Medical Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Please consult a licensed healthcare provider for diagnosis and treatment. In a mental health crisis, call or text 988.
It’s Not Just a Childhood Condition
For decades, ADHD was considered something children outgrow. Research has definitively disproven that. ADHD is a lifelong neurodevelopmental condition — and for more than half of diagnosed adults, the diagnosis didn’t come until adulthood. Many spent years struggling with focus, organization, and emotional regulation without ever understanding why.
The gap between prevalence and care is striking: over one in three adults with ADHD receives no treatment at all — not medication, not therapy, nothing. Understanding the condition is the first step toward closing that gap.
What Is Adult ADHD?
Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is characterized by persistent patterns of inattention, hyperactivity, and impulsivity that interfere with functioning. The DSM-5-TR recognizes three presentations:
- Predominantly Inattentive — difficulty sustaining focus, organizing tasks, and following through; often mistaken for laziness or apathy
- Predominantly Hyperactive-Impulsive — restlessness, acting without thinking, talking excessively; less common as a standalone type in adults
- Combined Presentation — meets criteria for both; the most commonly diagnosed in adults
In adults, ADHD looks different than the stereotype of a hyperactive child. Adults are more likely to experience internal restlessness — chronic disorganization, emotional reactivity, difficulty with time management, and an inability to complete tasks despite genuine effort and intelligence.
Why ADHD Gets Missed in Adults
Several factors contribute to delayed or missed diagnosis in adults. Girls and women are significantly underdiagnosed — their symptoms tend to present as inattentiveness rather than disruptive hyperactivity, making them easier to overlook. High-functioning individuals often develop compensatory strategies that mask impairment until demands become overwhelming — a new job, parenthood, or major life stress can unmask ADHD that was previously managed.
Co-occurring conditions further complicate the picture. Anxiety, depression, and substance use disorders are highly prevalent in adults with ADHD, and their symptoms can overshadow the underlying attention issues, leading to misdiagnosis and ineffective treatment.
Key distinction: ADHD is not a deficit of attention — it’s inconsistent regulation of attention. People with ADHD can hyperfocus intensely on highly engaging topics while struggling to sustain attention on tasks they find routine or low-stimulation.
Key distinction: ADHD is not a deficit of attention — it's inconsistent regulation of attention. People with ADHD can hyperfocus intensely on highly engaging topics while struggling to sustain attention on tasks they find routine or low-stimulation.
Evidence-Based Treatment
Medication
- Stimulants (amphetamine, methylphenidate) — first-line, 70–80% response rate
- Non-stimulants (atomoxetine, viloxazine, guanfacine) — useful when stimulants are contraindicated
- Dose titration is individualized; response varies
Behavioral & Psychological
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) tailored for ADHD
- Executive function coaching
- Organizational skills training
- Mindfulness-based interventions
Medication and therapy together produce the best outcomes. Medication manages core symptoms; behavioral strategies address the habits, patterns, and secondary emotional consequences that develop over years of unmanaged ADHD.
Integrative Psychiatric Care at Ascent Psychiatry
Dr. Modan takes a whole-person approach, combining evidence-based psychiatry with informed discussion of nutritional and integrative options. Schedule a consultation to discuss your care.