Rise in diagnoses is prompting more US adults to ask: 'Do I have ADHD?'
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[January 28, 2025]
By MIKE STOBBE
NEW YORK (AP) — Allison Burk's teenage daughter struggled with
uncontrolled emotions, a shrinking attention span and a growing tendency
to procrastinate. A family doctor suggested ADHD testing, which led to
an unexpected discovery: The teen had ADHD, and Burk did too.
During her daughter's evaluation, Burk thought, "Wait a minute. This
sounds familiar," she recalled.
“I was able to piece together that this might be something I was
experiencing,” said Burk, of Columbus, Ohio. She subsequently underwent
her own testing and was diagnosed with ADHD — at age 42.
More adults are being diagnosed with attention-deficit/hyperactivity
disorder. Diagnoses have been rising for decades but seem to have
accelerated in the last few years.
A recent study suggested that more than 15 million U.S. adults — roughly
1 in 17 — have been diagnosed with ADHD. The condition always starts in
childhood, but about half of adults with it are diagnosed when they are
18 or older.
Some doctors say the number of people coming in for evaluation is
skyrocketing.
“Just in our clinic, requests for assessments have doubled in the last
two years,” said Justin Barterian, a psychologist based at Ohio State
University.
Here's a look at the phenomenon, and how to know if you might have the
condition.
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ADHD symptoms in adults
ADHD makes it hard for people to pay attention and control impulsive
behaviors. It can be inherited, and is often treated with drugs,
behavioral therapy, or both.
“It's like there's an engine in you and you feel like it's always
running, and you can't turn it off except with medication,” said Judy
Sandler, a 62-year-old Maine woman who was diagnosed in her 50s.
ADHD has been called the most commonly diagnosed mental health disorder
in U.S. children, with more than 7 million kids diagnosed. Historically,
it was thought to mainly affect boys (perhaps because boys with ADHD
were seen as more disruptive in school) and to be something that kids
grew out of.
But experts believe many people aren't diagnosed as kids and live with
symptoms into adulthood.
Adults with the condition talk about having trouble focusing on tasks,
juggling responsibilities, and planning and managing their time. Some
talk about not putting things away, and straining personal relationships
with their restlessness, mood swings and impulsiveness.
Burk said she was grouped with talented and gifted students in grade
school but didn't complete college until her 30s because, “when I was
19, I hitchhiked across the country on a whim” and ended up a single
mother in her early 20s. She now works in marketing and media relations
for Ohio State University's College of Veterinary Medicine.
Diagnoses have been rising
Diagnoses have been climbing in both kids and adults, and the recent
government report found adult ADHD was more common than earlier
estimates.
“We haven’t had (federal) adult ADHD data in a long time,” said one of
the study’s authors, Angelika Claussen of the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.
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Judy Sandler, who was diagnosed in her 50s with ADHD, walks in the
woods near her home, Thursday, Jan. 23, 2025, in Lincolnville,
Maine.(AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
 There were indicators of the rise,
she added. Increasing demand for ADHD medication led to widespread
shortages after the COVID-19 pandemic hit in March 2020. A 2023
study showed the rise in prescriptions was particularly notable in
adults — especially women.
ADHD diagnoses and prescriptions were increasing before the
pandemic, due partly to a change in general diagnostic criteria in
2013 that broadened the definition of ADHD and reduced the number of
symptoms a patient needed to have.
But case counts really seemed to jump in 2020, when schools were
closed and many adults were forced to work from home.
“It’s very difficult to focus when you are home and you have kids,”
Claussen said. “That may have exacerbated the symptoms for people
who’d had mild ADHD but were able to cope” before the pandemic.
How ADHD is diagnosed in adults
The last few years have seen growing cultural acceptance and
curiosity about the condition, fueled by a proliferation of “I have
ADHD” social media videos and online medical start-up companies
offering 5-minute diagnostic quizzes.
Indeed, the long-held belief that ADHD was underdiagnosed in adults
has given way to recent debates about whether it's become
overdiagnosed.
There’s no blood test or brain scan for ADHD. Experts say it is
diagnosed when symptoms are severe enough to cause ongoing problems
in more than one area of life, and when those symptoms can be traced
to pre-adolescent childhood.
Ideally, a psychologist or psychiatrist diagnoses it by taking
careful histories from patients and from people who know them,
experts say. They also might ask patients to take tests designed to
check their memory and ability to concentrate. Doctors also must
rule out anxiety, depression and other conditions that can have
similar symptoms.
But getting an appointment with a mental health professional can
take months, and intensive ADHD evaluations can cost thousands of
dollars. Many patients turn to family doctors or even online
diagnostic quizzes, some of them connected to telehealth companies
that prescribe medications.
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“There is wide variability in this country in how people diagnose,
how strict they are, and who they diagnose,” said Margaret Sibley, a
University of Washington psychologist.
The American Professional Society of ADHD and Related Disorders is
drafting a first national set of diagnosis and treatment guidelines
for health professionals who treat adults, and expects to release
them later this year.
The goal is "to improve the accuracy of diagnoses in this country,"
said Sibley, who is leading the work on the guidelines.
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