Videos on ADHD and ADD: Symptoms, Treatments, Stories 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, 30 Sep 2024 17:33:37 +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 Videos on ADHD and ADD: Symptoms, Treatments, Stories https://www.additudemag.com 32 32 How Gender Role Expectations Obscure ADHD Symptoms in Women https://www.additudemag.com/gender-roles-adhd-symptoms-misdiagnosis-women/ https://www.additudemag.com/gender-roles-adhd-symptoms-misdiagnosis-women/?noamp=mobile#respond Fri, 20 Oct 2023 10:00:50 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=340614 ADHD Symptoms in Women Vs. Men


For many years, ADHD was believed to impact only males — and the research reflects that. It wasn’t until 1993 that NIH-funded clinical studies on ADHD were required to include women. We’ve come a long way, but missed ADHD symptoms and underdiagnosis are still common among females with the condition.

“Because of stigma as well as thoughts related to gender role presentations, ADHD symptoms in females can be thought of as more likely due to anxiety or depression,” says Dave Anderson, Ph.D., of the Child Mind Institute, in the video above. “Those are conditions that people are more used to seeing in females.”

The presentation of ADHD in males and females is distinct, and not fully understood or valued. On average, females experience a later age of symptom onset and a different level of severity. While males are commonly hyperactive and impulsive, females are better known for symptoms of inattention and distractibility. (Inattentive ADHD was introduced to the DSM in 1980.)

“People will say, ‘Oh, she’s distracted because she’s anxious,’ or ‘She’s distracted because she’s sad,’ not because she has ADHD. And that is something we’re actively trying to fight even in clinician bias,” Anderson says. “If a female is presenting these symptoms, we want to consider whether or not to include ADHD.”

Other factors that cause females with ADHD to slip through the cracks include referral bias, lower symptom severity, internalizing symptoms, and outdated diagnostic criteria.

For more information about the evolution of ADHD understanding, watch Dr. Anderson’s free ADDitude webinar, “ADHD Then and Now: How Our Understanding Has Evolved.” Dr. Anderson is Vice President of School and Community Programs and former Senior Director of the ADHD & Behavior Disorders Center at the Child Mind Institute.

ADHD Symptoms in Women Vs. Men: Next Steps


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Adverse Childhood Experiences Help Explain the Depression – ADHD Link https://www.additudemag.com/adverse-childhood-experiences-depression-adhd/ https://www.additudemag.com/adverse-childhood-experiences-depression-adhd/?noamp=mobile#respond Wed, 18 Oct 2023 19:06:37 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=341082

Our environments and experiences play an important role in our wellbeing. Of particular interest to researchers is the link between exposure to adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and risk for an array of mental health conditions, including depression and ADHD.

“We don’t talk enough about the importance of adverse life events in patients who have ADHD,” said Nelson M. Handal, M.D., DFAPA, in an ADDitude webinar.

Compared to those without ADHD, individuals with the condition are more likely to have experienced adverse life events — an association that may explain, according to researchers, why individuals with ADHD are also at greater risk for depression.1

“Adverse life events on adults who have depression and ADHD are extremely, extremely significant,” Handal said, referencing research that found that the ADHD-depression connection was substantially stronger in individuals who experienced serious conflicts and more adverse life events.1

What counts as an adverse life event? Researchers are working to confirm the definition, however Handal offered the following examples:

  • losing a parent (which happened to so many children during COVID, in itself an adverse event)
  • witnessing domestic violence
  • experiencing an unstable home environment (due to financial difficulties or other problems)
  • experiencing parental neglect

The rule of thumb for identifying an adverse life event, according to Handal, may be “anything that can alter your normal functioning.”

To learn more about adverse childhood experiences and their role in ADHD and depression, watch the full replay of Dr. Handal’s free ADDitude webinar, “New Insights Into and Treatments for Comorbid Depression.”

Depression and ADHD: Next Steps


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Sources

1 Semeijn, E. J., Comijs, H. C., Kooij, J. J., Michielsen, M., Beekman, A. T., & Deeg, D. J. (2015). The role of adverse life events on depression in older adults with ADHD. Journal of Affective Disorders, 174, 574–579. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2014.11.048

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How the Science of ADHD Is Advancing: fMRI and Beyond https://www.additudemag.com/adhd-research-updates-fmri-open-science/ https://www.additudemag.com/adhd-research-updates-fmri-open-science/?noamp=mobile#respond Wed, 11 Oct 2023 13:56:23 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=340612 The science of ADHD is evolving and, with it, so is our understanding of the condition. Over the past 25 years, research has blossomed as institutions share data sets to combine and test earlier findings, says Dave Anderson, Ph.D., of the Child Mind Institute.

The use of fMRI brain scans in ADHD research has helped scientists spot abnormalities in underlying neural networks and circuitries. Differences in the default mode network (overactivity) and frontostriatal circuits (underactivity) of the ADHD brain remain key findings.

“The default mode network (DMN) is one of the most fascinating and significant discoveries to come out of neuroscience in the past 20 years,” writes Edward Hallowell, M.D., in his ADDitude article, “ADHD’s Secret Demon — and How to Tame It.” “The DMN seems to be more active in those of us who have ADHD, and it may explain our tendency to make ‘careless’ mistakes. In fact, when using a functional MRI, you can predict a mistake 20 seconds before it is made by watching for activity in the DMN.”

The emergence of multiple large-scale, multi-site studies has called into question other previous conclusions from neuroscience research. In short, complex answers are replacing some of our more simple ones, and care is improving as a result.

“Large-scale, multi-site, open-science data sharing brings us closer and closer to the idea that we might discover either objective task-based markers or objective biological markers that would allow us to index risk for ADHD and make this not so much dependent on therapists’ subjectivity and the quality of a diagnostic interview,” Anderson said during his 2023 ADDitude webinar on the evolution of ADHD.

For more information about the evolution of ADHD research and diagnostic tools, watch Dr. Anderson’s free ADDitude webinar, “ADHD Then and Now: How Our Understanding Has Evolved.” Dr. Anderson is Vice President of School and Community Programs and former Senior Director of the ADHD & Behavior Disorders Center at the Child Mind Institute.

ADHD Research: Next Steps


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How a Mamba Mentality Can Benefit ADHD Brains https://www.additudemag.com/mamba-mentality-how-to-set-intentions-adhd/ https://www.additudemag.com/mamba-mentality-how-to-set-intentions-adhd/?noamp=mobile#respond Thu, 21 Sep 2023 20:43:11 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=339950

Dopamine is the fuel that converts our intentions into action. It regulates the brain’s pleasure-seeking behaviors, and it motivates us to take action in anticipation of a future reward. Good intentions are clear and deliberate; identifying and defining them helps enormously in the lifelong quest to achieve our goals.

But setting clear, deliberate intentions can be problematic for people with ADHD, who are known to have a deficient dopamine reward system. They know what they need to do but struggle to get there – to see past the daunting hard work to the achievement itself. It’s why ADHD might be better described as an intention deficit disorder, says sports psychiatrist Dawn Brown, M.D.

The late basketball star Kobe Bryant also struggled to set intentions. It’s what led to his legendary commitment to the game. “Mamba mentality,” as he famously called it, was all about completing smaller tasks in order to accomplish bigger goals. Bryant didn’t focus on achieving the triple double — instead, he looked at the process of what was needed to get there.

In the video above, Brown explains how to harness Bryant’s “Mamba mentality” for your ADHD brain.

For more sports-psychiatry insights into ADHD motivation, watch Dr. Brown’s ADDitude webinar, “How to Leverage Sports Psychology to Benefit ADHD Brains.” Dawn Brown, M.D., is a sports psychiatrist and founder of the ADHD Wellness Center.

How to Set Intentions with ADHD: Next Steps


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6 Ways to Deal with Your Teen’s Rude and Disrespectful Behavior https://www.additudemag.com/rude-and-disrespectful-behavior-teens-adhd/ https://www.additudemag.com/rude-and-disrespectful-behavior-teens-adhd/?noamp=mobile#respond Fri, 25 Aug 2023 09:03:54 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=338086

Disrespectful behavior from your child is a signal, says Sharon Saline, Psy.D. Getting curious about what’s triggering that warning signal is Step One in dealing with lying, pushback, and rudeness.

  • Look underneath your child’s words and behaviors. Oppositional behavior often masks other emotions such as anxiety, depression, poor self-esteem, confusion, boredom, fear, and frustration. Many kids with ADHD will resort to lying as a form of coping; impulsivity and poor self-regulation skills sometimes make them do things they regret, and rather than dealing with those things directly, they’ll deny their actions. Avoid addressing these surface behaviors in the moment — expect that your child will act out at times. Opt to come back to the topic later when emotions have cooled.
  • Establish doable routines. How can your child’s routines change to increase their confidence and decrease frustrations that cause problematic behaviors?

[Get This Free Download: A 2-Week Guide to Ending Defiant Behavior]

  • Manage your own feelings. Provocative behaviors from your child can trigger reactivity on your part and escalate the situation. To manage reactivity and avoid saying things you don’t mean, ask yourself, “Why am I talking now?” There are times when it makes more sense to stay silent and listen rather than get into it.
  • Set up a “take-back-of-the-day” system where everyone in the family has a chance for a redo. This practice helps address impulsivity, and it also gives your family the opportunity to practice forgiveness.
  • Rely on natural and logical consequences. When you stand in the rain, you get wet. When you begin a huge school project the night before it’s due, you may get a poor grade. Your punishments and threats won’t do much to change your child’s behaviors, but natural and logical consequences will because they empower your child.
  • Set clear and appropriate expectations. Expectations should fit the child you have, what they can do, and what they can almost do. Avoid focusing on goals that are barely reachable for your child.

Watch Dr. Saline’s ADHD Experts webinar, “Motivating the Unmotivated: Strategies for Middle and High School Students with ADHD,” for more insights on teen behavior challenges.

Rude and Disrespectful Behavior in Teens: Next Steps


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How to Motivate an Unmotivated Teenager https://www.additudemag.com/lack-of-motivation-teenager-tips-adhd/ https://www.additudemag.com/lack-of-motivation-teenager-tips-adhd/?noamp=mobile#respond Wed, 23 Aug 2023 19:49:02 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=338082

“My 11-year-old is so frustrated with school and feels so little success that he has given up. He is so anxious and dysregulated all the time. Where do I even start!?”

“My son refuses systems of organization, and he’s insulted by my suggestions. He is 15 and knows he has ADHD, but he feels like he’s doing fine and doesn’t need help. I don’t know where to go from here.”

“What if my child won’t collaborate? I can’t get any buy-in.”

[Get This Free Download: 4 Secrets to Motivating Students with ADHD]

Motivation problems brought on by ADHD can create and multiply challenges for your teen in just about every corner of life. But these challenges, of course, also affect you. You might feel frustrated and fatalistic if you tried and failed repeatedly to motivate your unmotivated teenager.

But for teen motivation challenges (and any other parenting challenge, really) your primary goal as a parent should be to maintain a positive connection with your child, according to Sharon Saline, Psy.D. Without that connection, you won’t be able to work with your teen and foster a plan to move through the issue.

Saline advises following the 5 Cs of ADHD parenting to build a positive parent-child relationship and help your teen go from unmotivated to inspired.

  • Self-Control: What triggers your child’s motivation challenges? Knowing, for example, that science is a tough subject for your child can help you anticipate and avoid homework meltdowns and coach your child through other negative feelings as they arise.
  • Compassion: It’s all about setting realistic expectations for your child and meeting them where they are. Don’t try to solve all problems at once. Pick just one behavior/motivation challenge and focus your energy there.
  • Collaboration: Brainstorm the sources of your child’s motivation challenges, and have your child do the same. See where your child’s list overlaps with yours. This practice is both compassionate and collaborative, as you’re meeting your child where they are and working with them on a single issue.
  • Consistency: Support your child’s efforts to maintain motivation. Redirect your child toward their goals when necessary. We’re not aiming for perfection, but for consistency.
  • Celebration: Celebrate progress toward the achievement of the goal, regardless of whether it’s fully completed.

Lack of Motivation in ADHD Teens: Next Steps

Watch Dr. Saline’s ADHD Experts webinar, “Motivating the Unmotivated: Strategies for Middle and High School Students with ADHD,” for more tips.


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“We Are All Running from Something:” Marathoner Molly Seidel On ADHD & Self-Care https://www.additudemag.com/adhd-in-athletes-molly-seidel-self-care/ https://www.additudemag.com/adhd-in-athletes-molly-seidel-self-care/?noamp=mobile#respond Tue, 02 May 2023 20:04:02 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=329648 “I see a lot of women who probably have undiagnosed ADHD in this sport because we all gravitate toward this… and find that the repetition and structure of running works,” said Olympic marathon medalist Molly Seidel during her recent conversation with WebMD about barriers to mental health care for women. “A lot of people in elite sports, I think, do have something going on… Yeah, we’re all running from something.” (Seidel may be on to something, as some research suggests that ADHD may actually be more common in elite athletes than it is in the general population.)

For Seidel, that something is a late-life diagnosis of ADHD, along with comorbid obsessive compulsive disorder and eating disorders.

“This Is Never Going to Get Easier. And That’s OK.”

It took Seidel years, and a lot of work, to figure out how to manage her conditions, and to find the self-care systems and strategies that are most beneficial for her. She likens this work to her training as a runner, and emphasizes that both are ongoing.

“I think a lot of people assume that I’m a lot more naturally talented than I actually am at this sport. I’m really not,” she said, emphasizing that her success is a product of hard work and dedication. “It’s that consistent, day-to-day work that has translated exactly into my mental health, my realizing that it’s OK that I’m going to have to work at this every day… I also have to wake up every day and brush my teeth, and I’m not expecting that if I brush my teeth enough, I’m never going to have to do it again.”

Seidel’s sharp understanding of herself and what she needs to be at her best every day echoes the advice of Dawn Brown, M.D., a sports psychologist and ADHD specialist who recently hosted the ADDitude webinar, “How to Leverage Sports Psychology to Benefit ADHD Brains:”

“We should adapt to how our brain, our minds are created, meaning we have to find accommodations and strategies that are in line with how our ADHD brains respond to performance and productivity,” Brown said.

Though Seidel has developed effective methods for managing her mental health conditions, she says their impact on her life is far from static. “There are times where these things are very manageable for me,” she shares. “And there are other times when it takes over my entire life.”

Mindfulness and Other Self-Care Strategies

Mindfulness is the lynchpin of Seidel’s daily routine. “I operate on a very high-strung, very over-stimulated level, and I struggle with coming down,” she said. “Being able to decompress, come down from that, [by using] various breathing and calming techniques has been absolutely vital for me. That is something that I have to do every day, multiple times a day.”

Mindfulness, she said, “is about really focusing on lowering the temperature in the system and lowering the breath rate…so that I can come back to almost like a baseline level.”

Mindfulness, like other relaxation techniques, is part of optimal mental performance conditioning — “what great athletes practice,” according to Dr. Brown.

Recovery and Structure Outside the Track

What happens outside her running shoes is just as important for Seidel’s overall mental health and performance, she said.

“I need to have stuff outside that I’m working on,” she said. “Being able to have some sort of structured time and structured assignments is really mentally healthy for me.” Seidel is pursuing an MBA through DeVry University’s Keller School of Management. “It’s nice having something else outside of running to focus on.”

Another important self-care lesson Seidel has learned as a professional athlete: Healing — both physical and mental — is not a luxury, but a necessity. “Recovery is a huge part of my job,” she says. “And I’ve found that it is just enormously helpful for what I do, and for being able to manage not only just life, but a higher level of training.”

