It’s Different for Girls with ADHD
“Dr. Ellen Littman, author of Understanding Girls with ADHD, has studied high IQ adults and adolescents with the disorder for more than 25 years. She attributes the under-diagnosis of girls and women—estimated to be around 4 million who are not diagnosed, or half to three-quarters of all women with ADHD—and the misunderstandings that have ensued about the disorder as it manifests in females, to the early clinical studies of ADHD in the 1970s. “These studies were based on really hyperactive young white boys who were taken to clinics,” Littman says. “The diagnostic criteria were developed based on those studies. As a result, those criteria over-represent the symptoms you see in young boys, making it difficult for girls to be diagnosed unless they behave like hyperactive boys.”
ADHD does not look the same in boys and girls. Women with the disorder tend to be less hyperactive and impulsive, more disorganized, scattered, forgetful, and introverted. “They’ve alternately been anxious or depressed for years,” Littman says. “It’s this sense of not being able to hold everything together.”
Further, while a decrease in symptoms at puberty is common for boys, the opposite is true for girls, whose symptoms intensify as estrogen increases in their system, thus complicating the general perception that ADHD is resolved by puberty. One of the criteria for ADHD long held by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, published by the American Psychiatric Association, is that symptoms appear by age 7. While this age is expected to change to 12 in the new DSM-V, symptoms may not emerge until college for many girls, when the organizing structure of home life—parents, rules, chores, and daily, mandatory school—is eliminated, and as estrogen levels increase. “Symptoms may still be present in these girls early on,” says Dr. Pat Quinn, cofounder of The National Center for Girls and Women with ADHD. “They just might not affect functioning until a girl is older.” Even if girls do outwardly express symptoms, they are less likely to receive diagnoses. A 2009 study conducted by at The University of Queenland found that girls displaying ADHD symptoms are less likely to be referred for mental health services.”
This is so important. [source]oh man
(via krawps)
centauressalison reblogged this from prismatic-bell
centauressalison liked this
glassballdinosaurs liked this
hologram-moss reblogged this from infinitemacaroni
hologram-moss liked this
craictropical reblogged this from infinitemacaroni
craictropical liked this
infinitemacaroni reblogged this from mockturtlesmisery
mockturtlesmisery reblogged this from lady-lancer lady-lancer reblogged this from dexxxtrodna
limetimo liked this
dexxxtrodna reblogged this from mandaloriandy
dexxxtrodna liked this
iamramonadestroyerofworlds liked this strawbearycordial reblogged this from thepurpleglass
thepurpleglass reblogged this from gehayi
thepurpleglass liked this
nisheunder-wood liked this moonyrocks liked this
chibiarmygeneral liked this
itsbiscuittime liked this
helpfulandhiddenthoughts reblogged this from sufnlower
letuskeepdreaming liked this
buthedidntgetit liked this
cheesecylinder liked this starredwrites liked this
anxious-witch reblogged this from i-sold-my-soul-to-thefandom
anxious-witch liked this
i-sold-my-soul-to-thefandom reblogged this from 1dietcokeinacan
i-sold-my-soul-to-thefandom liked this
thiefnessman reblogged this from 1dietcokeinacan annie-manga liked this
raisingyourjoys reblogged this from tchallakingforever companion-piece reblogged this from 1dietcokeinacan
deathvsthemaiden liked this rollforanxiety reblogged this from stevesjester
rollforanxiety liked this
dreamlogick liked this
emmalemadingdong reblogged this from emmalemadingdong
tofufae liked this
whydidichoosethaturlwheniwas12 reblogged this from goldwyrtsdotror
whydidichoosethaturlwheniwas12 liked this sufnlower posted this
- Show more notes