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ADHD (Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder) affects focus, organization, impulse control, and energy. It can appear in childhood or adulthood. ADHD is real and treatable, but only a licensed clinician can diagnose it.
Our website is for information only. We help you understand your options and prepare for conversations with licensed providers, but we do not diagnose, treat, or guarantee outcomes.
ADHD is a pattern of attention, activity, and impulse symptoms that interfere with daily life at school, work, or home. It is not laziness or a character flaw. With the right plan, including skills, routines, and sometimes medication, many people improve their focus and functioning.
Not everyone shows all signs. Only a clinician can determine whether symptoms meet criteria for ADHD or reflect another concern.
ADHD involves ongoing functional impact. This may include declining school or work performance, repeated missed deadlines or bills, accidents, strained relationships, or ongoing emotional distress. When symptoms are persistent and disruptive, a clinical assessment can help.
Some people use alcohol or drugs to cope with stress, sleep problems, or focus. This can worsen symptoms and make ADHD harder to assess. Dual diagnosis care addresses mental health conditions and substance use together, focusing on safety, structure, and coping skills. If there is immediate risk, seek emergency services.
A licensed clinician will:
Diagnosis is based on the full clinical picture, not a single test.
Care is tailored to your goals, safety, and daily demands. Many people benefit from using more than one approach, from therapy to medication support and more.
A prescriber may discuss stimulant or non-stimulant options. Medication is voluntary and personalized. Your clinician will review risks, benefits, and alternatives. Do not start, stop, or change medication without medical guidance.
Take ADHD medication only as prescribed
Mixing medication with alcohol or other drugs increases risk
Store medication securely and never share prescriptions
If misuse is a concern, tell your clinician so care can be adjusted
Other conditions often occur alongside ADHD and can worsen focus and fatigue. Common co-occurring disorders with ADHD include anxiety, depression, and PTSD. Integrated care treats all conditions together using therapy, skills, and medication when appropriate. This approach often improves both mood and attention.
Many evaluations and follow-up visits can be done via secure online video sessions. Some testing or vital checks may require in-person visits. Availability varies by location.
Yes. Therapy, skills, routines, coaching, and supports help many people. Medication is optional and decided with a prescriber.
Tell your clinician. Integrated care can address both safely. If opioids may be involved, ask about naloxone for overdose emergencies.
No. Many adults live with ADHD and benefit from treatment at any age.
Treatment supports your strengths and reduces obstacles. You remain yourself.
Plans change over time. Some people need short-term support, while others benefit from ongoing structure and check-ins.
If you are in danger or thinking of self-harm, call 911 (or your local emergency number). In the US, dial or text 988 for the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline.