ADHD in Women: Signs, Symptoms, Treatment 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 Mon, 13 Jan 2025 17:05:11 +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 ADHD in Women: Signs, Symptoms, Treatment https://www.additudemag.com 32 32 216910310 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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“Motherhood, ADHD & the Impossible Burden: Balancing the Invisible Load of Work & Family” [Video Replay & Podcast #536] https://www.additudemag.com/webinar/invisible-load-motherhood-adhd-parenting-stress/ https://www.additudemag.com/webinar/invisible-load-motherhood-adhd-parenting-stress/?noamp=mobile#respond Mon, 18 Nov 2024 18:29:25 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?post_type=webinar&p=367079 Episode Description

If you’re a mom who has it all figured out, with a clean and tidy house, and clean and tidy children who do their homework on time with no prodding, and you prepare elegant meals that Martha Stewart would envy, after a full day of work, congratulations. This webinar is not for you.

If you’re a mom with ADHD, and you feel overwhelmed by the daily chaos of getting kids off to school, managing piles of clutter, planning meals, and juggling household chores with after-school activities, doctor appointments, and more — regardless of whether you work outside the home — then you won’t want to miss this event. ADHD expert, psychotherapist, and author Terry Matlen, LMSW, will provide working and stay-at-home moms with practical tools and strategies to improve their day-to-day life.

  • About the societal expectations that push women to demonstrate good executive functioning and the emotional impact on mothers with ADHD
  • How to battle disorganization, procrastination, sensory overload, and more
  • How to change and reframe internal and external expectations
  • How to problem-solve as a family
  • How to better manage your time and help your children improve their own time management
  • About the importance of self-care

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.

Motherhood & ADHD: More Resources

Obtain a Certificate of Attendance

If you attended the live webinar on December 17, 2024, 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

Terry Matlen, LMSW, is a psychotherapist, consultant and author of the award-winning book, The Queen of Distraction and Survival Tips for Women with AD/HD. (#CommissionsEarned) She runs www.ADDconsults.com, an online resource serving women with ADHD, and www.PowerfulWomenWithADHD.com, an online community for women with ADHD looking for connection and skill building.

With over 25 years of experience helping women with ADHD, Terry has written hundreds of articles for various publications. She served for many years on the board of directors of ADDA and is immediate past coordinator of the E. Oakland County Chapter in Michigan. Terry can be reached at terry@ADDconsults.com.

#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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CDC: Half of People with ADHD Diagnosed in Adulthood https://www.additudemag.com/adult-adhd-diagnosis-cdc-report/ https://www.additudemag.com/adult-adhd-diagnosis-cdc-report/?noamp=mobile#respond Tue, 15 Oct 2024 17:08:25 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=365324 October 15, 2024

More than half of individuals with ADHD — and significantly more women than men — were diagnosed in adulthood, according to new data published in the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR).1 These findings constitute the CDC’s first update on the prevalence and age of diagnosis for ADHD in nearly 20 years.

The CDC report, which found that 6 percent of U.S. adults have a current ADHD diagnosis, identified several gender-based discrepancies regarding the age of diagnosis. Sixty-one percent of women received their ADHD diagnosis during adulthood, compared to 40 percent of men. One-quarter of women received an ADHD diagnosis before age 11, compared to 45 percent of men.

“Taken together, these data highlight the significant public health burden of ADHD and challenges experienced by adults with this diagnosis,” said Greg Mattingly, M.D., president of the American Professional Society of ADHD and Related Disorders (APSARD), and Ann Childress, M.D., past president of APSARD, in an article published in Psychiatric Times.2

The MMWR analyzed data collected from the National Center for Health Statistics Rapid Survey System (RSS) from October through November 2023 on the prevalence, treatment barriers, and telehealth usage of adults with ADHD.

Consequences of Undiagnosed Adult ADHD

Once considered a childhood condition, ADHD is now recognized as one of the most common mental health conditions in adults, affecting men and women almost equally. 3,4 A new national survey of 1,000 American adults by The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center and College of Medicine revealed that as many as one in four adults suspect they may have undiagnosed ADHD, however, only 13 percent have consulted a doctor about their suspicions. The researchers say the findings raise concerns that self-diagnosis may lead to incorrect treatment.

“In recent years, the number of adults diagnosed with ADHD has risen significantly – thanks, in part, to decades of research that has advanced awareness of ADHD as a lifelong disorder,”5 wrote APSARD secretary Maggie Sibley, Ph.D., in the ADDitude article, “Why We Need U.S. Guidelines for Adults with ADHD.” “Though ADHD is commonly detected in childhood, later-in-life diagnoses are providing clarity and relief for many adults with once unexplained, misunderstood, or overlooked lifelong struggles.”

Untreated adult ADHD symptoms may impair individuals personally and professionally, and they may exacerbate comorbidities like depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, insomnia, substance use disorders, and trauma-related conditions. 6, 7

“ADHD does not happen in a vacuum, and its effects are far more impairing when the condition goes undiagnosed, untreated, or improperly treated,” said Nelson M. Handal, M.D., DFAPA, in the ADDitude webinar, “New Insights Into and Treatments for Comorbid Depression” “It’s not difficult to see how untreated symptoms of ADHD — from impulsivity and emotional instability to poor planning and execution skills — compromise one’s ability to find success in school, work, relationships, and other parts of life.”

Even with an ADHD diagnosis, adults face barriers to care amid the ongoing stimulant shortage. Approximately 7 in 10 adults treating ADHD with stimulant medications reported difficulty obtaining their prescriptions, the CDC found.

The CDC’s findings suggest that telemedicine may improve access to healthcare and decrease systemic discrepancies in care. Nearly half of adults with a current ADHD diagnosis said they received some of their ADHD healthcare via telemedicine.

“These benefits must, however, be balanced with the need for thorough diagnostic evaluation and follow-up for both the in-person and virtual models of care,” said Mattingly and Childress.

“Some telehealth companies are under federal investigation for their prescribing practices, highlighting a need for clarity on appropriate practices for the prescription of stimulants – a first-line treatment for ADHD,” Sibley wrote. “APSARD’s forthcoming adult ADHD guidelines will address this urgent need for providers and patients alike — making evaluations more thorough, diagnosis more reliable, and treatment safer.”

Importance of Adult ADHD Guidelines

The Ohio State study and CDC data underscore the need for adult ADHD diagnosis and treatment guidelines, which APSARD is working to finalize by late this year or early 2025.

“These will be the first U.S. guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of adults with ADHD, and they will provide a valuable framework of treatment for clinicians and families,” said Mattingly and Childress. “While many unanswered questions remain, these findings bring us one step closer to a deeper understanding of the needs of adults with ADHD.”

The impact of the APSARD guidelines may be felt most profoundly by adult women.

“Many women do not recognize that they have ADHD or seek evaluations until their children are diagnosed,” wrote Childress in an ADDitude article earlier this year. They are often treated for anxiety or depression that developed secondarily to ADHD. Helping clinicians recognize the difference in presentation of ADHD symptoms in women is important.”

Sources

1taley, S.B., Robinson, L.R., Claussen, A.H., et al. Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Diagnosis, Treatment and Telehealth Use in Adults – National Center for Health Statistics Rapid Surveys System, United States, October – November 2023. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 2024;73(40)

2 Mattingly, G., Childress, A. (2024). Clinical Implications of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder in Adults: What New Data on Diagnostic Trends, Treatment Barriers, and Telehealth Utilization Tell Us. J Clin Psychiatry; 85(4): 24com15592. https://doi.org/10.4088/JCP.24com15592

3Ayano, G., Tsegay, L., Gizachew, Y, et al. (2023). Prevalence of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder in Adults: Umbrella Review of Evidence Generated Across the Globe. Psychiatry Res; 328:115449. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psychres.2023.115449

4Faraone, S.V., Bellgrove, M.A., Brikell, I., et al. (2024). Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder. Nat Rev Dis Primers; 10(1):11. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41572-024-00495-0

5Sibley, M.H., Arnold, L.E., Swanson, J.M., Hechtman, L.T., Kennedy, T.M., Owens, E., Molina, B.S., Jensen, P.S., Hinshaw, S.P., Roy, A., Chronis-Tuscano, A. (2022). Variable Patterns of Remission from ADHD in the Multimodal Treatment Study of ADHD. American Journal of Psychiatry;179(2):142-51. https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.ajp.2021.21010032

6Kessler, R.C., Berglund, P., Chiu, W.T., et al. (2004). The US National Comorbidity Survey Replication (NCS-R): Design and Field Procedures. Int J Methods Psychiatr Res; 13(2):69–92. https://doi.org/10.1002/mpr.167

7Katzman, M.A., Bilkey, T.S., Chokka, P.R., et al. (2017). Adult ADHD and Comorbid Disorders: Clinical Implications of a Dimensional Approach. BMC Psychiatry. 17(1):https://doi.org/10.1186/s12888-017-1463-3

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“Taking Up Space:” Illustrator Hayley Wall on Neurodivergence and the Power of Art   https://www.additudemag.com/disability-awareness-art-mental-health/ https://www.additudemag.com/disability-awareness-art-mental-health/?noamp=mobile#respond Wed, 02 Oct 2024 08:20:29 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=363076
Credit: Hayley Wall, illustrator

Art is Hayley Wall’s love language. Since Wall was a young child, she has found her footing as a communicator through drawing. Wall struggled academically as a child due to dyslexia and undiagnosed ADHD and autism, but she says, “What I did have was this gift where I could create images and I could tell stories.”

