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  • Today I want to talk to you about ADHD and here are four new facts that you need to know.

  • So, like I said today I'm going to talk with you about ADHD.

  • And I am going to be reading you some information from the new DSM 5.

  • And that's what I meant about "new facts about ADHD"

  • These four facts will come straight from the DSM-5.

  • Now, they diagnose, or describe the diagnosis of ADHD as follows:

  • "A persistent pattern of inattention and or hyper activity/impulsivity that interferes with functioning or

  • development."

  • Now, what that really means is that if we struggle with ADHD, we really struggle to complete tasks, to stay on task,

  • to stay focused. It's really difficult to sit still and to remain calm during situations. We often fidget a lot, feel really

  • restless.

  • But something that I want to talk about as I go through these new facts about ADHD, know that if you worry

  • that you struggle with this, please seek professional help and find someone who works with it specifically

  • and can test you appropriately.

  • Because many of the symptoms can be very similar to those with depression, anxiety, learning disabilities,

  • there can be a lot of overlap, so we want to make sure that we're getting properly diagnosed, so please seek

  • professional help.

  • So the first new fact about ADHD is that symptoms can now occur before age twelve.

  • So onset can be before age twelve, whereas in the DSM prior, it was before age seven.

  • So what that really says to me is that they understand that there are more people struggling and it can take

  • longer for ADHD to develop.

  • Because if they're saying, "Now we're giving you until age twelve to have the six symptoms for six months,"

  • (Which is part of the diagnostic criteria)

  • It means that they find people are still struggling with ADHD when they're young, they're just not getting to the diagnostic

  • criteria by age seven.

  • The second new fact about ADHD is that they have changed the criteria to say now that several symptoms must

  • occur in two settings, rather than there just being some impairment in two settings.

  • So, my guess would be that they did this because they felt that ADHD might be something that was potentially being

  • overdiagnosed, or diagnosed too early before all the criteria that they felt needed to be met was actually being met.

  • So instead of just having some impairment, now several symptoms in several different areas of our lives have to be

  • present at the same time.

  • The third new fact about ADHD is that they have kind of increased the information that's available to us clinicians

  • in the new DSM-5.

  • And what they've added is new, more lengthy descriptions about what ADHD will look like as people get older.

  • So, what that says to me is that they felt that a lot of adults struggling with ADHD weren't being diagnosed because

  • it appears different in adults versus children.

  • Which, I can tell you is very common among a lot of different diagnoses.

  • Kids will say, "I just feel really irritable" and you know, they'll be really lashing out and they actually struggle with

  • depression.

  • Where we know many adults are really lethargic and kind of quiet and withdrawn.

  • So, different diagnoses can appear differently depending on our age.

  • And so they're definitely making that very clear in the new DSM for ADHD.

  • And the final, fourth new fact about ADHD is that they have changed the diagnostic criteria for those of us who are

  • older and being diagnosed with this.

  • So, for any of us age seventeen or older, they are now only requiring that we have five symptoms persisting

  • for six months, rather than the original six.

  • So they've made it a little bit easier for us to meet the criteria.

  • And my guess on why they're doing this kind of goes back to the fact I talked about before.

  • When they've added in new descriptions for adults because it presents differently.

  • So they probably took away one because they understand that it kind of presents a little differently than it does

  • in children.

  • And so therefore we only need five symptoms for six months to be diagnosed with ADHD as an adult.

  • Living with ADHD isn't something that's going to hold you back.

  • People lead wonderful and successful lives and you can be another one of those people doing that.

  • So we just want to make sure we get all the information so that we can get treated properly.

  • And don't forget to subscribe to my channel because I put out videos every Monday.

  • And please leave your comments below, if any of you have struggled with ADHD, or have helpful tips or hints

  • or anything like that. We're a community working together to help one another.

  • And you can find me all over the web, I'm on Facebook, I'm on Tumblr, I'm on Twitter, I'm on Instagram.

  • Any place on the web that I should have a profile, I most likely do, so you can find me there too.

  • And don't forget to like this! Bye!

  • Subtitles by the Amara.org community

Today I want to talk to you about ADHD and here are four new facts that you need to know.

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