ADHD is a condition that can cause problems in almost any aspect of everyday life. As the DSM’s diagnostic criteria for ADHD put it, one of the requirements
Happy May! Like every month, May is a month for adapting to life with ADHD. And like every month, here’s one interesting scientific study, one news article about
It’s 2020, and staying home is cool. That might have something to do with coronavirus leading cities around the world to go on lockdown, shelter in place, or
ADHD is a mental health condition that can have implications for physical health. Symptoms such as having less self-control or prioritizing short-term rewards can have direct implications for
OK, sometimes when you have ADHD you get behind on stuff. That’s kind of what happened with our newsletter. Starting this March, though, the ADaptHD newsletter is back,
Everyone makes unthinking blunders from time to time, but so-called “careless mistakes” are a hallmark of ADHD. Just ask the DSM, the diagnostic handbook commonly used to diagnose
ADHD is, technically speaking, a set of symptoms. But the experience of living with ADHD is about much more than that. It’s about not just the symptoms themselves,