When Wall graduated from university and considered where to take her art, she was drawn to the topic of disability. “I was exploring the things I felt were important, the things that needed to be spoken about,” Wall explains. “My mom is disabled, so that’s been around me for a long, long time and it’s felt like people with disabilities are always the last to be thought of.”

Wall was asked to illustrate an article on chronic illness for the cover of Sick magazine, and then another on the same topic for It’s Nice That. These illustrations caught the attention of The New York Times, which commissioned Wall to illustrate a package celebrating the anniversary of The Americans with Disabilities Act. Her work became known for her signature bodies — large, gender-fluid forms, typically without faces, that exude strength, joy, and confidence.

As Wall’s art career gained momentum, so too did her personal journey to understand her own neurodivergence. Though Wall struggled with mental health challenges all her life, it wasn’t until she was 34 that she received a diagnosis of ADHD and autism.

Below, Wall shares her creative process, the challenges and joys of being a neurodivergent artist, and her commitment to a future that celebrates different minds and bodies.

[Read: “Happily Neurodivergent — at Last”]

Q: How did your diagnoses come about?

I’ve always wondered, ‘What’s wrong with me?’ and always struggled with my mental health. It was a feeling of being too much — too emotional, too sensitive, I always carried this feeling of, I just don’t fit in.

When I was 30, I sat down with my partner at the time, and was like, ‘I found this article about adults that have been diagnosed with ADHD and I’ve just done multiple quizzes. Can you do the quiz as well, please?’ They did, and they scored really low. I was like, ‘So you don’t do that? And that?’ It made me think, ‘OK, I think something’s going on.’ I approached my general practitioner, and from there, it took four years to get a diagnosis.

When I was 36, a year ago, I got diagnosed with autism and a mental health condition. I’m coming to terms with all these diagnoses and trying to understand how to navigate them. To me, what’s more important is not the label but just working out what I need.

Credit: Hayley Wall, illustrator

[Self-Test: Autism Test for Adults – Signs of ASD]

Q: When did your love of art begin?

I was a kid who bounced off the walls, I had so much energy. I wouldn’t shut up, and I would cry and scream. To calm me down, my parents would give me pens and paper and I would draw. It was the one time I was calm and focused.

Q: How does your ADHD inform your work?

After graduating, it took me 8 to 10 years to establish myself. I’ve done so many random jobs. I’ve worked as a nanny, in factories, in cafes. But running parallel to that was my hyperfocus, which kept me on track to pursue art. My hyperfocus is the reason I’ve been able to turn art into a career.

My work is all about bodies, usually gender ambiguous bodies. They are these big bodies that take up space — maybe because I’ve always felt really small and inferior. The bodies in my work are powerful. I can live through them.

The whole ‘taking up space’ idea is a big f&*k you to society for being like, ‘You have to be like this, or like that.’ It’s, ‘No, we can be whomever we want to be.’

Q: Can you tell us about your creative process?

A commission will come through and it’s like jumping on a roller coaster. There’s a voice that goes, ‘Here we go.’

I center myself and breathe to remove any negative voices and let the process take me.

As I read the commission, the visuals start coming, and my brain is joining dot-to-dots. I have a background in dance, and the dancing lives in my work now. Sometimes I’ll get myself or my friends into different positions and I’ll draw from that. I create loose, playful hand-rendered drawings and textures, and then I bring it onto my computer to work with.

Once I’ve got my concept down, I enter the most playful part of the process. I can enjoy coming to the end of the roller coaster nice and slowly.

Q: What’s the hardest part of your job?

The first bit of the process, mind-mapping concepts, is hard because I’ve got so many ideas, and I need to hone in. It’s the organization of thoughts that’s hard.

What crushes mind-mapping is impostor syndrome, a feeling I’ve carried of being inferior. I wish I was able to remove that saboteur voice that creeps in to say, ‘You’re not good enough,’ so I could just let my brain run free.

Q: What ADHD supports have you found helpful?

Freelance work is definitely hard because you don’t have HR, you don’t have colleagues to turn to. You are your absolute everything, and it’s really tough.
I was doing it for a long time all by myself, and I reached burnout. My mental health crashed.

In the UK, we are very lucky in terms of the benefits we get from the government. The ‘Access to Work’ program offers a sort of grant or reimbursement scheme to cover the cost of a support worker. It has been very helpful to me, and I’ve used that to have somebody support me through the admin tasks.
I never want to go back to a point where I’m trying to manage it all alone.

Q: Any advice for other artists with ADHD?

If you can tune into your voice and communicate your story, that’s when you’re going to create something nobody’s ever seen before.

Q: Where are you now on your journey of understanding your neurodivergence?

With the community I’ve found, I have a feeling of being able to unmask, to be my true self, to be able to be too much, weird, overly emotional, and sensitive.

Recently, I did a commission for a London museum and library called The Wellcome Collection. They asked me to respond to an article written by a person who was diagnosed with autism as an adult, and because this piece was so personal to my experience, I really wanted to place myself in the work. It was a three-part series: before, during and after diagnosis.

For the final image, I Photoshopped my face in quite a warped way onto the figure. I’ve hid behind my work for years, so to put my own face on this figure felt quite important. It was like, ‘I’m unmasking now. I’m showing myself. I’m allowing myself to actually come through. This is me.’

ADHD, Art, and Mental Health: Next Steps


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Funny Girl: Rachel Feinstein on Fueling Her Stand-Up Comedy with ADHD https://www.additudemag.com/rachel-feinstein-adhd-comedian/ https://www.additudemag.com/rachel-feinstein-adhd-comedian/?noamp=mobile#respond Mon, 30 Sep 2024 07:13:40 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=362968  

Rachel Feinstein finds herself in some ridiculous situations courtesy of her ADHD. Because she’s been gifted with a razor-sharp sense of humor, she takes these unlikely, sometimes absurd moments and turns them into comedy gold in her stand-up routine.

Rachel is a nationally touring comedian and actress whose newest hour-long comedy special, Big Guy, is now streaming on Netflix, where it premiered in the Top 10. In it, she talks about everything from her aggressively liberal mother and Facebook-blundering dad to the odd-couple relationship she has with her fire chief husband, who affectionately calls her “Big Guy.” In vivid detail, Feinstein illustrates how perplexing and frustrating her annoyingly neat husband finds her chronic messes.

“One morning, I walk into the kitchen and my husband is just pacing,” she recounts. “He goes, ‘One question. I got one question for you: Why are there three open seltzers? I’d love to hear the story behind that.” And I’m like, ‘It’s not gonna be a good tale. It’s not like I’m gonna tell you ‘Well, there was blow and hookers and then three open La Croixs!’”

Feinstein’s been praised for her “amazing impersonations” (Vulture), “acute observations,” and ability to be “subtly, exquisitely attuned to her audience” (AV Club). She’s had three Comedy Central specials, co-hosted The View, and been a guest on The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon and Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, among other late night shows, not to mention her slew of TV and film appearances. And she’s the mother of a three-year-old, who provides plenty of comedy material. “My daddy’s a hero,” her daughter likes to say. “And my mommy’s sarcastic.”

Below, Feinstein opens up about the good, the bad, and the funny of her ADHD journey.

[Read: In Praise of the ADHD Funny Bone]

Q: What does your ADHD look like?

I am insanely disorganized. I am always running late. I shed debit cards. I’m always leaving a shoe in somebody’s car. I lose a passport almost every year.

My husband, who is OCD, always says to me: ‘Why don’t you just put things back in the same place?’ And I’m like, ‘You’re assuming I know where I put them. My hands take trips throughout the day. It’s like my hands are not connected to my body.’

I’m a workaholic — but only if someone’s sitting with me. I always have to have a babysitter for myself. I pay people to sit with me.