Athletes and Self-Care with ADHD: Next Steps


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“Maybe I’m Not Just Thoroughly Messed Up:” Olympian Molly Seidel On Her Late ADHD Diagnosis https://www.additudemag.com/adhd-diagnosis-in-women-molly-seidel-video-2/ https://www.additudemag.com/adhd-diagnosis-in-women-molly-seidel-video-2/?noamp=mobile#respond Tue, 25 Apr 2023 19:04:41 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=328544 Half of all women with ADHD receive a misdiagnosis or an incomplete diagnosis before finally identifying and treating their attention deficit disorder. This staggering statistic, revealed in a recent ADDitude survey of 2,760 women, confirms the anecdotal reports we hear often of medical gaslighting, distrust of self, unnecessary suffering, delayed treatment — and the grave consequences of each.

“I was misdiagnosed and received treatment that did not help me,” wrote one survey respondent misdiagnosed with depression and anxiety. “This led to me never getting better and ending up having a mental breakdown before I got my proper ADHD diagnosis 10 years later.”

“I believe if, instead of being diagnosed with bipolar 2 (cyclothymia), anxiety, and depression, I had been appropriately diagnosed with ADHD and given coping skills and treatment for that, my life would be completely different,” wrote another ADDitude reader.

“Antidepressants worked for a while, but my anger and frustration flare-ups were still an issue,” wrote a woman diagnosed with ADHD in her 50s. “Eventually, the antidepressants didn’t work anymore and I hit bottom… By the time I was diagnosed with ADHD, I was on long-term disability and felt I had no control over my life.”

The reasons for incomplete or inaccurate diagnosis range from outdated ADHD and gender stereotypes to low self-esteem and self-trust, seeded by years of criticism for unrecognized and untreated symptoms of ADHD, according to ADDitude‘s Women’s Health Month survey.

“Not being able to verbalize my emotions well continues to be a difficulty, likely due to not being able to trust my own emotions, whether they are valid or an under or over reaction,” wrote an ADDitude reader misdiagnosed with bipolar disorder. “In my opinion, this led to being misdiagnosed.”

This prevalent and debilitating roadblock to an ADHD diagnosis was a topic of discussion with Olympic marathon medalist Molly Seidel during her recent conversation with WebMD about barriers to mental health care for women.

“I wish that I had been more vocal about exactly how I was feeling earlier, because we might have gotten to the solution a lot earlier,” said Seidel, a world-class professional runner who was diagnosed with obsessive compulsive disorder and eating disorders before finally receiving an ADHD diagnosis a few years ago. “Especially as women, a lot of us are willing to almost gaslight ourselves by saying, ‘Oh it’s not really that bad.’ And then you look objectively at it, and you’re like, ‘No, this is objectively pretty bad and there has to be a better way to live than this.’”

For Seidel, an ADHD diagnosis was nothing short of life changing.

“My diagnosis came with such a sense of relief from knowing, Oh my God, there is a reason why I feel the way I feel. Maybe I’m not just thoroughly messed up and thoroughly a terrible person. My brain just works a little bit differently,” said Seidel, who earned the bronze medal in the Olympic marathon in Japan. “That diagnosis was the most freeing thing and the thing that has gotten me to the place that I am now.”

“What it took me years to figure out is that, if you are just trying to treat the symptoms and not addressing the underlying causes, it will just tend to jump from diagnosis to diagnosis to diagnosis,” said Seidel, who reported that she’s “in a much better and more stable place than I’ve been in a long time.”

Seidel’s ADHD treatment plan today includes mindful meditation, fine-tuned nutrition, miles upon miles of exercise, and therapy.

“Ultimately, the point of therapy is learning to have a better relationship with your own brain and understanding the mechanisms by which your brain works,”she said. “That has been the biggest thing in becoming more confident and trusting myself.”

ADHD Diagnosis in Women: Next Steps


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TikTok Is My Therapist: The Dangers and Promise of Viral #MentalHealth Videos https://www.additudemag.com/tiktok-adhd-videos-self-diagnosis-support/ https://www.additudemag.com/tiktok-adhd-videos-self-diagnosis-support/?noamp=mobile#comments Thu, 11 Feb 2021 10:34:50 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=193609 “Watching this made me think I might have ADHD.”
“All of a sudden I think I need to get checked.”
“Do I call up my doctors or what?”

These are just three of the nearly 33,000 comments posted on “The Difference Between an ADHD ‘Actor’ and a Person Who Truly Has It,” a one-minute-long TikTok video by @xmaaniiix, a young Hawaiian with 290,000 followers but no formal training in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.

Still, her personal and engaging video has received 2.2 million likes — nearly as staggering as the 2.6 million likes showered on “ADHD in Girls,” a video by self-proclaimed “mental-health advocate” @peterhyphen. His collection of #ADHD videos has garnered an impressive 9.7 million likes, though he cites no sources and likewise has no medical credentials.

How #ADHD Caught Fire on TikTok

The #ADHD channel on TikTok — the social media platform comprising short video clips of coordinated dances, hopeful singers, and bored quaranteens — now boasts 2.4 billion views. Yes, billion. TikTok has 1 billion active users in 150 countries, including roughly 100 million Americans every month. Its popularity and a flood of new content posted during the pandemic has caused an undeniable spike in ADHD awareness, particularly among adolescents and young adults.

