03/10/2023
October marks ADHD Awareness Month, offering the ideal opportunity to acknowledge the growing understanding of ADHD and its impact on individuals' lives.
While ADHD diagnoses have undeniably become more prevalent in recent years, dismissing it as overdiagnosis ignores those who have silently struggled with this condition throughout their lives. Instead, the increase in diagnoses stems from a deeper understanding by both the medical profession and the general community of ADHD.
In just one generation, we have shifted from the belief that ADHD primarily affects young boys, characterized primarily by hyperactivity, and the expectation that most will outgrow it during their teenage years. Instead, now recgonising ADHD as a chronic, lifelong condition affecting individuals of all genders. Moreover, frequently coexisting with other conditions such as anxiety, autism, depression and learning disabilities, adding complexity to its presentation in each individual.
One of the most significant changes in understanding ADHD involves recognising the significance of inattentive symptoms, which were previously overlooked. This realisation has opened the door for many women who are only now recognising ADHD in themselves and seeking diagnosis. For so many, years of misdiagnosis or being told their challenges were simply laziness or oversensitivity have come to an end.
As we observe ADHD Awareness Month, it is essential to acknowledge the progress achieved through medical and psychological research and the improved quality of life it has provided for those who spent years not understanding themselves and self-criticizing due to what they could only describe as their own brokenness.