[Read: Get More Done With a Body Double]

So, for example, an editor expressed interest in working with me on my Netflix special, but I knew I was never going to go through it and email him time codes. So I said to the editor: ‘I’m going to come to your house and sit with you and edit every line with you.’ I don’t think he thought I was going to really do that. Then I was over at his place — just me and him and his wife in his little apartment. I’d leave and bathe and give him time to implement notes, but we were together for two weeks and we got it done. I think we were common law wed by the end of that process.

Q: What was school like for you?

When I even smell a school now, it brings me back to all these weird bad feelings about myself. Ever since I can remember, I was always doing so terribly in school. I was failing, getting Ds and Fs in my public school. They couldn’t stuff information into my brain. I had no idea what was going on in any of the classes. I remember getting 23% on a quiz and thinking, ‘Wow! I can’t believe I know 23% of this!’

I felt like a quaking, throbbing mess in school. It created my core self-esteem issues. When I was 11, I was diagnosed with ADHD, inattentive type.

Then, junior year in high school my parents took me out of the local public school and got me into a tiny Quaker school. There were 60 kids in the whole school, 8 kids in each class. I was able to learn there. I wasn’t distracted and confused. I had a 3.8 GPA for a beat.

Q: When did your love of comedy begin?

From very early on, I loved accents and imitating people and affectations. My parents got me into acting classes and I’d put on living room plays and impersonate everyone in my family.

I always thought I had to entertain people. I remember trying to make everybody laugh in school — and being good at that. That was one thing I could do.

Q: How does ADHD inform your comedy?

I think about things in a funny way. I wasn’t able to think about things in a straight way, so that was the only option left available to me. I need things to hook on to that are funny; that’s what helps me pay attention. So, if someone uses a weird word choice, I’m going to notice what’s funny about it, otherwise I won’t retain anything.

My mom said I was always friends with people who had very distinct personalities and accents — it woke me up, jolted me. That’s true to this day; I’m married to a Brooklyn firefighter pronounced “fiya fida.”

Q: What’s your favorite part of your job?

When I’m on stage, I get a very immediate reaction: it either works or it doesn’t. I am addicted to it, the way my husband’s addicted to the adrenaline rush of being a firefighter. This also helps me as an editing process: I know what works and what doesn’t, and I shed, shed, shed as I go.

The other great thing about stand-up for somebody with ADHD is once you’re booked, you have to do it — you have to be on stage. It’s not something you have to turn in; if it was, I’d never turn it in.

Q: Your least favorite part of your job?

The constant rejection, which mimics all those bad feelings I had about myself in school. There’s always a new insult, even when you think you’ve gotten past that and you’re accepted.

I have to retrain my mind every day to not focus on the person that isn’t into me, that doesn’t like what I’m doing. When the rejection starts to take its toll, I go to the Comedy Cellar and have an immediate connection with the audience.

Q: Where have you found inspiration or encouragement along the way?

I had a therapist who told me that I could juggle a lot of things and that I could grow up and do something where I could be thinking of a million things at once. I remember thinking, ‘This is a man with a desk, who went to graduate school, and he believes this?’ I thought. ‘If Dr. Castellano thinks I won’t be in a Gray Gardens situation for the rest of my life, maybe I won’t be.’

Later, when I was 17, I moved to New York with this random guy and his band, which was named ‘Dick’s Sister.’ I was very obsessed with guys at the time, thinking more about them than what I was going to do with the rest of my life. I had a vague idea of being something funny.

I really didn’t know how to keep a job and I kept getting fired from everything — waitressing, bartending. Then I started nannying for this five-year-old boy with autism. That was the one job I could keep. I really related to his struggles.

I remember I’d tell him, ‘Go put that in the trash can and come right back,’ and he’d get caught between where we were sitting and the trash can. I’d see him get almost there and then get lost. I really related to the feeling of making it halfway to what you were supposed to do. I still do that — I do most of the work and it falls apart at the end.

I worked really hard at the nannying job because I just had this feeling that he had really complicated thoughts, that he was really smart. I didn’t know if I was projecting onto him, but there really was something very special and creative and gifted about him. He ended up going to Harvard. We’re still in touch. He came to my wedding!

It was the first successful experience I had of following something through, until I did stand-up full time. He taught me a lot more than I taught him.

Q: What’s your advice to other people with ADHD?

For anyone who struggles with those old bad feelings from school, my message would be what a lovely therapist said to me: Believe in the way your mind works. Do what you need to do to support yourself.

What might be considered indulgent or lazy might be your own weird route to success. When I was getting started, I did stuff like take cabs everywhere because I was always late. That’s the way I had to do it. I knew I would never be the person who was going to take two buses and be there on time. I spent money to make money. I bet on myself.

ADHD and Comedy: Next Steps


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Finding: Intimate Partner Violence Tied to Declines in Working Memory https://www.additudemag.com/intimate-partner-violence-working-memory-menopause/ https://www.additudemag.com/intimate-partner-violence-working-memory-menopause/?noamp=mobile#respond Fri, 27 Sep 2024 17:40:49 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=363950 September 27, 2024

Women who reported physical intimate partner violence (IPV) before menopause experienced a significantly greater decline in working memory after menopause as compared to women who had not reported violence, according to new research.

Comprising a subgroup analysis of the Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation (SWAN), this research revealed that women who reported physical intimate personal violence showed an annual decline of 0.17 points in working memory performance post-menopause, compared to women who had not reported IPV. Declines in other areas of cognition, including processing speed and verbal memory, were not observed.

SWAN is a multisite, longitudinal cohort study that began in 1996. It seeks to investigate physical, psychological, and social changes that occur during midlife. Baseline information was collected at the start of the study from participants, women aged 42 to 55, and follow-up visits continue to be conducted annually. The subgroup analysis focused on IPV was led by Jillian Baker, MPH, of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, and presented at the annual meeting of the Menopause Society this month.

Baker’s subgroup analysis measured the cognitive performance over time of women who reported physical IPV in the year prior to the SWAN baseline. That subgroup comprised 3.1% of all participants.

The cumulative effect of working-memory decline can dramatically impact quality of life. “Over the course of several years, a decline like this would equate to a drop of nearly two points. and a ten-year change of nearly two points is objectively a loss of nearly a quarter of the average baseline score,” Baker explains. “We think of working memory as the ability to follow directions you just heard or to remember the steps of a task you need to do. If this function is impaired, it can feel pretty debilitating.”

Connecting IPV to Working Memory Impairments

Much remains unknown about how physical IPV contributes to working memory decline. Baker explains that many survivors of IPV have experienced brain injury, often repeatedly, which is linked to changes in cognitive performance. In addition, IPV survivors often struggle with mental health conditions including anxiety, depression, or post-traumatic stress disorder. They may also experience poor sleep and chronic hypervigilance, which may have a deleterious impact on working memory.

“We need more research into these potential mechanisms,” urges Baker. “As they may indicate points of intervention to prevent declines in working memory.”

Another question that remains: Why was physical IPV associated with working memory decline but not with declines in other areas of cognition? These unknowns underline the necessity of additional research, says Baker: “This work sends a strong signal that the association between intimate partner violence and change in cognitive performance is worth studying further.”

Implications for Women with ADHD

Research has proven that women with ADHD are at a particularly high risk for physical IPV due to low self-esteem, high rejection sensitive dysphoria (RSD), and social skill deficits. A study published in the Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology found that:1

  • Girls with ADHD were five times more likely to be victims of physical intimate partner violence than non-ADHD girls (30% vs. 6%)
  • Greater ADHD symptom severity in childhood was associated with increased risk for physical victimization

While the sub-analysis did not include data on ADHD, Baker notes that, “it is both an interesting and important research question to understand how ADHD may play a role in this association,” especially given that women with ADHD often struggle with pre-existing challenges in working memory.

According to the WHO, one-third of women worldwide will experience some form of intimate partner violence during their lifetime, making this research critical to a broad audience of women. “Millions of women are at risk for health effects of partner violence,” says Baker. “We hope this research contributes to the call to invest in violence prevention and support for survivors.”

Sources

1Guendelman MD, Ahmad S, Meza JI, Owens EB, Hinshaw SP. Childhood Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Predicts Intimate Partner Victimization in Young Women. J Abnorm Child Psychol. 2016 Jan;44(1):155-66. doi: 10.1007/s10802-015-9984-z. PMID: 25663589; PMCID: PMC4531111.