At best, ADHD TikTok destigmatizes mental disorders, fosters community, and makes life-changing research accessible to a new demographic. At worst, it leads to dangerous self-diagnosis, overwhelms unqualified content creators with direct requests for help, and perpetuates untruths that further stigmatize individuals with ADHD.

The question with which ADHD professionals and caregivers are grappling today is this: Do the benefits of #ADHDTikTok outweigh its risks, or vice versa?

[Download: An Ethics Manual for Your Teen’s Electronics]

Benefit #1: TikTok Makes ADHD Strategies Accessible

The cadre of ADHD TikTokers includes comic illustrator Dani Donovan, chef and podcast co-host Erik Gude, and psychology and neuroscience student @ADHaDult, among many others. Most creators don’t monetize their content; they share personal anecdotes and other people’s research. But some do link to PayPal or Venmo accounts for donations and some even become ambassadors for their mental illness.

Though in fewer numbers, licensed psychiatrists and therapists do contribute their ADHD-expertise to TikTok as well. Dr. Edward Hallowell, an esteemed ADHD psychiatrist and author, began posting daily “NedTalks” on TikTok last September, after a friend convinced him the 60-second format perfectly suited an ADHD audience. Since then, @drhallowell has earned over 4.5 million views and nearly 100,000 followers.

“I have patients saying they’re addicted to TikTok, so I wanted to find out what this was,” Dr. Hallowell said. “It was a lot of very entertaining, imaginative and creative content — it was like an ADHD field that was very fertile.”

[Expert Answers: Dear Teen Parenting Coach]

Dr. Hallowell offers quick bits of advice for dealing with frustration, managing chaos, and remembering to eat breakfast. He says his goal is to help viewers who identify with his videos, and to encourage those with undiagnosed and/or untreated ADHD to seek professional help.

“I’m trying to do a service to educate the public,” Dr. Hallowell said. “[ADHD] is a good news diagnosis! Not knowing you have it is the real danger… then you don’t know why your best efforts don’t succeed.”

Risk #1: TikTok Confuses Content Creators with Experts

Peter Wallerich-Neils, of the popular @peterhyphen, is a 31-year-old retail manager from Tacoma, Washington. He made ADHD his dominant theme last June, after his “Symptoms of ADHD I Wish I’d Known About Sooner” series went viral, garnering 6.4 million views. More than 65,800 people commented on his video about ADHD in girls, which highlights symptoms of predominantly inattentive type ADHD such as daydreaming and misunderstood symptoms like emotional dysregulation.

“All of a sudden, a ton of people who have ADHD or who weren’t diagnosed with ADHD and thought maybe they had it, saw me speaking up about something that they realize is a part of their everyday life,” said Wallerich-Neils, who has received thousands of messages from viewers thanking him — and many also asking for medical advice.

Catie Osborn is a 32-year-old actor whose @catieosaurus video series presents research on topics that fall outside the mainstream, such as the link between ADHD and comorbid disorders like anxiety, mood and eating disorders, chronic pain, and sexual dysfunction.

“Nobody ever told me that people with ADHD have a higher likelihood of having eating disorders or being predisposed to addiction,” Osborn said. “That is information that should be on the front page of the brochure, not something that some random person on TikTok tells you in 15 seconds!”

Osborn said she receives about 100 direct messages every day, mostly from teenagers who lack a support system or worry about talking to their doctors and parents.

“Some days it gets really hard,” she said. “I get Instagram messages at two o’clock in the morning from people who are like, ‘I’m thinking about killing myself, are you awake?’ and I’m just like, ‘Yeah, but I’m not qualified to handle this.’”

Risk #2: TikTok Oversimplifies ADHD, Posing a Health Risk

Suicide ideation or intention requires immediate professional help, said Dr. Roberto Olivardia, ADHD psychologist and instructor at Harvard Medical School. Having ADHD alone increases the risk for suicide, but 20% of people with ADHD also experience mood disorder, and about 20% experience bipolar disorder.

Certain symptoms such as fatigue, difficulty concentrating, and under-stimulation are common attributes of both depression and ADHD. Similarly, sleep problems, hyperfocus, impulsivity and emotional dysregulation overlap with mania symptoms in bipolar disorder. Thus it’s common for ADHD to be misdiagnosed as a mood disorder, and vice versa.

“When untreated, symptoms of both ADHD and the mood disorder will be much more severe than if someone just has one of those diagnoses,” Dr. Olivardia said.

Matthew Haring, a psychologist at North Shore Center for ADHD in Chicago, said his adult patients almost all have a comorbid diagnosis like anxiety or depression. Parsing out, identifying, and effectively treating those ADHD comorbidities must begin with a formal comprehensive assessment, he said.

“An informal diagnosis can explain a lot of people’s symptoms in a way that comforts them,” Haring said. “But it skips over all the steps needed to really target and treat the underlying cause.”

Many TikTokers speak openly (and often comically) about their comorbid diagnoses. But #adhdcheck and #adhdtiktok videos simply repeat information from other TikToks by non-professionals, and fail to address the nuances of the condition.

