional regulation.
  • Talk about autism from a neurodiversity-affirming standpoint. Viewing autism from a strengths-based perspective can help young girls accept themselves, refrain from masking, and gain the confidence to advocate for themselves throughout their lives.

Autism in Girls: Next Steps

The content for this article was derived from the ADDitude ADHD Experts webinar titled, “AuDHD Guidance: Why Autism is So Difficult to Diagnose in Women and Girls with ADHD” [Video Replay & Podcast #511] with Karen Saporito, Ph.D., which was broadcast on June 27, 2024.


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Sources

1 Maenner, M. J., Warren, Z., Williams, A. R., Amoakohene, E., Bakian, A. V., Bilder, D. A., Durkin, M. S., Fitzgerald, R. T., Furnier, S. M., Hughes, M. M., Ladd-Acosta, C. M., McArthur, D., Pas, E. T., Salinas, A., Vehorn, A., Williams, S., Esler, A., Grzybowski, A., Hall-Lande, J., Nguyen, R. H. N., … Shaw, K. A. (2023). Prevalence and characteristics of autism spectrum disorder among children aged 8 years – autism and developmental disabilities monitoring network, 11 sites, United States, 2020. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. Surveillance Summaries (Washington, D.C. : 2002), 72(2), 1–14. https://doi.org/10.15585/mmwr.ss7202a1

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Can a Busy Schedule Help ADHD Symptoms? A New Study Says Yes. https://www.additudemag.com/whats-helps-adhd-longitudinal-study-busy-schedule/ https://www.additudemag.com/whats-helps-adhd-longitudinal-study-busy-schedule/?noamp=mobile#comments Sat, 23 Nov 2024 02:59:42 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=367349 November 22, 2024

ADHD is not a static condition with fixed symptoms, but rather a dynamic disorder with symptoms that wax and wane over the lifespan, sometimes disappearing for years at a time. This was the finding of a new study published in the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry 1 that made another unexpected discovery: periods of higher environmental demands were associated with times of remission or reduced ADHD symptoms.

Led by Margaret Sibley, Ph.D., professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the University of Washington School of Medicine, the research used data from the longitudinal Multimodal Treatment of ADHD (MTA) study, which followed 483 participants, diagnosed with ADHD at 7-10 years of age, for 16 years.2 Follow-up assessments, which were administered every two years, asked participants and parents about the severity and frequency of ADHD symptoms and impairments, as well as about environmental demands, including responsibilities in education, work, and finances.

The researchers found that longitudinal patterns revealed four groups:

  • Fluctuating ADHD: 64%

Alternating periods of remission and recurrence

  • Stable Partial Remission: 16%

A significant reduction in symptoms was experienced, typically beginning in late adolescence or early adulthood, that remained stable afterward

  • Stable Persistence: 11%

High symptoms that met diagnostic thresholds with minimal or no improvement over time

  • Recovery: 9%

Sustained full remission of symptoms

Among the group that experienced fluctuating ADHD, the following trends were uncovered:

  • There were typically three to four transitions between remission and recurrence over the 16-year period.
  • The first remission period often began in early adolescence, around age 12, with symptoms returning within a few years.
  • Compared to other groups, symptom severity was moderate.

ADHD symptoms improved to a point of remission at some point over the 16 years for most study participants, Sibley explains in an article titled “ADHD’s Vanishing Act” that appears in ADDitude’s forthcoming spring 2025 issue. In most cases, faded symptoms returned three to four years later, Sibley says.

“In other words, most individuals with ADHD can expect to go through years when their symptoms do not cause meaningful problems,” Sibley writes. “The neurocognitive risks are always present, but the clinical problems may only emerge sometimes. This is comparable to a person who may struggle with weight gain biologically, but who may fluctuate in and out of the obesity range over the course of their lifetime.”