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“I Love the Way My Brain Works:” Bestselling Author Rebecca Makkai on Her ADHD https://www.additudemag.com/rebecca-makkai-author-upsides-of-adhd/ https://www.additudemag.com/rebecca-makkai-author-upsides-of-adhd/?noamp=mobile#respond Thu, 26 Sep 2024 09:31:40 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=363457 Rebecca Makkai is a New York Times bestselling author whose books have been translated into more than 20 languages. She is a Pulitzer Prize and a National Book Award finalist. She teaches graduate fiction writing at Northwestern University, among other places, and is artistic director of StoryStudio Chicago. A review of her accomplishments would leave you wondering: What can this woman not do?

The answer? Laundry.

Putting away clean laundry, according to Makkai, is an “insurmountable task.” So is making doctors’ appointments, keeping track of her keys, tolerating conversational lags, and opening a package neatly with scissors. These are the parts of ADHD that Makkai, who was diagnosed just three years ago, finds frustrating. But for Makkai, these annoyances are just a small part of the big neurodivergent picture.

Makkai says ADHD affords her the hyperfocus, bold instinct, and associative thinking that’s allowed her to craft novels like I Have Some Questions for You and The Great Believers, lauded as “spellbinding, “enthralling” and “emotionally riveting” by media outlets including The New York Times Book Review.

“My mind goes in 17 different directions at once, and I’m constantly reaching for new ideas. Everything in the world contains a million things behind it and they’re all fascinating,” Makkai explains. “I’m sure that there are certainly plenty of artists who are linear thinkers but, to me, that feels like a disability. You’re trying to make art and you can only think of one thing after another in a straight line?”

[Download: Your Free Guide to All the Best Parts of ADHD]

Below, Makkai talks about her recent ADHD diagnosis, the gift afforded to her by an unusual education, and how she harnesses the powers of her neurodivergence to create unforgettable stories.

Q: When were you diagnosed?

I was diagnosed two or three years ago, mostly because I have a daughter who is not neurotypical and I was doing these online quizzes for her.

The diagnosis was almost entirely a relief and a revelation. Now, when I lose my keys or mis-manage my time, I know I have reasons other than ‘I’m lazy, I’m spacey, I don’t care.’ It offered me the ability, in certain situations, to stop masking and to help my daughter, who got diagnosed after I did.

[Read: Not Ditzy. Not Lazy. And Definitely Not Dumb.]

It’s been amazing to look back and acknowledge how much of my life I’ve faked, how often it’s like I’m listening to a radio with very poor reception, catching three words and pretending I know what’s going on.

Q: What does your ADHD look like?

I live in a world in which objects move behind my back. I put down my keys and they’re gone. Streets rearrange themselves.

My physical hyperactivity is subtle. If I stand near the food at a party, I will not stop eating — not because I have food issues, but because eating is something to do with my hands. I can only slow down my rapid speech with effort, and I panic at conversational lags. It takes everything I have not to interrupt people constantly.

I have a highly associative brain and a tendency to start several sentences at once. I’ve learned to explain this to my writing students on the first day of class. I’ve learned to start a lot of sentences with “Sidebar” and hold up one finger so students understand that I’m not permanently derailing the conversation.

Q: What was school like for you?

Traditional school can be an ADHD torture chamber. I went to Montessori School until 8th grade, and it was perfect for this kind of mind. It was like, ‘OK, you’re not in the mood for math? You’ll have to do it eventually, but right now, you can go do a report on hedgehogs and knock yourself out doing that for three days. When it’s time for math, you can write your own word problems, or you can do it with a friend, or you can do it in the hall.’

There are so many plusses to this, the biggest one of which is that I learned how my brain works and how I get work done. I’ve been able to carry that with me.

I’m not someone who writes every day. Why would you write every day? If I sit down to work and I’m not in a place to write, then I research. I can do other stuff all week and then I can write for 16 hours if I’m in the mood, so I’m not going to beat myself up for not writing 1,000 words every day.

Before I published my first book, I taught Montessori for 12 years, and that was great for me. There are 30 things going on all the time and you have to pay attention to all of them. I’d be helping a kid with long division, keeping an eye on a discipline issue, answering a question for another kid. Give me that all day long.

Q: How does your ADHD inform your writing?

I’m happiest when I’m doing five things at once. If I could somehow ride a bike and do a Sudoku puzzle and watch a movie and drink a smoothie at the same time, I’d be in heaven. The great news is that the mental juggling you have to do in order to hold a 300-page novel in your mind — ADHDers were built for that.

I teach a lot of really talented writers and I’ve noticed that one of the things that really holds a lot of people back is a dearth of ideas. They start something and they have a couple of elements going on, but they don’t have the urge to add more things that might enrich this. They are marching along this straight and predictable path, which can make for boring writing.

I think a lot of people don’t have good boredom detectors. People who have an above-average sense of patience are going to overestimate the patience of most readers. I am so easily bored that, if I can manage not to bore myself, I probably won’t bore anyone else.

I don’t have infinite patience with a text that’s beautiful but there’s no real craftsmanship to the plot. It’s an art to be able to keep hooking people.

Q: Do you have any ADHD hacks for getting work done?

Deadlines are fantastic for me; they kick me into high gear. Often, I really can’t bring myself to do it until the day before and then I suddenly put my cape on and fly at it and it’s great.

For example, I have a writing group and I know that, if I’ve told them I’m going to get them pages by our meeting on October 1, I have to get those pages to them by then. That helps a lot.

I’ve learned to lean into the sprint in little ways, too. I’ll fail to plug in my computer, realize it’s running low on power, and then try to see how much I can write before it dies. One of the reasons I write well on an airplane is I know I only have so long before they say you have to put away your laptop.

Then, too, so much of the business of writing is not writing. It’s blurbing and interviewing and answering emails. An assistant helps a lot with those things.

Q: What’s your advice to other people with ADHD?

I am so fortunate that I was able to figure out how my mind works at an early age. I’m trying to do that with my daughter now. I tell her, ‘You don’t have to do the same thing everyone else is doing, but you do have to get this done. Let’s analyze: What is your plan? Where do you need to be to get work done? What’s a distraction? What’s a useful distraction? What’s a good break?’

Yes, we need to acknowledge the challenges. And, yes, I frustrate myself, but I love the way my brain works. I’m love my career and how my career is going — and it’s largely due to the brain I have.

The Upsides of ADHD: Next Steps


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“From Self-Loathing to Self-Discovery: How a Late Diagnosis Changed My Life” https://www.additudemag.com/being-diagnosed-with-adhd-as-an-adult-woman/ https://www.additudemag.com/being-diagnosed-with-adhd-as-an-adult-woman/?noamp=mobile#respond Wed, 11 Sep 2024 06:51:09 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=363004 I discovered my ADHD indirectly, thanks to my 20-year-old daughter’s TikTok. As she listed 25 symptoms of inattentive ADHD, with examples from her life, I saw myself mirrored in each one.

But I was confused. I associated ADHD with fidgety grade-school boys. Little did I know that I, an adult woman, could also be diagnosed with ADHD. My daughter’s descriptions of time and organizational overcompensation, decision paralysis, procrastination, overwhelm, and hyperfocus resonated deeply with me. When I suggested that I might have ADHD myself, she agreed.

While waiting for an evaluation and the results, I had daily epiphanies as I connected my lifetime of experiences with information about the ADHD brain. Like so many of us, I’d spent years feeling inadequate, hypersensitive, and too ashamed to say any of it out loud. How many paralyzing hours did I lie on the couch, wondering what was wrong with me? My diagnosis came in August 2022.

[eBook: Women with ADHD: How Hormones, Symptoms & Late Diagnoses Impact Females]

Six years earlier, at almost 49, I’d unknowingly set in motion a seismic journey of personal reinvention with the decision to stop drinking (10 years in the making) and enter therapy for the first time. I was finally able to follow through on both steps, even in the face of intense anxiety and self-hatred. My sobriety and therapy unleashed a flood of unresolved issues and traumas. Recovery was just the beginning of my self-discovery.

I ended my 26-year marriage and became an empty nester. My work as a commercial interior designer suddenly felt toxic. I had come to realize that there was a fundamental misalignment between my strengths, interests, and responsibilities. Near crippling self-doubt and fear of rejection had kept me tethered to my career for 28 years. Finally, my ADHD diagnosis shattered the narrative of not good enough, paving the way for self-compassion and newfound confidence and hope.

Standing at the intersection of creative expansion and personal revolution, I found a community of midlife women on similar paths and planted the seed for starting my company, Triple Moon Coaching. I enrolled in a holistic coach certification program so I could build a side practice and phase into full-time professional life coaching.

Empowered by clarity and optimism, I focused on creating my new vision. ADHD impulsivity has been a consistent thread for as long as I can remember. My resignation was bold and necessary, and a bit premature. But I was learning. No regrets.

I am on a solid path to successful entrepreneurship. It’s a joy and a privilege to coach women who are taking charge of their lives and growing into their own unique potential.

