25% of Adults Suspect Undiagnosed ADHD (neurosciencenews.com) 67
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Neuroscience News: Attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder -- also known as ADHD -- is typically thought of as a childhood condition. But more adults are realizing that their struggles with attention, focus and restlessness could in fact be undiagnosed ADHD, thanks in large part to trending social media videos racking up millions of views. A new national survey of 1,000 American adults commissioned by The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center and College of Medicine finds that 25% of adults now suspect they may have undiagnosed ADHD. But what worries mental health experts is that only 13% of survey respondents have shared their suspicions with their doctor. That's raising concerns about the consequences of self-diagnosis leading to incorrect treatment.
"Anxiety, depression and ADHD -- all these things can look a lot alike, but the wrong treatment can make things worse instead of helping that person feel better and improving their functioning," said psychologist Justin Barterian, PhD, clinical assistant professor in Ohio State's Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Health. An estimated 4.4% of people ages 18 to 44 have ADHD, and some people aren't diagnosed until they're older, Barterian said. "There's definitely more awareness of how it can continue to affect folks into adulthood and a lot of people who are realizing, once their kids have been diagnosed, that they fit these symptoms as well, given that it's a genetic disorder," Barterian said. The survey found that younger adults are more likely to believe they have undiagnosed ADHD than older generations, and they're also more likely to do something about it. Barterian said that should include seeing a medical professional, usually their primary care provider, to receive a referral to a mental health expert to be thoroughly evaluated, accurately diagnosed and effectively treated.
"Anxiety, depression and ADHD -- all these things can look a lot alike, but the wrong treatment can make things worse instead of helping that person feel better and improving their functioning," said psychologist Justin Barterian, PhD, clinical assistant professor in Ohio State's Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Health. An estimated 4.4% of people ages 18 to 44 have ADHD, and some people aren't diagnosed until they're older, Barterian said. "There's definitely more awareness of how it can continue to affect folks into adulthood and a lot of people who are realizing, once their kids have been diagnosed, that they fit these symptoms as well, given that it's a genetic disorder," Barterian said. The survey found that younger adults are more likely to believe they have undiagnosed ADHD than older generations, and they're also more likely to do something about it. Barterian said that should include seeing a medical professional, usually their primary care provider, to receive a referral to a mental health expert to be thoroughly evaluated, accurately diagnosed and effectively treated.
TikTok, Youtube Shorts and Twitter are giving ADHD (Score:5, Interesting)
All these platforms are focusing on 30s bursts of very brief information.
No wonder people can't focus for over 1h at a time anymore.
Re: TikTok, Youtube Shorts and Twitter are giving (Score:2)
Says a dude who's made his point in four short lines of text. As displayed on a phone screen.
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Wow, you certainly aren't improving.
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He confirmed my post, I can't complain. ;-)
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Well of course I have ADHD, everybody has it to different levels. Trying to categorize everybody into different buckets doesn't work, period.
Nevertheless, I still prefer reading or listening to long detailed articles/videos on topics so I guess I am doing fine overall.
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Trying to categorize everybody into [two] different buckets doesn't work, period.
You need 10 buckets. Those that understand binary and those that don't. [Apologies for my "addition" to your quote. Needed it to make the "joke" work.]
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Says a dude who's made his point in four short lines of text. As displayed on a phone screen.
..crafted purposefully out of necessity. It’s called know your audience.
Hope that was brief enough for you.
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Japanese poems
Are purposefully shorter
ADHD Zen
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Haiku is more than counting.
Try again, harder.
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All these platforms are focusing on 30s bursts of very brief information.
No wonder people can't focus for over 1h at a time anymore.
I wish I could block YouTube shorts, gets in the way of the videos I actually want to watch.
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What do you mean? Are you subscribed to some kind of mailing list or something?
I sometimes watch shorts but they are quite easy to avoid in my use case against YouTube since they clearly come up on a specific row by themselves so it's very hard to inadvertently click on a short if you don't want to.