A Busy Schedule Linked to Reduced ADHD Symptoms

The MTA study gathered information about environmental demands, such as an increase in significant responsibilities at work, school, or home, in order to explore whether these demands impacted ADHD symptoms. It turns out they did — but not in the way researchers hypothesized.

“We speculated that increased stresses would be associated with higher levels of ADHD in participants,” Sibley explains. “We were surprised to find quite the opposite, [that] higher levels of demands were associated with remission of ADHD. In other words, people with ADHD were rising to the challenge when demands were high.”

Sibley notes that the nature of the relationship between higher demands and reduced symptoms remains unclear; the study revealed a link, but not how the link works.  “One explanation is that ADHD symptoms fade when consequences in the environment create an urgent need to stay on track,” she speculates. “It is also possible that, when people have lower ADHD symptom levels, they are able to take on greater responsibilities.” Likely, it’s a combination of the two, Sibley says.

Childhood Factors Predict Long-Term Outcomes

The study found that certain childhood factors served as predictors for long-term outcomes. Individuals in the stable persistent group tended to be at higher risk for mood disorders, substance use problems in adolescence, low medication utilization, and poorer response to treatment in childhood. Those in the partial remission group tended to have higher rates of comorbid anxiety. By contrast, individuals in the recovery group were less likely to have mood disorders and parents with psychopathology.

The study helps the scientific community more fully understand the complex landscape of ADHD, and Sibley sees great potential benefit if clinicians pass along this nuanced understanding to patients.

“For some people with ADHD, this may mean staying busy and keeping an active schedule,” Sibley ventures. “It may also mean working with practitioners to leverage a nuanced understanding of ADHD fluctuations when designing a treatment plan that boosts wellbeing.”

Sources

1Sibley MH, Kennedy TM, Swanson JM, Arnold LE, Jensen PS, Hechtman LT, Molina BSG, Howard A, Greenhill L, Chronis-Tuscano A, Mitchell JT, Newcorn JH, Rohde LA, Hinshaw SP. Characteristics and Predictors of Fluctuating Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder in the Multimodal Treatment of ADHD (MTA) Study. J Clin Psychiatry. 2024 Oct 16;85(4):24m15395. doi: 10.4088/JCP.24m15395. PMID: 39431909.

2The MTA Cooperative Group: A 14-Month randomized clinical trial of treatment strategies for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) . Arch Gen Psychiatry 1999;56:1073-1086.

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New Research: Childhood Obesity Linked to ADHD, Impulsivity https://www.additudemag.com/childhood-obesity-bmi-adhd-impulsivity/ https://www.additudemag.com/childhood-obesity-bmi-adhd-impulsivity/?noamp=mobile#respond Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:49:09 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=367310 November 21, 2024

Children with ADHD are more likely to be obese, despite lower-than-average birth weights, according to a new study that found a correlation between elevated ADHD symptoms and higher body mass index (BMI) scores for both females and males. 1The study, published in the Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, complements additional research tying ADHD impulsivity to unhealthy food consumption and overeating.

In analyzing data from the Millennium Cohort Study (MCS) of more than 19,000 families with children born between 2000 and 2002, researchers found that children with ADHD had significantly lower birth weights than did children in the control group. Both groups maintained similar obesity rates until age 5, when the ADHD group experienced a rise in obesity that continued throughout adolescence.

“As children with ADHD are typically lighter in weight at birth than children without ADHD, the results suggest there may be a sensitive time period between the ages of 3 and 5 years during which this association reverses, and higher ADHD symptoms become associated with obesity,” the researchers wrote.

Researchers collected data when the 442 ADHD cohort members reached 9 months and 3, 5, 7, 11, 14, and 17 years. (The study excluded cohort members taking ADHD medications.) They found that weight gain began earlier for girls with ADHD (age 7) compared to boys with ADHD (age 11). “The weight changes in girls additionally seemed to be more long-lasting, whereas the observed changes in boys seemed to be transitory,” the researchers wrote. It is unclear whether these associations continue into adulthood.