ADHD in Women: Next Steps


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“A Patient’s Guide to Talking with Your Doctor About ADHD and Menopause” [Video Replay & Podcast #525] https://www.additudemag.com/webinar/talk-to-your-doctor-menopause-adhd/ https://www.additudemag.com/webinar/talk-to-your-doctor-menopause-adhd/?noamp=mobile#respond Tue, 10 Sep 2024 19:30:25 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?post_type=webinar&p=363021 Editor’s note: In this webinar, we discussed the safety considerations for menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) and hormone replacement therapy (HRT). To clarify, in addition to the contraindications to transdermal MHT/HRT that were discussed (history of breast cancer and complicated diabetes), there may be other relative contraindications for oral MHT, such as a history of thrombosis or migraines. These were not fully addressed due to time constraints. Importantly, transdermal estrogen is generally considered safe for individuals with a history of thromboses, and certain formulations of local (vaginal) estrogens can be used by all women without time restraint. For specific questions and concerns, consult your healthcare provider.


Episode Description

Brain fog, emotional meltdowns, and fear of dementia. Perimenopausal women with ADHD face these and myriad other challenges to brain and body due to hormonal changes during their final reproductive years. Many women, with and without ADHD, are not fully aware of the hormonal processes that start up to 10 years before menopause. During this busy time of life, many women carry great responsibility for children, aging parents, career, and family logistics. Already burdened by stress, most women assume the physical and psychiatric symptoms of perimenopause are unavoidable. At the same time, they struggle to understand and effectively treat their changing ADHD symptoms during this time of hormonal transition, which has been largely ignored by medical research to date.

All of this is true, however many researchers and clinicians continue to dismiss patients’ concerns saying that “there are no studies exploring adult or older women” or “there is no evidence to support advice on adjustment of medication or other treatment efforts for (peri)menopausal women.” It is, of course, important to base our medical advice on the best available research. But is it ethical to allow adult women with ADHD to suffer just because researchers and clinicians haven’t paid them enough attention?

We think not! That is why I’m passionate about doing the best and the most we can and to communicate the evidence that actually exists.

In this webinar, you will learn the following information to share with your clinician:

  • How the ADHD brain reacts to fluctuating hormones in vulnerable periods of the female life
  • How you can differentiate between ADHD and menopausal symptoms
  • How the “swinging” decrease of estrogen and progesterone during perimenopause can worsen ADHD symptoms and influence medication effect
  • How psychiatric and physical symptoms interplay with ADHD in (peri)menopause
  • How to treat ADHD and menopausal symptoms in adult females
  • How the ADHD life beyond menopause can look

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.

Download or Stream the Podcast Audio

Click the play button below to listen to this episode directly in your browser, click the symbol to download to listen later, or open in your podcasts app: Apple Podcasts; Audacy; Spotify; Amazon Music; iHeartRADIO

ADHD in Perimenopause & Menopause: More Resources

Obtain a Certificate of Attendance

If you attended the live webinar on October 16, 2024, 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

Lotta Borg Skoglund, M.D., Ph.D., is an author, keynote speaker, and entrepreneur from Sweden. Her specialty is in psychiatry/addiction and family medicine with a specific focus on ADHD and ADD. In 2015, she defended her thesis, When ADHD and Substance use Disorders Coexist – Etiology and Pharmacological Treatment, at Karolinska Institute, Stockholm.

Dr. Skoglund currently holds a position as Associate Professor at Uppsala UniversityDepartment for Women’s and Children’s Health, where she continues her research into ADHD, comorbidity, and gender influences. She is specifically interested in how hormones affect mental health across the female lifespan — a field that is not even close to being researched enough! Together with colleagues from around the world, she leads the pioneering research group GODDESS ADHD.


Listener Testimonials

“Today was so great. Such a relief to hear my symptoms discussed and validated! Thank you!”

“The list of information to take to a medical appointment was particularly helpful. Thank you!”

“Amazing speaker, so knowledgeable and up to date. Very helpful.”


Webinar Sponsor

The sponsor of this ADDitude webinar is….

 

 

“Is it ADHD, menopause, or both?” The overlap between the two can be confusing and overwhelming. At Inflow, we understand the unique challenges of managing ADHD during this transitional phase of life. Our CBT-based app program, developed by expert ADHD clinicians, provides you with effective strategies to navigate the combined effects of ADHD and menopause. From mood swings to memory lapses, we’ll help you develop coping techniques to manage your symptoms and stay on track. Don’t let the confusion of ADHD and menopause hold you back. Take the free ADHD quiz today to kick off your self-care journey.

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


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Turning Regret Into Reset After an ADHD Diagnosis https://www.additudemag.com/reinvent-yourself-adhd-symptoms-in-adult-women/ https://www.additudemag.com/reinvent-yourself-adhd-symptoms-in-adult-women/?noamp=mobile#respond Fri, 06 Sep 2024 01:50:12 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=362270 At midlife, many women enter the sandwich generation, juggling the often-conflicting needs of their children, parents, and partners. Society’s gender role expectations pressure them to conform to a traditional feminine ideal and prioritize others’ needs before their own.

Some of these women feel overwhelmed with overcommitment and dread moral judgment of their efforts. They feel ill-equipped to manage life’s complexities. These are the women with hidden ADHD: undiagnosed, untreated, and underserved.

Evading ADHD detection for so long suggests these women were able to present a seamless façade; that they passed for neurotypical, which may have felt like a win. But perfectionistic masking almost always comes at a high emotional cost. The self-monitoring is relentless; the hypervigilance, fueled by anxiety, exhausting.

While hiding their true selves may have seemed necessary to escape anticipated judgment and rejection, women who receive an ADHD diagnosis later in life report a new appreciation for the courage and determination that served them for so long.

Getting an ADHD Diagnosis Can Be Revelatory

Diagnosis at midlife unleashes a kaleidoscope of sensations—shock, anger, relief, regret, shame, fear, guilt, resentment, and sadness. On the life-changing journey toward understanding and acceptance, your first step is to learn everything you can about ADHD in women. Make use of audiobooks, articles, podcasts, webinars, support groups, and therapy.

[Read: Women with ADHD – No More Suffering in Silence]

Gradually, the explanation for your years of distress and confusion will emerge with increasing clarity. Share it with the people most important to you. Honor the regret you feel about the opportunities lost, then embark on building a more rewarding future.

The Impact of Hormones

For women with ADHD, declining estrogen levels in perimenopause and menopause trigger a perfect storm: functionality suffers as the severity of ADHD symptoms and coexisting anxiety and depression spike. Fluctuating hormones also disrupt mood, memory, sleep, concentration, and motivation. Shame and self-doubt, amplified during the premenstrual phase, become more intrusive and destabilizing.

Ambushed by tsunamis of emotion and memory lapses, many women attribute their worsening struggles to character flaws and judge themselves harshly. Since women now spend about a third of their lives in menopause, it’s a game-changer to discover that your unpredictable functioning is hormonally mediated.

Reinvent Yourself

We cannot change our age, history, or brain wiring, but we can change the lens through which we view our world. Changing our perspective and redefining our identity is best achieved through an alliance with a therapist who has expertise in working with women with ADHD.

[Read: Relief, Grief, and More Raw Reactions to an Adult ADHD Diagnosis]

In the meantime, begin the process of creating a new version of yourself by doing the following:

  • Embrace your strengths. Understanding the far-reaching impact of ADHD in midlife enables a more realistic assessment of your strengths and weaknesses. After years of ruminating about your limitations, you’ll learn that there is strength in knowing when you need help and asking for it.
  • Trust your unique vision. Non-linear thinkers are differently abled. Your passion and creativity enhance the neurotypical status quo with novel solutions.
  • Create boundaries. To many women, social acceptance is an indicator of self-worth. Social dynamics are confusing, and you may consider others’ agendas more important than your own. Boundaries can help you find a balance between feeling trapped by overcommitment and withdrawing from interactions to avoid confrontation.
  • Prioritize self-care. It takes a serious investment in your wellbeing to change the way you interact with your body. Women with ADHD tend to skimp on attention to their health. Creating a bedtime routine to improve sleep requires small changes over time. Eating healthier foods, drinking more water, and maintaining an exercise routine demand healthy vigilance. Balance conflicting needs—protection vs. connection, self-care vs. accommodating others, and passivity vs. assertiveness. Each small step will improve your quality of life.
  • Develop systems that work for you. When chaos and clutter threaten to consume your environment, you may feel more frantic and unable to envision solutions. Creating organization and routine will help you manage your time and space more effectively.
  • Seek pleasure. Take a designated amount of time each day, even just 15 minutes, to do something you find pleasurable. This transition will allow your brain to revel in unstructured downtime, whether that means chilling out with music, meditating, or having a cappuccino while playing Wordle.