“There is no regulation of what people say on TikTok, so lots of false information can be spread with a tone of authority,” Dr. Olivardia said. “It may be a call to action to professionals to enter the TikTok space to establish authority on ADHD information.”

Benefit #2: TikTok Shatters Mental Health Stigma

Kyra Steck, then a sophomore at Northwestern University, was diagnosed with ADHD in late 2019. A few months later, just as the university sent students home because of COVID-19, she started a new medication that helps her concentrate – but sometimes on the wrong things.

“Instead of being focused on my work, I was hyperfocusing on COVID cases rising in my area,” Steck said.

But then a friend showed her a TikTok video about hyperfocus and she saw her behavior not as a personal fault but as a symptom of her ADHD. “My friends started asking me about my symptoms and testing experience because, all of a sudden, their ‘For You’ pages on TikTok, were filled with these videos,” she said. A trending hashtag was making people curious to learn more about mental health.

Fiona Devlin, a sophomore physics major at Texas A&M University, suspected she had ADHD for two years but only sought an official diagnosis last November. A few months earlier, she discovered “Neurodivergent TikTok,” which includes videos on ADHD, autism, dyslexia, obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), and Tourette syndrome.

“The more videos I saw, I was like, wait a minute — I kind of relate to ADHD a bit too much for me to just be in the center Venn diagram,” she said. “Maybe this is something I should see a professional about.”

Like many young adults with ADHD, Devlin’s struggles became more obvious when she left home for college and got a part-time job. She was habitually late for work due to difficulty gauging time and working memory problems. After watching TikTok, she recognized these struggles as potential symptoms of ADHD and sought a formal evaluation.

Risk #3: TikTok Perpetuates ADHD Stereotypes and Stigmas

Despite her happy ending, Devlin thinks most ADHD TikToks do more harm than good. Her concern is shared by many ADHD professionals: Many young people are self-diagnosing based on superficial characteristics and untrue stereotypes, failing to recognize ADHD as a serious disorder that requires professional medical help.

“It can just be frustrating how everyone suddenly starts claiming they have something that they do not actually have,” Devlin said. “Then other people are like, ‘[ADHD is] not that bad…’ when in reality, if those things aren’t treated, it can be very harmful to your life.”

Popular #ADHD videos from the likes of nutrition and fitness influencer @chalenejohnson, frenetic @itsfred, and choreographed @threedotcoreymay emphasize hyperactive traits such as talking very fast, constant distraction, or excessive fidgeting — or they highlight traits that aren’t actual ADHD symptoms.

“What I have typically observed are videos where ADHD gets used so loosely and the person most likely does not have ADHD,” Dr. Olivardia said. “Being excited or bubbly does not mean you have ADHD. These videos do a disservice to people who truly have ADHD. It lends to lowering credibility of the diagnosis.”

Lady Taylor, a sophomore art major at Millsaps College in Jackson, Mississippi, has confronted misinformation in the comment section of her painting videos. In response, she posted a 30-second video explaining: “My ADHD is so severe that it is a disability… If I didn’t have medication, I wouldn’t be able to go to college or get a job. I’d have to live with my parents the rest of my life.”

The video soared to one million views within a week, but she never meant for something so personal to go viral. One person wrote, “Wow, they really making anything a disability now,” while another insisted that she had inattentive, not hyperactive, ADHD.

“I only talked about certain aspects of ADHD, and people thought that’s all it was,” Taylor said. “And people were diagnosing themselves, and I thought that was dangerous.”

Still, Dr. Hallowell said that the pros of the ADHD TikTok trend far outweigh its cons.

“The only danger of information on any platform, is that it is wrong information,” he said. “But that’s the danger for the entire Internet. If you identify with the symptoms of ADHD, it’s up to the professional to screen out the people who don’t have it. It’s not up to the viewer.”

ADHD TikToks on Our Short List

More Mental Health TikToks

TikTok and Beyond: Next Steps


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“It’s Not About Social Cues. It’s About Social Learning.” https://www.additudemag.com/social-learning-challenges-adhd-teens/ https://www.additudemag.com/social-learning-challenges-adhd-teens/?noamp=mobile#respond Fri, 05 Feb 2021 10:53:13 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=193265 What Causes Social Learning Challenges

Social skills in kids with ADHD are almost universally misunderstood. For example, parents and professionals often say to me, “He misses social cues.” But that’s actually not accurate for most kids with ADHD who have social learning challenges, meaning they have not learned social information intuitively from a young age to the same extent as their peers.

Lagging perspective-taking skills — this is the foundation of these social learning challenges. Kids with ADHD have difficulty thinking about others’ thoughts and understanding how they come across to others. This is a result of their lagging self-directed talk, or “brain coach,” as I call it.

In early elementary school, lagging perspective-taking skills looks like:

  • Wanting to control play situations
  • Being bossy
  • Having trouble engaging in reciprocal play

Around age 10 or 11, social learning challenges become more noticeable because becoming part of a same-gender peer group becomes important to more kids and social expectations increase. This is when most parents reach out to me because they realize this has not improved with age.

Manifestations of Social Learning Challenges

Kids with ADHD who struggle socially because of lagging perspective-taking skills often don’t understand why their peers may reacts negatively to them. As a result, they may think other kids are being mean to them or they are being bullied. In reality, most of the time, their words or behaviors elicited a negative response. I call this “cringe-y thoughts.”

