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Volume 2 Issue 5, May 2024

ADHD in adulthood

The cover of the May issue uses a braid of several colorful threads woven together to symbolize some of the current thinking about attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in adulthood. Adult ADHD is not well understood and, consequently, can be overdiagnosed, underdiagnosed and misdiagnosed. But recent work has attempted to identify the ways in which ADHD in adulthood may be both different from and similar to ADHD diagnosed in childhood by bringing many strands of research together. The braid also symbolizes the need for increasing the awareness of, reducing the stigma of and providing better treatment and multifactorial support for people with ADHD in adulthood.

Read more in our Editorial about the neurobiological basis of ADHD in adults and parental support and self-management in people with ADHD transitioning to adulthood.

Image and cover design: Marina Spence

Editorial

  • ADHD is the most common neurodevelopmental disorder in children, yet despite a large increase in awareness and in the number of diagnoses, much less is known about how this disorder affects adults. More research is needed to understand how ADHD may present differently as a function of age or how the experience of ADHD may change in people as they age.

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