Further analysis revealed that elevated ADHD symptoms in females at ages 7, 11, and 14 predicted higher body mass index (BMI) scores at ages 11, 14, and 17, respectively. The same association occurred in males at ages 11 and 14. These results suggest that ADHD symptoms are not entirely responsible for the uptick in weight children experience between the ages of 3 and 5 years.

Genetics, Prenatal Factors Impact BMI

Hormones and puberty contribute to weight gain. “Sometimes pre-teens can gain weight as the body prepares for a growth spurt in height,” says Roberto Olivardia, Ph.D., clinical psychologist at Harvard Medical School. “Therefore, BMI normalizes as they gain height.”

Prenatal factors, including the mother’s pre-pregnancy BMI, prenatal blood pressure, smoking during pregnancy, and poor nutrition, predicted a higher BMI at 5 years. Genetics may also increase the risk of obesity.

“It is possible that there is a common genetic background to both ADHD and [being] overweight or, as parents with ADHD are more likely to have children with ADHD, this may have an impact on executive function skills involved in parenting, such as planning healthy meals, which in turn may influence weight status,” the researchers wrote. “Parents with an increased genetic risk may be influencing their child’s home environment in ways that compound inherited risk.” 2, 3

Impulsivity Linked to Poor Dietary Decisions

Another recent observational study found a strong link between impulsivity, a common ADHD trait, and unhealthy food consumption and overeating, specifically in the form of snacking. 4

The study, published in the Journal of Attention Disorders, analyzed data from the KOALA Birth Cohort Study of 810 adolescents aged 16 to 20 years. The researchers identified five dietary patterns

  • Snack — high intakes of regular (non-diet) soft drinks, fruit juice/drinks, fried snacks, chips, nuts or snacks, and energy drinks
  • Healthy — high intakes of lettuce, raw vegetables, fruit, eggs, and tea
  • Animal-based — high intakes of animal dairy products, meat and chicken, and fish
  • Sweet — high intakes of pastry, chocolate bars, candy bars, cake or biscuits, and sweets
  • Beverage — high intakes of diet soft drinks, light fruit juice/drinks, sports drinks, and energy drinks

Among the five dietary patterns, adolescents with an ADHD diagnosis scored higher on the Snacking dietary pattern than did those without ADHD. Higher Snack scores were associated with difficulties with cognition, inattention, and impulsiveness. Impulsivity was inversely related to Sweet dietary patterns and positively related to Beverage dietary patterns.

Interestingly, adolescents with ADHD appeared no less likely than their neurotypical peers to engage in Healthy dietary patterns. “The lack of a reverse association between ADHD symptoms, especially impulsivity, and the healthy pattern is unexpected and raises questions,” the researchers wrote.

Though the study does not prove causality, the findings suggest that eating habits may differ based on the specific ADHD symptoms each individual experiences.

“When studying how ADHD impacts an adolescent’s diet, looking beyond a simple diagnosis and considering the specific dimensions of their ADHD symptoms, like inattention, hyperactivity, and impulsivity, provides a more nuanced understanding of their dietary behaviors, as these individual dimensions can differentially influence food choices and eating patterns, even among individuals with the same ADHD diagnosis,” the researchers wrote.

Both ADHD and high BMI are associated with poor health outcomes, including asthma, diabetes, and cardiovascular disorders, so it’s vital that children understand the potential consequences of their dietary decisions. 5,6

Adolescents have more independent access to food, which can also result in unhealthy choices when impulsivity collides with puberty. “Parents have less control over what teenagers eat since they are not always with them,” Olivardia says, “and this most likely plays a bigger role in weight gain.”

Preventing Childhood Obesity

Educating children about their food choices can help curb unhealthy food cravings. For example, instead of banishing carbs from your kitchen, Olivardia says, explain them in a way children can understand. “Say, ‘Simple carbs, like potato chips, taste good, but basically break down in the body as sugar. There is no nutritional value in simple carbs, and they get in the way of healthy weight, high energy, and other things that matter, like your complexion.’”

