A new survey reveals that 25% of adults in the U.S. suspect they may have undiagnosed ADHD, though only 13% have consulted a doctor.

  • Dasus@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    So these days the common complaint is that ADHD is overdiagnossd. While abuse exists, such as the online script mill in the news recently, the criticism is usually less helpful — since it implies misjudgment on the part of clinicians and parents attempting to help a child keep up, stigmatizes the ones who succeed, delays diagnosis for many others — but also is not precisely the intent. Instead they mean to question (rightly, as you did) society’s increasingly narrow definition of when someone’s best efforts are considered “enough.”

    But also, you have to realise this misdiagnosing does exist.

    I had excellent school success as a kid. I taught myself how to read before school. I was always the top of the class, made friends easily, had no issues. My mom is a social worker. There was never any behavioural trouble from me, nor any learning problem.

    But now some 30 years later, when I’ve looked for help and been anxious at the doctors, 9/10 of them would be “perhaps you have ADHD?”, despite they core characteristic of ADHD being it’s neurodevelopmental, and I had literally zero issues in that. No matter how much I kept reassuring them and pointing out as a kid I would not have met any of the diagnostic criteria, they wanted to “test” me. The test was essentially just someone asking every clear questions about the same things I just talked about. Had I had even tje slightest inclination to answer a single question “yes”, I would’ve got a permanent prescription for pharmaceutical stimulants. Without needing one.

    But as I actually wanted to figure out my issues, I didn’t take that chance, becsuse I don’t want to be misdiagnosed.

    However, this is in Finland, and I can not exaggerate how common pushing this idea was, but only AFTER like 2010 or something. Before that no-one ever even considered it, despite me having gone to the doctors with the exact same symptoms.

    So yeah it’s a complex issue, but I’m of the mind that doctors are clearly being affected enough to influence their objectivity on the matter.

    • Septimaeus@infosec.pub
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      3 hours ago

      I understand that feeling, and the annoyance of having something insistent upon with treatment attached you’re not interested in. Hopefully the norm is dispassionate advocacy and dropping it when patients say no.

      Acquired/adult ADHD is not as well studied and is usually secondary to other conditions, or correlated with long-term use of certain drugs like antihistamines for sleep, structural changes in the brain, etc etc. We don’t know enough. But if a patient have their own mechanisms that they say works, or thinks it’s temporary/habit-extinction/burnout, that’s the final word. Pushing rx management after that is unethical.