Why more Aussies are being diagnosed with ADHD

Why more Aussies are being diagnosed with ADHD

ADHD – attention-deficit/hyperactivity dysfunction – has lengthy been related to youngsters.

But now, a rising variety of Australian adults are reaching out for assist.

Speaking to news.com.au’s podcast, I’ve Got News For You, Monash University cognitive neuroscience Professor Mark Bellgrove, mentioned that grownup diagnoses of ADHD are undoubtedly “on the rise”.

“This is largely because awareness of ADHD is increasingly becoming more prevalent,” Prof Bellgrove, who’s director of analysis on the Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health, informed host Andrew Bucklow.

“And what means is that adults are coming forward for diagnoses more than they have before.
“But this is, we think, still largely representing an under-diagnosis of adult ADHD in the Australian population.

“Roughly 2.5 per cent of the population, by population prevalence rates, will have ADHD and we know the diagnosis rates in Australia are much less than that.”

One one that has drawn consideration to the issue of being identified – particularly as a lady – is Abbie Chatfield, who revealed her personal ADHD analysis in May after a months-long course of.

The 27-year-old influencer and podcast host once more addressed “how f***ing hard it is to get ADHD medication or to get diagnosed” when responding final week to feedback made by fellow Bachelor alum Megan Leto Marx, who deemed ADHD the new influencer “trend” in an Instagram Q&A.

“It’s actually a diagnosis and a health condition that affects people’s lives,” Chatfield mentioned.

“This idea that it’s a trend or that you shouldn’t be on medication is so ableist and so offensive.

“Only now – through social media and speaking about the f***ing symptoms that are debilitating – are [people] able to f***ing see that they might have it.

“People with an ADHD diagnosis didn’t up one day and go, ‘I’d like to spend 18 months on a waitlist and a lot of my f***ing money and time just so I can fit in with a trend.’”

Prof Bellgrove mentioned: “A real point of concern for us and for everyone in the discipline who’s involved in treating and diagnosing ADHD [is that] the waitlist can be up to a year.

“This is, I think, really important for the public to understand that ADHD in adulthood is not treated within the public health system, really at all,” he mentioned.

“And what that means is people need to wait to get appointments for either a private psychiatrist or a private psychologist, and those waitlist times are long, and the appointments are inevitably reasonably expensive because there is no public treatment.

“This is something that really has to change. It’s a massive, massive point of health inequity, for folks with ADHD, that there’s no public treatment in adulthood.”

Chatfield additionally shut down Marx’s dangerous assertion that ADHD medicine is “basically meth”, and that influencers are solely taking it as a result of it makes you “lose your appetite”.

“Who the f**k do you think you are saying that people are owed an explanation for anybody’s weight loss or weight gain?” Chatfield, who lately spoke about medicine and weight reduction on her podcast, fired again.

“The reason why people don’t speak about ADHD medication making you lose weight is these people don’t want to encourage you to take medication to lose weight.

“People are trying to destigmatise medication for mental health issues. It’s important to speak about medication if you feel comfortable. No one has to tell you anything, particularly why they’ve lost weight.”

Prof Bellgrove mentioned that medicine “can have really quite dramatic effects on the person with ADHD”.

“We often say that these medications, not only are life-changing in many cases, they can really be lifesaving for folks with ADHD,” he mentioned.

“Medication can really bring about a massive change.”

He urged the Federal Government “to view ADHD like we would do any other form of mental illness”, as a method of lowering stigma, and making receiving a analysis and therapy extra accessible for all Australian adults.

“We’re used to asking about anxiety and depression, we’re used to checking in with people regarding their mental health and supporting them. But we haven’t yet reached the level in society that we’re as comfortable talking about ADHD and checking in with it in the same way,” Prof Bellgrove mentioned.

“And as a result, it has not reached the same level of priority within the Government and within the funding systems that it needs to … We have this situation where we have health inequities, and folks with ADHD aren’t able to access diagnosis and treatment as readily as for other conditions.

“And I think, really, that has to change. It can’t stand,” he mentioned.

“We’re missing an opportunity here to maximise the potential of all these folks within society. And, you know, allow them to live healthy, happy, productive lives that are really going to contribute effectively to Australian society, and I think it has to change. That can’t go on.”

Originally printed as Real motive extra Australians are being identified with ADHD