Caregivers can help children and adolescents make better dietary decisions by incorporating the following strategies:

  • Set up a “food environment” that promotes healthy eating. Children with ADHD may not notice they’re hungry until they’re starving. To fend off unhealthy pantry raids, stock up on nutritious, easy-to-grab meals and snacks that require little preparation, such as peanut butter crackers, yogurt, or string cheese. Display healthy snacks and fruits in plain view in the refrigerator or pantry.
  • Practice good sleep hygiene. In addition to regulating hormone levels, a good night’s sleep makes it less likely that children will turn to food for comfort in fragile moments.
  • Set healthy eating rules. Create family eating rules that encourage children to eat attentively — for example, no eating while watching T.V. or eating straight out of the bag. Consider requiring children to eat only in the kitchen or dining area.
  • Teach children mindful eating skills. Children are less likely to overeat when they practice mindful eating. Teach children to put down their fork in between bites. Or ask them to describe what they’re eating as though the person listening has never tasted that food.
  • Set a good example. Children learn by watching others, especially their parents. Set a good example by making smart food choices, dishing appropriate portions, and not distractedly eating while engaging in another activity (like using your phone).
  • Treat ADHD. Make sure children adhere to their ADHD treatment plan. ADHD stimulant medications help children better observe and regulate their behaviors and avoid impulsive eating. They also make it easier to follow through with healthy eating and exercise plans.

Sources

1 Reed, C., Cortese, S., Golm, D., Brandt, V., et al. (2024). Longitudinal Associations Between Physical Health Conditions in Childhood and Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Symptoms at Age 17 Years. Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaac.2024.09.009
2 Barker, E.D., Ing, A., Biondo, F., Jia, T., et al. (2021). Do ADHD-Impulsivity and BMI Have Shared Polygenic and Neural Correlates? Mol Psychiatry;26(3):1019-1028. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41380-019-0444-y
3 Faraone, S.V., Larsson, H. (2019). Genetics of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder. Mol Psychiatry; 24(4):562-575. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41380-018-0070-0
4 Dalnoki, L., Hurks, P. P. M., Gubbels, J. S., Eussen, S. J. P. M., Mommers, M., & Thijs, C. (2024). Exploring the Relationship of Dietary Intake With Inattention, Hyperactivity, and Impulsivity, Beyond ADHD. Journal of Attention Disorders https://doi.org/10.1177/10870547241293946/a>
5 Arrondo, G., Solmi, M., Dragioti, E., et al. (2022).Associations Between Mental and Physical Conditions in Children and Adolescents: An Umbrella Review. Neurosci Biobehav Rev. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neubiorev.2022.104662
6 Horesh, A., Tsur, A.M., Bardugo, A., et al. (2021). Adolescent and Childhood Obesity and Excess Morbidity and Mortality in Young Adulthood—a Systematic Review. Curr Obes Rep; 10, 301–310. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13679-021-00439-9

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Shedding Light on Winter Depression and ADHD https://www.additudemag.com/winter-depression-adhd-sad-sleep-mood/ https://www.additudemag.com/winter-depression-adhd-sad-sleep-mood/?noamp=mobile#respond Wed, 20 Nov 2024 17:02:23 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=367137 Q: Do people with ADHD experience winter depression more often and more severely than do neurotypical individuals? Also, why is my quality of sleep affected in winter?

Winter depression is marked by two or more weeks of low mood, usually starting in the Northern Hemisphere’s fall or winter when there is less daylight, that resolves in the spring or summer when there is more light. There is an association between winter depression, also known as seasonal affective disorder, or SAD, and ADHD.

In the Netherlands, where I live, researchers asked 259 patients with ADHD about seasonal mood swings; 27% reported winter depression compared with 3% in neurotypical people.1 Other researchers have confirmed this increased rate among people with ADHD.2 What’s more, females are four times more likely than males to have winter depression.1

Sleep problems are also common among people with ADHD: About 80% are late sleepers3 , which means they have a short sleep duration — they fall asleep at a later time and sleep less because they must wake up for work or school.