After decades of shame, apologizing, and fearing criticism, a diagnosis gives you explicit permission to forgive yourself for being your own harshest critic. Whether you’ve punished yourself in the past with isolation, substance abuse, binge eating, or other kinds of self-harm, a midlife diagnosis can help you accept that you are worthy of being nurtured—by yourself and by others.

Diagnosis at midlife is the beginning of an ongoing journey toward enlightenment and transformation. Seize this unexpected second chance to believe in yourself. As you get the hang of reinvention, you will rejoice.

Reinvent Yourself Post-Diagnosis: Next Steps

Ellen Littman, Ph.D., a clinical psychologist in New York, is co-author of The Hidden Side of Adult ADHD, Understanding Women with ADHD, and Gender Differences in ADHD.


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“‘The Bright Underachiever:’ Cruelties I Heard Growing Up with Undiagnosed ADHD” https://www.additudemag.com/undiagnosed-add-self-esteem-girl/ https://www.additudemag.com/undiagnosed-add-self-esteem-girl/?noamp=mobile#respond Fri, 30 Aug 2024 09:42:41 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=361998 “The reality is that, while Maria is clearly a cognitively bright young lady, she wouldn’t necessarily be considered gifted in any particular area.”

“In talking with Maria, it is clear that her family and instructors have historically viewed her as being intellectually quite bright and an underachiever.”

These are not a passive-aggressive bully’s words, a sibling’s backhanded compliment, or careless remarks delivered at a parent-teacher conference. These are the very deliberate words of a neurologist, neuropsychologist, and medical-education specialist following my ADHD evaluation in childhood. The intended audience: my parents, my family physician, and my teachers.

The clinic’s problematic “assessment” and cruel words still haunt me years later. I didn’t read their words until I was in my 40s, and I finally understood why I had a decades-long habit of telling people I have no special talents. The specialists stated in scientific terms that I, a child, was a talentless loser. My parents and my family physician believed them without question. What could my parents have done differently?

[Take This Self-Test: ADHD Symptoms in Women and Girls]

Set in Their Ways

Despite education and experience, we know that experts make mistakes all the time. It’s why we frequently seek second medical opinions. My parents certainly needed one when the politely insulting report described my problems as “common” with ADHD, but the tone of the recommendations was “do better.” A second opinion would have offered my parents another analysis of my behaviors. Most importantly, I could have had a chance at a better life.

But my parents – education experts – were inclined to go along with what the evaluators said, as they shared similar vocational backgrounds. Though my mother still harbored some suspicions that I had ADHD, she and my father ultimately assumed that I was failing my classes on purpose. They made sure to share their theories about my behaviors with my teachers, who were more inclined to default to their opinions rather than their own judgment about my classroom behavior they saw every day.

What I Cannot Forgive

I can forgive science not catching up in time. (After all, it’s been more than 30 years since that evaluation and we’re still working to better understand ADHD in girls.) What I cannot forgive is my parents and the clinic for the cruelty, sexism, and failure to recognize the fact that I didn’t want to do poorly. In any setting, telling someone they do not have any special talents or that they’re an underachiever is an appalling insult.

[Read: “11 Things I’d Tell My Younger Self”]

The rest of the report would eventually prove hilariously inaccurate. “During the evaluation Maria did not demonstrate many of the learning deficits often observed in adolescents with a primary attention deficit hyperactivity disorder,” reads part of the report. Thirty-one years later, I received my ADHD diagnosis at age 44.

Ironically, the experts who wrote the report that detailed my carelessness and sloppiness also committed typographical, punctuation, and grammatical errors along with listing my incorrect home address on every page and misspelling my last name. Perhaps they were gifted in other areas? Unfortunately, those doctors didn’t provide their full names in the “scientific” report they authored, so I was never able to track them down to find out. What a relief for them.

Undiagnosed ADD: Next Steps

Maria Reppas lives with her family on the East Coast. Visit her on X and at mariareppas.com.


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“Women with ADHD Prefer Silence Over Disclosure. This Needs to Change.” https://www.additudemag.com/inclusive-culture-workplace-women-with-adhd/ https://www.additudemag.com/inclusive-culture-workplace-women-with-adhd/?noamp=mobile#respond Thu, 15 Aug 2024 08:18:07 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=360704 More than half of adults with ADHD prefer to keep their diagnosis to themselves, according to a recent Understood.org survey of 2,100 adults conducted online by The Harris Poll. However, an even more concerning pattern emerges when we break down the results by gender: 66% of young women (ages 18–34) prefer to stay silent compared to 42% of young men with ADHD.

Why Women with ADHD Don’t Disclose Their Diagnosis

In part, the survey results suggest that women with ADHD are perceived differently than are men with ADHD — a finding that more than half of survey respondents (three-quarters of whom were women) agree to be true.

We know that self-stigma is a key barrier to seeking professional support.1While the survey’s findings relate to ADHD specifically, they speak to a larger societal phenomenon: Individuals internalize public stigma, e.g., stereotypes, prejudice, and discriminatory attitudes endorsed by the public. We see examples of internalized public stigma across women’s mental and general health, including their ADHD diagnosis.

Although men and women are just as likely to have learning and thinking differences, girls with ADHD are diagnosed one-third as often as boys2 Many women receive their ADHD diagnoses in their 30s, 40s, and beyond. When a woman is diagnosed with ADHD later in life, she’s likely spent decades struggling without understanding why. A late-in-life diagnosis may be the route of frustration, self-doubt, and anxiety.

Researchers have primarily based assessment tools on studies of boys and they do not norm for female populations. Gender bias built into testing instruments is one of the biggest reasons women and girls with ADHD may go undiagnosed, something 87% of survey respondents acknowledged, the survey revealed.

[Free Resource: What to Ask Yourself to Find the Perfect Job]

Women diagnosed with ADHD later in life often express how they made efforts and investments to get answers, but providers routinely dismissed their concerns as “hormones,” “mom brain,” or “lack of self-care.” Many received diagnoses of depression or anxiety instead of ADHD.

They finally got an accurate diagnosis after enduring years of unsuccessful treatments — along with blame for non-compliance. The experience of having their providers meet their initial concerns with disbelief, in a sense, trained women not to disclose.

Many women develop the core belief that “there’s something wrong with me.” And this doesn’t change overnight. Often, women need time, support, and community to learn how to voice their newly learned diagnosis in a way that feels right to them.

Choosing not to disclose an ADHD diagnosis is a logical response to stigma, bias, and backlash. Half of the adults surveyed believe that the negative stigma surrounding neurodiversity is stronger now than ever before. Among respondents with learning and thinking differences, 59% worry that disclosing their diagnosis would negatively impact their careers. Nearly 1 in 4 respondents who requested workplace accommodations said they lost their jobs or got demoted after asking. In that kind of workplace culture, it’s no surprise that people stay silent.

[Take the ADHD Self-Test for Women]

How to Create an Inclusive Culture

The culture that too often makes silence the best option for women must shift. The solution to silence is not as simple as telling women to “speak up” at work. We need to create a culture that places women’s voices and needs at the core. We need to raise awareness and challenge the stigma around neurodivergence (particularly ADHD and dyslexia) for women. We need better resources, awareness, and action, to start the shift toward progress.

Here are a few steps individuals, providers, and employers can take to create a more inclusive culture:

  • Learn: Patients, employers, and providers need to let go of old assumptions and dial up their curiosity because the information about ADHD has historically been based on homogeneous, primarily male experiences. Even among the most knowledgeable, there’s still much to learn and unlearn.
  • Embrace the gray: Disclosure isn’t “on” or “off.” You don’t need to share your diagnosis with everyone. You get to choose who, when, and how much you share.
  • Listen: Often people don’t speak up because when they do, they aren’t heard or understood. For providers, this means actively listening to clients and patients. Employers need to actively listen to employees and take their concerns and requests seriously. Individuals need to listen to their inner voice without judgment.

Inclusive Culture: Next Steps


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Sources

1 Lannin, D.G., Bible, J. (2022). Self-Stigma of Seeking Help: A Meta-Analysis. The Cambridge Handbook of Stigma and Mental Health. Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology. Cambridge University Press; 111-142.