Another reason why kids with ADHD struggle socially is because of poor situational awareness, or reading the field. If your son ever walked into the street without looking, it was because he wasn’t using situational awareness. I often find that kids do fine in structured social situations, but have difficulty reading the field in unstructured or semi-structured situations.

How to Address Social Learning Challenges

Social learning challenges are a learning issue, not a mental health issue.

Counseling or talk therapy is not going to effectively address social learning challenges. A social skills group may have been recommended to you by a professional, but please know that the research shows social skills groups are not effective for kids with ADHD and that is certainly the case for the vast majority of families with whom I work.

WATCH THE VIDEO BELOW FOR MORE

Social Learning Challenges: Next Steps


Ryan Wexelblatt, LCSW is the facilitator of the ADHD Dude Facebook Group and YouTube channel. Ryan specializes in working with males (ages 5-22) who present with ADHD, anxiety with ADHD, and learning differences.

Submit your questions about ADHD in boys here!

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“Is ADHD Really Real?” 6 Ranked Responses to ADD Skeptics https://www.additudemag.com/is-adhd-real-responses-to-skeptics/ https://www.additudemag.com/is-adhd-real-responses-to-skeptics/?noamp=mobile#comments Mon, 22 Jun 2020 09:30:57 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=174708

“ADHD was made up by big pharma.”

“There was no such thing as ADHD when I was her age!”

ADHD is just an excuse to get drugs.”

Unqualified, uneducated people seldom hesitate to spout ‘facts’ to prove you (or your child) cannot possibly have ADHD. Does it matter what these people think? Absolutely not. But that doesn’t mean that dismissive, nasty, know-it-alls can’t undermine your self-esteem and your trust in your diagnosis.

You have a limited energy reserve; don’t waste your precious time and creativity arguing endlessly with people who are willfully ignorant about ADHD. At the same time, when myths aren’t rebutted or debunked, they get to live on and on. It isn’t your job to educate everybody, but it is important to be able to defend yourself. Here are the six strategies that I use with people who doubt or judge my ADHD diagnosis, ranked in order from least to most effective.

Strategy 1: Fight Back (Effectiveness Score: 1/10)

Refute, rebut, or demolish their statement with facts. Quote studies and statistics. Talk about neurology. Give the history of the disorder. Name famous people with ADHD.

Strategy 2: Play Dumb (Effectiveness Score: 4/10)

Expose their statements (opinions or beliefs) by asking simple, naïve questions:

“ADHD is way over-diagnosed? Really?! By how much? What are the diagnosis levels today and what should they be?”

Strategy 3: Seek Clarification (Effectiveness Score: 7/10)

When someone claims that ADHD isn’t real, ask them, “What about DRD4.7? DRD4.7 was the first gene that was identified as being a suspect for ADHD.” This a fact that most ADHD doubters won’t know.

Strategy 4: Concede a Point That May be True (Effectiveness Score: 8/10)

If someone argues that college students are faking ADHD in order to get stimulant medications, you can say, “Yes, some do fake ADHD to try to get an advantage, and that really hurts the students who really need medication to regulate their neurochemistry.”

Strategy 5: Been There Done That (Effectiveness Score: 9/10)

When a person argues that ADHD is just a manifestation of poor diet and poor parenting, begin by agreeing that this is, indeed, a very popular misconception — one you actually believed, too. And then you began actually educating yourself, and you learned the truth.

“Yes! That’s exactly what I thought. Then I found out…”

Strategy 6: Say Nothing

Remember, not everyone is trying to hurt or humiliate you. The Internet is overflowing with scary myths and, yes, real medication abuse does exist. They may actually be deeply concerned about your welfare; don’t assume they are not.

Learn More About How to Respond to ADHD Naysayers

  1. Read: How to Respond To ADHD Haters and Naysayers
  2. Download: Your Free Guide to Responding To ADHD Doubters
  3. Listen: The ADHD Guide to Fighting Stigma: How To Defend Your Diagnosis and Build Your Self-Esteem

The content for this article was derived from the ADDitude webinar, “The ADHD Guide to Fighting Stigma” by Rick Green, which broadcast live on May 26, 2020.


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Q: How Can I Help My Son Discern ‘Ribbing’ from ‘Bullying?’ https://www.additudemag.com/adhd-teasing-ribbing-bullying/ https://www.additudemag.com/adhd-teasing-ribbing-bullying/?noamp=mobile#comments Fri, 06 Dec 2019 10:03:34 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=135775 WATCH THE VIDEO BELOW FOR THE FULL ANSWER

Q: “How do we tell the difference between bullying and ‘ribbing?’ Our 5th grade son is very sensitive and emotional. He complains about being bullied and has few friends. But we’re seeing a different pattern. It seems like other boys take digs at him, possibly in that shared male language of ribbing each other. Our son then blows up, screaming and crying, identifying himself as the ‘weird’ kid — after which, the bullying begins in earnest. How can we — parents, teachers, AND our son — get better at figuring out when other boys are teasing to connect vs. teasing to hurt?”