Q : How does winter depression relate to screen addiction in children with ADHD?

Children with ADHD who are late sleepers and who experience winter depression may turn to video games and the Internet. Screens emit blue light, and they’re often held close to the eye, so the effects are similar to light therapy if you’re staring at them for a while.

[Get This Free Download: How to Sleep Better with ADHD]

Screen use at night can induce delayed circadian rhythms, disrupting your sleep-wake cycle.4 Many children with ADHD are already late sleepers, so using screens after 9:30 pm will delay their rhythm even more; this is not recommended. Keep in mind that when sleep gets delayed, mood is affected.

The good news is that winter depression and sleep problems can be easily and quickly treated with artificial light therapy. A 10,000-lux light therapy lamp can be used for 30 minutes a day for 5 to 20 consecutive days. The lamp, or light box, should be used at a close distance to your eyes; the distance is very important for the intensity of the treatment. It’s best to do this every day at the same time, preferably between 7 and 8 am, to reset your biological clock and alter the sleep-wake cycle.

You may also consider using light therapy glasses, which work in the same way as lamps. You can wear these for 30 minutes a day while you’re dressing or eating breakfast; in other words, without disrupting your routine.

Light therapy is a serious antidepressant that often unlocks better mood, improved sleep, and more energy.

[Read: How to Fall Asleep with a Rowdy, Racing ADHD Brain]

Q:  Is vitamin D recommended for people with winter depression?

If your vitamin D is too low, then taking vitamin D is recommended. Vitamin D is generally low in people with ADHD, though we don’t know why.5 You get vitamin D from sunlight; in winter, when there is less light, you may need to take a supplement. Another way we can get vitamin D is by eating fatty fish, though many people don’t eat enough to affect levels.

Winter Depression: Next Steps

J.J. Sandra Kooij, M.D., Ph.D., is a psychiatrist and head of the Expertise Center Adult ADHD at PsyQ in the Netherlands.


SUPPORT ADDITUDE
Thank you for reading ADDitude. To support our mission of providing ADHD education and support, please consider subscribing. Your readership and support help make our content and outreach possible. Thank you.

Sources

1Amons, P. J., Kooij, J. J., Haffmans, P. M., Hoffman, T. O., & Hoencamp, E. (2006). Seasonality of mood disorders in adults with lifetime attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Journal of affective disorders, 91(2-3), 251–255. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2005.11.017

2Wynchank, D. S., Bijlenga, D., Lamers, F., Bron, T. I., Winthorst, W. H., Vogel, S. W., Penninx, B. W., Beekman, A. T., & Kooij, J. S. (2016). ADHD, circadian rhythms and seasonality. Journal of psychiatric research, 81, 87–94. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpsychires.2016.06.018

3Van Veen, M. M., Kooij, J. J., Boonstra, A. M., Gordijn, M. C., & Van Someren, E. J. (2010). Delayed circadian rhythm in adults with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and chronic sleep-onset insomnia. Biological psychiatry, 67(11), 1091–1096. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsych.2009.12.032

4Hartstein, L. E., Mathew, G. M., Reichenberger, D. A., Rodriguez, I., Allen, N., Chang, A. M., Chaput, J. P., Christakis, D. A., Garrison, M., Gooley, J. J., Koos, J. A., Van Den Bulck, J., Woods, H., Zeitzer, J. M., Dzierzewski, J. M., & Hale, L. (2024). The impact of screen use on sleep health across the lifespan: A National Sleep Foundation consensus statement. Sleep health, 10(4), 373–384. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sleh.2024.05.001

5Khoshbakht, Y., Bidaki, R., & Salehi-abargouei, A. (2018). Vitamin D Status and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Observational Studies.. Advances in nutrition, 9 1, 9-20 . https://doi.org/10.1093/advances/nmx002.

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