2 Young, S., Adamo, N., Ásgeirsdóttir, B.B. et al. (2020). Females with ADHD: An Expert Consensus Statement Taking a Lifespan Approach Providing Guidance for the Identification and Treatment of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder in Girls and Women. BMC Psychiatry. 20, 404. https://doi.org/0.1186/s12888-020-02707-9

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“How RSD Evolved from Protector to Tormentor in the ADHD Brain” https://www.additudemag.com/fear-of-rejection-rsd-evolution-adhd-women/ https://www.additudemag.com/fear-of-rejection-rsd-evolution-adhd-women/?noamp=mobile#comments Sat, 29 Jun 2024 09:39:56 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=358221 Picture this: You’re back in high school. You’re in the cafeteria, and you notice two classmates eating lunch at a nearby table. One of them looks at you, laughs, and then whispers something to her friend. How would you interpret this situation?

Without fail, all of my female clients reply, “They are laughing at me.”

This painful thinking pattern – sensitivity to rejection – is etched into our brains, a pattern that arguably developed for an evolutionarily adaptive purpose. It’s also a pattern that appears to be much more amplified in the female ADHD brain.

Rejection Is an Existential Threat

According to neuropsychiatrist Louann Brizendine, M.D., author of The Female Brain (#CommissionsEarned), girls’ brains are “machines” that are “built for connection.” From infancy, girls respond more to the cries of other babies and gaze longer at faces compared to boys.

Unlike men, who are physically larger and stronger, women have historically needed other people and social connections to ensure their own safety and that of their offspring. The female brain, Brizendine posits, likely tuned into the potential for social rejection as an evolutionarily protective function.

So great is the fear of exclusion among women that it informs bullying behaviors. Peer relationship research shows us that, unlike males, who engage in more physical forms of bullying, females generally rely on more relational or reputational methods, such as excluding another girl from their social group, spreading rumors, or saying something mean directly to the victim’s face. In other words, we toy with other females’ emotions by threatening exclusion from an early age because that is really what we fear the most — being rejected and alone.

[Take the RSD Self-Test: Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria Symptoms]

The ADHD Brain and Emotional Reactivity

The amygdala, which Brizendine describes as the brain’s “emotional gatekeeper,” is where fear and anger are initially processed. Once the amygdala detects a threat — real or perceived — that information is sent to the hypothalamus. The hypothalamus then heightens the uncomfortable fight-flight sensations (e.g., faster heartrate and breathing) we experience when we are anxious or angry. The amygdala also sounds the alarm to the prefrontal cortex (PFC), the executive functioning center of the brain, which then decides whether and how to react.

And here lies the pivotal point where the differences between girls with and without ADHD come to light. Our ADHD brains, prone to greater emotional flooding, crank up the volume on the aforementioned process. Our fear of exclusion is amplified. We interpret a situation as threatening when it likely isn’t.

Regardless, our brains get carried away with the threat. The alarm bells of “danger” ring, ring, and ring. We struggle to regulate, and, due to poor executive functioning, we struggle to respond effectively. There’s a reason psychiatrists Edward Hallowell, M.D., and John Ratey, M.D., describe the ADHD brain as a Ferrari equipped with bicycle brakes.

The way those of us with ADHD experience rejection is so unique that there’s a term for it: rejection sensitive dysphoria (RSD). Psychiatrist William Dodson, M.D., notes that some of his patients with RSD even describe feeling physical pain – as if they’ve been stabbed in the chest – as a response to rejection.

[Read: How Does RSD Really, Actually Feel?]

I can attest to this; after I got into an argument with someone very close to me, I sobbed in my husband’s arms and could only say, “It hurts.” Yes, I was hurting emotionally. But I was also in literal, physical pain. The female brain’s propensity to relay intense emotions into actual physical sensations is not lost on me. Feelings of emotional pain can register as physical pain responses for us, according to Brizendine.

As women, but especially as women with ADHD, our brains are wired to scan for rejection at every turn. Yes, this probable evolutionary adaptation – developed for protection – is turbocharged under ADHD. Yes, RSD and emotional reactivity are the excruciating result. But our sensitivity and ability to feel deeply, dare I say, has its advantages, too.

Fear of Rejection, RSD, and ADHD: Next Steps


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#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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Study: Complex ADHD More Common in Women and Girls, Leading to Later Diagnoses https://www.additudemag.com/comorbidities-misdiagnosis-mood-disorders-adhd/ https://www.additudemag.com/comorbidities-misdiagnosis-mood-disorders-adhd/?noamp=mobile#respond Thu, 30 May 2024 13:20:29 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=356374 May 30, 2024

Females are more likely than males to have complex presentations of ADHD, potentially leading to delayed diagnosis and treatment, according to new research published in the Journal of Attention Disorders. The study found that females with ADHD are more likely than males to have inattentive ADHD, are diagnosed at older ages, and have higher rates of anxiety and depression diagnoses both before and after their ADHD diagnoses. 1

The retrospective observational study was conducted using data from four U.S. health databases. The researchers sought to explore the relationship between sex as well as ADHD subtype and diagnosis timing. They also hoped to assess whether receiving an ADHD diagnosis had an impact on pre-existing diagnoses of depression and anxiety in women and girls, who receive treatment for these comorbidities at higher numbers.

Age of ADHD Diagnosis Rates by Sex and Subtype

The study revealed:

  • The average age of ADHD diagnosis by gender:
    • Females:16 to 29 years
    • Males: 11 to 23 years
  • Across both sexes, the average age of diagnosis by ADHD type:
  • Females were substantially more likely than males to be diagnosed with inattentive ADHD

How Mood Disorders Fit Into the Diagnostic Picture

  • Females were twice as likely as males to have depression or anxiety diagnoses and treatments in the year before their ADHD diagnosis.
  • Females were more likely than males to receive new diagnoses or treatments for depression or anxiety in the year following an ADHD diagnosis.
  • The number of females with pre-existing depression or anxiety diagnoses with symptoms that did not continue after their ADHD diagnosis was higher than the number of males. In these cases, ADHD may have been misdiagnosed as anxiety or depression.
  • Patients with inattentive ADHD were more likely to receive a prior diagnosis of depression or anxiety:
    • Inattentive ADHD: 13% to 18% (depression) and 17% to 26% (anxiety)
    • Hyperactive impulsive ADHD: 5% to 12% (depression) and 9% to 20% (anxiety)

Repercussions of Delayed Diagnosis

The study’s finding that females are diagnosed five years later than males, on average, together with other key data points lead researchers to conclude that diagnoses in females tend to occur “only once ADHD symptoms become more severe,” and underscores the importance of addressing this gap in health equity.

The consequences of undiagnosed ADHD are dire, especially for women.

“Women who live undiagnosed until adulthood experience significant negative outcomes in the areas of self-esteem, social interaction, and psychosocial wellbeing beginning in childhood and continuing into adulthood,” concluded the authors of a systematic review of research published in March 2023. “Women in these studies engaged in less task-oriented coping and more emotion-oriented coping and often turned to recreational drugs, alcohol, nicotine, and sex to self-medicate for symptoms of undiagnosed ADHD.” 2

A female ADDitude reader explains the lived experience of late diagnosis this way: “I have lived with the misleading belief that I was a loser, lazy, incompetent. What are the long-term impacts of these self-defeating beliefs?”

The Complicating Presence of Mood Disorders

The connection between ADHD and mood disorders, including depression, is well-established. According to a recent study in BMJ Mental Health: 3

  • People with ADHD are 9% more likely to have MDD
  • An MDD diagnosis increases the risk for ADHD by 76%

These findings are echoed in the responses to a recent ADDitude survey of 6,810 adults, which found that 72% reported having anxiety and 62% having reported depression.

In addition to the over-representation of mood disorders among individuals with ADHD, previous research has documented that women in general are twice as likely as men to suffer from MDD and General Anxiety Disorder (GAD).

While rates of mood disorders are unequivocally higher among women with ADHD than either men with ADHD or women without the condition, the new study lends credence to what many women have reported anecdotally: They are also more likely than men to have ADHD initially misdiagnosed as depression or anxiety.

“Because of stigma and thoughts related to gender role presentations, when females do present with ADHD symptoms, it can be thought that it’s more likely due to anxiety or depression, because those are presentations that people are used to seeing in females early on,” explained Dave Anderson, Ph.D., in the ADDitude webinar “ADHD Then and Now: How Our Understanding Has Evolved.” “So, people say, ‘She’s distracted because she’s anxious or sad,’ not because she has ADHD. That’s something that we’re actively trying to fight, even in clinician bias.”

The new study, and research like it, helps shed light on the unique toll exacted on women by ADHD. More investigation is desperately needed, explains Dawn K. Brown, M.D., in the ADDitude article, We Demand Attention! A Call for Greater Research on Women with ADHD.

“Further research regarding these topics is indeed crucial,” Brown explains. “By conducting in-depth investigations into the gender-specific nuances of ADHD presentation and impact, healthcare professionals, policymakers, and advocates can promote greater awareness, understanding, and tailored support for women with ADHD.”