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Apparently, from tfa, 25% of people are susceptible to those advertisements.
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People have been getting advertisments telling them to worry about adult ADHD [youtube.com]. The symptoms listed are really generic. Apparently, from tfa, 25% of people are susceptible to those advertisements.
99% of consumers are susceptible to believing clickbait. I wonder what addictive mind-warping shit I could sell to some politicians to legalize and shove in a pill bottle, and pretend it’s an improvement.
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I wonder what addictive mind-warping shit I could sell to some politicians to legalize and shove in a pill bottle, and pretend it’s an improvement.
Amphetamines? When you think of it, you have to wonder what the drug companies did wrong to get slapped down for opiates. Who did they accidentally offend?
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I have my doubts that video sites have anything directly to do with it, but rather are just a symptom of a more systemic problem: we are all overloaded with things to do and too little time in which to do them. As such, we rush through everything.
Cue all the oldies (Score:2, Informative)
Cue all the older people who dismiss this completely, aka "back in my day, my mom fixed that with a couple of slaps" or something.
Well, I was on the receiving end of plenty slaps, kicks, belts and worse. Guess what, that didn't fix shit.
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Half the time its their kids script.
Re: Cue all the oldies (Score:2)
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Perhaps a problem is that you think this is different for you than it was for "older people".
"...because work has changed to become less suitable to the nature of people, especially men."
Because it has not. You know, older people still work, their jobs aren't different from yours.
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Because it has not. You know, older people still work, their jobs aren't different from yours.
Good lord... Think back a little further than that.. Instead of thinking back 50 years, try 100 or 200... There's probably some truth to the suspicion that we can't adapt as fast as the world is changing.. Even going back just 50 years.. Most people had ONE television and maybe 10 total channels to choose from (yes, I'm aware that cable TV existed 50 years ago, but it wasn't ubiquitous). Nobody carried a phone with them.. Laptops didn't exist. We were able to disconnect for hours and hours at a stretch
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I grew up in Los Angeles in the '50s and '60s and until UHF came along we had seven TV channels available. And, the first UHF channel was in Spanish, which was a great thing for the Hispanic community but not much use to those of us who only knew English.
Re: Cue all the oldies (Score:2)
Idunno. You've got your shit together enough to be posting on slashdot. Could've always been worse.
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Re:Cue all the oldies (Score:5, Insightful)
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It didn't fix it enough, that's for sure. But are you claiming you had ADHD as a child, and the presciption was physical abuse? I doubt it.
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Re:Cue all the oldies (Score:5, Insightful)
overperscription of medication, misuse of the DSM (Score:2, Informative)
Yes, a small portion of the population is so far off center that they need real assistance. It is not 25% of the population. Life is life. Get over it.
Re:overperscription of medication, misuse of the D (Score:5, Interesting)
It's worth remembering that about 20% of people are susceptible to being convinced they're sick or better (placebo and nocebo effect). That's the approximate number of people who report feeling better while ill by simply going to a clinic and seeing someone in white doctor's garb, and then going home. That's also the amount of people who will develop asthma-like symptoms when you advertise to them that the building they work or live in has mold issues with air quality.
And the most fucked up part is that while the disease is imaginary, effects are real. People can die from a nocebo asthma attack.
This is why advertising mental illnesses should be criminalized and punished harshly. Regardless of reasons for doing it. Because you're effectively infecting about 20% of the population with a mind virus that has real physiological symptoms.
Oh and the way to cure people with nocebo asthma? Doesn't work to tell them they have a mind virus, rather than a real illness. They will dismiss this. The only way found to be even remotely effective is to convince enough of them of something they can believe that like "yes it's real, but it's being worked on and your symptoms should slowly ease over time". And anyone advertising that "oh this guy in the left building told us it's getting worse" has a very good chance of making symptoms worse, even if said people never visited that building.