A: “There are two things you need to do to help your son discern the difference between friendly ribbing and bullying. First, we need to teach him context of relationships… The other thing we need to help him understand is his social history with individuals. This can be difficult for kids with ADHD due to poor episodic memory…”

WATCH THE VIDEO BELOW FOR THE FULL ANSWER

ADHD and Bullying: Next Steps

1. Read This: How to Stop the Cycle of Bullying
2. Take Action: What To Do If Your Child Is Being Bullied
3. Address Behaviors: 5 Things To Do If Your Child Is the Bully
4. Download This: Free Guide to Improving Your Child’s Social Skills


Ryan Wexelblatt, LCSW is the facilitator of the ADHD Dude Facebook Group and YouTube channel.

Submit your questions about ADHD in boys here!

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5 Tricks to Reduce Your Child’s Reading Anxiety https://www.additudemag.com/reading-anxiety-video/ https://www.additudemag.com/reading-anxiety-video/?noamp=mobile#respond Mon, 01 Jul 2019 13:30:25 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=120761

Your child with attention deficit disorder (ADHD or ADD) tells you she hates reading. But really she’s just frustrated, and emotionally wiped out by its difficulty.

When reading is mentally taxing and unenjoyable, kids avoid it – and often develop reading anxiety.

Help your child learn to enjoy a good story with the tips in this video.

1. Choose books about your child’s interests.

If your child is a Pokémon fanatic, pick up the latest Pikachu novel.

Books need not be educational to build literacy skills.

2. Be open to graphic novels.

Though filled with artwork, these texts have narrative passages and dialogue bubbles on every page.

Their total word count is lower, but graphic novels can be a confidence-building step toward longer texts.

3. Use audiobooks effectively.

Hearing a story alleviates the mental burden of interpreting the words on the page, while still building language skills.

Audiobooks allow listeners to practice the same language processing skills that visual reading does.

4. Pair books with their movie version.

Let kids watch the movie first, then read the book.

Knowing the plot and characters in advance can make the novel easier to digest and interpret.

5. Take them to the library.

Set your children free to wander the stacks and pick a book — or eight. It’s so much more fun than looking up titles and summaries online.

Learn More About How to Reduce Reading Anxiety

1. Read: Beef Up Reading Skills
2. Download: Apps & Extensions That Improve Productivity and Learning
3. Podcast: Beyond Dyslexia: Overcoming Reading Challenges for Kids with ADHD
4. Blog“How My Dyslexic Son Fell Out of Love with Books and How I Brought Him Back”

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Why the “2-Minute Rule” Doesn’t Work for Adults with ADHD https://www.additudemag.com/how-to-stop-procrastinating-video/ https://www.additudemag.com/how-to-stop-procrastinating-video/?noamp=mobile#respond Mon, 24 Jun 2019 13:30:48 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=120736

Standard productivity advice says, “If a task will only take 2 minutes, drop everything and complete that task now.” That “2-minute rule” doesn’t work for adults with attention deficit disorder (ADHD or ADD). Why?

Your weak working memory makes it hard to remember to go back to your original goal when the 2 minute task is complete. Your difficulty transitioning between tasks adds 10, 15, even 20 minutes to any multi-tasking endeavor. Instead of stopping what you planned to do, carry a notebook and add items to your “catch-all” to-do list, and set a point in the day or week to revisit those tasks.

In the above video, from her ADDitude webinar titled “ADD-Friendly Productivity Strategies for Adults with ADHD,” Linda Walker, explains how to stop procrastinating and be more efficient.

Learn More About How to Stop Procrastinating Without the “2-Minute Rule:”

1. Read: Everyone Has a Productivity Zone. Here’s How to Find Yours.
2. Download: 19 Ways to Meet Deadlines and Get Things Done
3. Slideshow: Are You Time Blind? 12 Ways to Use Every Hour Effectively
4. BlogWhy My ADHD Brain (and Yours) Loves to “Complexify” Things

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10 Daily Rituals to Tame Clutter and Reduce Stress https://www.additudemag.com/clutter-solutions-reduce-stress-video/ https://www.additudemag.com/clutter-solutions-reduce-stress-video/?noamp=mobile#respond Fri, 21 Jun 2019 14:15:41 +0000 https://www.additudemag.com/?p=120547

10 Clutter Solutions That Reduce Stress

For adults with attention deficit disorder (ADHD), housework is the first thing to slide when you are feeling overwhelmed.

You’re too busy, upset, or rushed to tidy up. So the clutter mounts. And that only makes a bad mood worse.

Outer order can bring inner calm. So try 10 clutter solutions every day to keep your house and mind balanced:

  1. Make your bed.
  2. Put your dirty clothes in the hamper.
  3. Hang up your bath towel.
  4. Keep magazines and books where they belong.
  5. Shut all drawers, cabinet doors, and closets.
  6. Pick up the mail, sort it, recycle junk mail, and put important mail in its proper place.
  7. Put dirty dishes in the dishwasher or the sink.
  8. Deal with your recycling.
  9. Keep a bag handy for things you want to give away. Drop it at a thrift store whenever it is full.
  10. Hang up your coat.

Learn More About Clutter Solutions That Reduce Stress:

1. Self Test: Is Your Clutter and Disorganization Out of Control?
2. Download: 22 Clutter-Busting Strategies that Reduce Stress for Adults with ADHD
3. Reader Advice: How to Declutter Your Home with Adult ADHD
4. Blog10 Decluttering Tips

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