Read on to learn about the Top 10 research priorities detailed in ADDitude’s groundbreaking, cross-platform initiative : We Demand Attention! A Call to Action for Greater Research on Women with ADHD.

We Demand Attention: A Call for Greater Research on ADHD in Women

Intro: Top 10 Research Priorities

  1. Sex Difference in ADHD
  2. The Health Consequences of Delayed ADHD Diagnoses on Women
  3. How Hormonal Changes Impact ADHD Symptoms in Women
  4. How Perimenopause and Menopause Impact ADHD Symptoms, and Vice Versa
  5. The Elevated Risk for PMDD and PPD Among Women with ADHD
  6. The Safety and Efficacy of ADHD Medication Use During Pregnancy and While Nursing
  7. How ADHD Medication Adjustments During the Monthly Menstrual Cycle Could Improve Outcomes for Women
  8. The Long-Term and Short-Term Implications of Hormonal Birth Control and Hormone-Replacement Therapy Use Among Women with ADHD
  9. How and Why Comorbid Conditions Like Anxiety, Depression, and Eating Disorders Uniquely Impact Women with ADHD
  10. Early Indicators of Self-Harm, Partner Violence, and Substance Abuse Among Girls and Women with ADHD

Sources

1  Siddiqui, U., Conover, M. M., Voss, E. A., Kern, D. M., Litvak, M., & Antunes, J. (2024). Sex Differences in Diagnosis and Treatment Timing of Comorbid Depression/Anxiety and Disease Subtypes in Patients With ADHD: A Database Study. Journal of Attention Disorders, 0(0). https://doi.org/10.1177/10870547241251738

2  Attoe, D. E., & Climie, E. A. (2023). Miss. Diagnosis: A Systematic Review of ADHD in Adult Women. Journal of Attention Disorders, 27(7), 645-657. https://doi.org/10.1177/10870547231161533

3  Meisinger, C. & Freuer, D., (2023) Understanding the Causal Relationships of Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder with Mental Disorders and Suicide Attempt: A Network Mendelian Randomisation Study. BMJ Mental Health. doi.org/10.1136/bmjment-2022-300642

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Duke Project Narrows Top Research Priorities for, and by, Women with ADHD https://www.additudemag.com/adhd-symptoms-in-adult-women-duke-research/ https://www.additudemag.com/adhd-symptoms-in-adult-women-duke-research/?noamp=mobile#respond Fri, 24 May 2024 02:03:42 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=355787 May 24, 2024

The most urgent and important areas of medical research on women with ADHD include the following:

  1. Hormonal Influences: Understanding how hormones impact ADHD presentation and treatment in girls and women
  2. Aging and Cognitive Decline: Investigating the connection between aging, cognitive decline, and ADHD in post-menopausal women with ADHD
  3. Misdiagnosis and Late Diagnosis: Exploring the unique harms of misdiagnosis or later-in-life diagnosis of ADHD in women
  4. Executive Function Challenges: Studying how executive functioning challenges (e.g., organization, prioritizing, time management) manifest in girls and women with ADHD

These research priorities emerged from the interim results of a survey conducted by the Duke Center for Girls & Women with ADHD last month. The online survey asked respondents to rank 46 unique health research according to their personal importance, revealing broad consensus among women of various ages and socioeconomic backgrounds. To date, 1,350 people have completed the survey.

For women with ADHD in their 20s, 30s, and 40s, the top research priority was understanding the role of hormones in ADHD symptoms and treatment. Women aged 51 and older prioritized research on the interplay between ADHD, aging, and cognitive decline after menopause.

These findings complement those of ADDitude’s recent survey of 705 women with self-reported ADHD, 69% of whom said their quality of life would be most significantly impacted by research on “how the hormonal changes of perimenopause and menopause affect ADHD symptoms.” The survey respondents also expressed frustration by the historical lack of recognition of ADHD in women and girls.

“Surely I’m not seeing something that the actual scientists can’t,” wrote one ADDitude reader in response to an Instagram post calling for greater research on hormones and ADHD. “We know that dopamine levels are directly correlated with estrogen levels. It seems obvious that the Estrogen Rollercoaster we live on would have a huge impact on our symptoms, no?”

Among post-menopausal women who completed the Duke Center’s survey, their research priorities shifted to also include studies on the psychological, emotional, and long-term health implications of late diagnosis, including:

  • The impact of ADHD on girls’ and women’s beliefs about themselves
  • Specific considerations for therapy for women who were diagnosed with ADHD later in life

“I was an older woman (60+) when I realized that ADHD is real and that I have it,” wrote one respondent to ADDitude’s survey on research priorities. “I have lived with the misleading belief that I was a loser, lazy, incompetent… What are the long-term impacts of these self-defeating beliefs? Where does one this old go for help this late in life?”

Another woman lamented clinicians’ failure to understand, diagnose, and treat women for ADHD. “Most people going through menopause have not been allowed to have ADHD according to the DSM,” the woman said in response to an Instagram post calling for greater research on menopause in women with ADHD. “When we were kids, we had to be male and physically hyperactive [to get an ADHD diagnosis]. Born female before the late ‘80s, you had to be a sodding unicorn to be diagnosed. Seeing as we’ve only been in the club for a few years, why would anyone think to have looked?”

Quantifying ADHD Research Needs

Of the 1,350 survey responses included in the Duke Center’s early results, 1,128 came from adult women who self-identified as living with ADHD. The majority of these women were White, lived in mostly urban or suburban regions, and reported that they did not experience significant financial hardship. A third of the sample were of “childbearing age” (i.e., ages 24-40), more than half were in their 40s and 50s, and 37% were 60 and older. A small minority (2%) were “young adult” women (ages 18-23).

The majority (N=429, 38%) of the sample identified as not yet starting menopause, 35% (N=392) were perimenopausal or in menopause, and 285 respondents (25%) identified as being post-menopausal.

Research Priorities for Girls with ADHD

More than 400 survey respondents identified as being a parent of a daughter with ADHD. The Duke Center used their responses as a proxy for the top child-specific research priorities for girls with ADHD, which included the following:

  1. Investigating the reasons why girls with ADHD experience heightened rejection sensitivity
  2. Exploring how teachers’ understanding of ADHD presentation in girls can be different from boys, and how this unique presentation impacts identifying and supporting girls with ADHD in school
  3. Understanding the impact of social development delays in girls with ADHD
  4. Studying the challenges of identifying, supporting, and advocating for girls with ADHD in education settings
  5. Researching effective learning environments, teaching approaches/school accommodation, and strategies for girls with ADHD

Other Notable Findings

Women in their 20s and 30s were the only respondents to rank “unique medication concerns for girls and women with ADHD” as one of their top priorities. They also identified “workplace accommodations and strategies that are most helpful for women with ADHD” as especially important, a theme that was not prioritized as highly by other groups.

Post-menopausal women were in the only group to rank “impact of ADHD on girls’ and women’s beliefs about themselves” as one of their top four priorities.

Given that 90% of the sample of adult women with ADHD identified as White, and 95% identified as non-Hispanic, the researchers were unable to examine whether different races or ethnicities prioritized themes differently. Additional recruitment of more diverse groups is under way.

Research by the Duke Center for Girls & Women with ADHD is supported by a Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) Engagement Award (EASCS-26478), which aims to learn from girls and women living with ADHD — as well as from the people who love and support them — about the research areas that are the most important to them. The center’s mission is to advance education about the unique needs of girls and women with ADHD across the lifespan.

ADHD Symptoms in Adult Women: Related Reading

We Demand Attention: A Call for Greater Research on ADHD in Women

Top 10 Research Priorities According to ADDitude Experts, Readers

  1. Sex Difference in ADHD
  2. The Health Consequences of Delayed ADHD Diagnoses on Women
  3. How Hormonal Changes Impact ADHD Symptoms in Women
  4. How Perimenopause and Menopause Impact ADHD Symptoms, and Vice Versa
  5. The Elevated Risk for PMDD and PPD Among Women with ADHD
  6. The Safety and Efficacy of ADHD Medication Use During Pregnancy and While Nursing
  7. How ADHD Medication Adjustments During the Monthly Menstrual Cycle Could Improve Outcomes for Women
  8. The Long-Term and Short-Term Implications of Hormonal Birth Control and Hormone-Replacement Therapy Use Among Women with ADHD
  9. How and Why Comorbid Conditions Like Anxiety, Depression, and Eating Disorders Uniquely Impact Women with ADHD
  10. Early Indicators of Self-Harm, Partner Violence, and Substance Abuse Among Girls and Women with ADHD
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