And DSM being as advertised as it is, is basically Grandpa Nurgle of mind viruses. Infecting a massive amount of people with symptoms of problems they don't actually have. With activists insisting on "awareness" being basically Chaos Demons of Nurgle, spreading magical plagues and poxes that cannot be cured by normal means.
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You mean millions of potential happy pill buyers (Score:2, Flamebait)
There, I fixed it for you.
It continues to occur to me that if I'd were a small child in America in the 90s or later, as opposed to the Soviet Union in the 80s, they'd've diagnosed me with all sorts of crap for the pathology of running around and not staying still when I was a little boy.
And instead of being gainfully employed, married, 2.whatever kids and a house in the suburbs, Hypothetical Medicated RightwingNutjob might very well be strung out on tranq and counting his remaining fingers, living on the st
Re: You mean millions of potential happy pill buye (Score:2)
I think we're looking at the nascent next wave of legalization here: Legalized Amphetamines.
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This. Not just is it like opiates, but like, if you ask most people with depression, anxiety, ADHD, etc, something like this:
"If you had to go back in time say thirty years, or thirty years before that, or thirty years before that, how do you think psychology would help you?"
I've actually had this conversation a bunch, it's not a scientific study, but I find if you pull the tread even a little, most people don't just think that previous psychology would have been less good, it would have been actively harmf
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"...my prediction is we'll say 2024's psychology was too capitalist."
My prediction is that in 2054, young people will be ageist toward old people, only those old people are the young people of today.
I was one of them (Score:2)
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No therapist would belt it out like that.
Really?
I call bullshit (Score:2)
1/4? Really? Do these numbers change this fast over a couple of decades? Sometimes when I read stuff li.... OOOOOHHH! Look at that pretty butterfly!
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Very low tolerance of people who are less attentiv (Score:5, Insightful)
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I don't know why I came out the way I d
There's one quick way to tell (Score:2)
I hate the self-proclaimed ADHD videos.... (Score:2)
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Many of them could very well be from my background where everyone around me is scared of therapist and psychiatrist.
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Well... your meds obviously don't make you as chill as mine do for me, lol. That's a pretty big assumption you've made about me - I made no claims of "working hard" for a diagnosis, nor do I take issue with people who seek diagnosis - in fact I encourage it within my circles and share as much information as I can about the process.
What I do take issue with is people who are undiagnosed, spreading misinformation.
If you do not have ADHD (Score:3)
Professional who makes money identifying condition (Score:1)
Says that more people have that condition than they think and need to make an appointment to get their RX microdosed methamphetemine now.
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The thing is... if you DON'T have ADHD, that methylphenidate will make your behavior noticeably hyper and maybe manic to everyone around you.
On the other hand, if you DO have it, it'll calm your brain down and make you more normal.
Given the low risk of a single low dose, maybe doctors should be pretty casual about handing out a pill to any patients who want to see if they have it.
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Sure would save filling out checklists and surveys.
Adults who have self-taught themselves to cope with the issues they've faced their whole like are less likely to answer in a way that results in a positive diagnosis.
Adults who have researched the topic, or maybe their child has gone through the process, and want some of that sweet, sweet Ritalin, are easily able to fool the process.
25% so, more of a normal variance? (Score:3)
25% of ADHD is not a sickness necessarely. E.g. consider there is ~20% of people of color in the USA...and ~50% of opposite sex (rounding up the average). So it could be a normally occuring variance, maybe even evolutionary adaptation producing more flexible human population?
Map of the great masses of self-diagnosed. (Score:2)
Depression: "I think I'm depressed...but I don't care."
OCD: "I think I have OCD...but that statement has seven syllables, so I can't end a sentence on it."
Narcissism: "I think I have narcissism...the best, most flattering kind."
Paranoia: "I think I'm paranoid...but maybe that's what THEY want me to think."
Social anxiety: "I think I have social anxiety...what do you guys think?"
Psychopathy:
TikTok and YouTube Shorts are not helping, but. . (Score:1)