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Tag: ADHD

  • “Stop Chasing Others’ Approval: On Twice Exceptionality and Living Life for Me”

    “Stop Chasing Others’ Approval: On Twice Exceptionality and Living Life for Me”

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    “You’re going to do great things!”
    “You have so much potential!”
    “You’re so talented. I see great things in your future!”
    So many people in my life have directed various versions of these well-meaning yet anxiety-inducing, expectation-laden comments to me during every phase of my academic career. As a gifted child, I felt as though I could succeed and, at the same time, as if I had to… or I would be letting everyone down.This black-and-white way of thinking did get me to check off a list of great accomplishments:

    • first in my family to graduate college, go on to complete a masters, and start a doctoral program
    • a successful career
    • financially independent since age 18

    But hidden in these accomplishments are the many, many struggles and failures I encountered along the way:

    • flunking out my freshman year of college
    • being asked to resign from a job for an error in judgment I made
    • flunking out of my Ph.D. program due to being unable to complete assignments
    • piling on credit card debt

    I eventually learned that my setbacks — so confusing and contrary to my successes — were actually due to undiagnosed and unmanaged ADHD. I was twice exceptional (or 2e) all this time, and I had no idea.

    [Read: I Grew Up Gifted and Autistic — and Suffered the Burnout of Twice Exceptionality]

    My undergraduate transcript is a wonderful example of my interest-based nervous system. I had As and Bs in classes within my major, but failed yoga (which likely had to do with my impulsive, oppositional streak).

    Perspective Shift: From Never Enough to Good Enough

    At the age of 29, I came to the realization that my life is my own, and while the approval of others is nice, I would never feel content if I continued to chase it. I made the conscious decision to let go of “greatness” as defined by others and to start experiencing life as it came to me.

    Letting go of greatness freed me up to be content with where I am currently, instead of always trying to do more or be better. I still have personal and professional goals, but these goals are now based on my values rather than the values of other people.

    My shift from “not good enough” to “good enough” has changed my self-view from lazy, unmotivated, and stubborn to efficient, understanding, and passionate.

    [Read: “Twice Exceptional Is a Cruel Double-Edged Sword”]

    Now I am:

    • enrolled in a doctoral program to advance MY learning and knowledge
    • in a job I can see myself in long-term, with opportunities to advance or switch it up, if I choose
    • writing this blog from a house that I own after paying down my debt

    I don’t believe any of this would’ve been possible if I hadn’t made the choice to live life for me, instead of an image I could never realistically attain. I’ve found a specialty I love and a life that finally feels sustainable.

    How to Live for Yourself

    If you are 2e like me, or if you see yourself in my story, start living life for you with these steps:

    1. Clearly identify your current values. Your personal values will come to define and frame everything else you do in life.
    2. Set at least one goal for each value. They can be as broad or as specific as you like. For example, if you value family, how will you commit to spending more time with them?
    3. Let go of the constant pursuit of greatness. If you are always thinking of where you could or should be, it only robs you of the ability to appreciate who and where you are now.
    4. Foster self-compassion. You are a multi-faceted person. Your worth is not directly measured by your productivity or your achievements.

    2e and How to Live for Yourself: Next Steps


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    Nathaly Pesantez

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  • Finding a Path Forward: Runner Molly Seidel Takes Control of her ADHD

    Finding a Path Forward: Runner Molly Seidel Takes Control of her ADHD

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    [MUSIC PLAYING]


    SPEAKER: Molly Seidel is one


    of only three American women


    to medal in the Olympics in one


    of the most brutal of events–


    the marathon.


    Perhaps what’s even more


    remarkable about Molly is


    her success in overcoming


    a series of mental health


    challenges.


    [MUSIC PLAYING]


    MOLLY SEIDEL: Having lived


    with various forms


    of neurodiversity and mental


    illness


    since basically childhood,


    I feel right now that I’m


    in a place where, obviously,


    with this kind of stuff,


    you’re never like, quote


    unquote, “cured,”


    but I feel in a much


    better and more stable place


    than I’ve been in a really


    long time due to taking


    a step back over this last year


    and really putting


    in the work and the time


    to focus on it.


    And I think that’s probably


    the most important part


    of dealing with these kinds


    of things.


    The funny and gnarly thing


    about any


    of these mental disorders


    and what I’ve experienced


    is that it almost seems


    like a game of whack-a-mole,


    that when you whack down one


    thing


    or when you feel that you’ve got


    a handle on one thing,


    it jumps to another thing.


    So when it’s not–


    when it’s not


    like obsessive restriction,


    it turns into bulimia.


    When you get rid of the bulimia,


    it turns into restriction again.


    Then that turned back


    into– it’s– that’s the


    frustrating part that if–


    and what it took me years


    to figure out that if you’re


    just trying to treat


    the symptoms


    and not addressing


    the underlying causes of some


    of these things, it will just


    tend to jump from diagnosis,


    to diagnosis, to diagnosis.


    And I got the–


    my two main diagnoses just are


    the ADHD and the OCD.


    Obviously, it was years apart


    for the two of those


    and it took longer to identify


    the ADHD.


    But it came with such a sense


    of relief and knowing of just


    like, oh, my God there’s


    a reason why I feel the way


    that I feel and maybe I’m not


    just thoroughly messed up


    and thoroughly a terrible person


    because your brain just works


    a little bit differently.


    And I think a lot of that came


    with a deep sense of shame


    for me.


    And that was the hardest part


    of just being I don’t know why


    my brain just can’t work the way


    that other people’s brains work.


    And especially– I think


    especially with the ADHD–


    the OCD was one because that was


    more of a pathology, kind


    of just being like, OK, this is


    something that I really need


    to work on and improve,


    this is a disorder.


    Whereas with the ADHD


    it came with this sense of just


    like, oh, my God,


    this makes so much sense.


    I think that was the most


    freeing thing and the thing that


    has gotten me to the place


    that I am now of being like,


    OK, there are specific lifestyle


    changes that I can make to make


    sure that my brain works


    optimally and then they worked.


    I wish that I had been more


    vocal about exactly how I was


    feeling earlier and it might


    have gotten to the solution


    a lot earlier.


    Because I think– especially


    as women, a lot of us


    are willing to almost like


    gaslight ourselves of just being


    like, oh, it’s not really that


    bad.


    And then you look objectively


    at it and you’re like,


    no, this is actually objectively


    pretty bad and there has to be


    a better way to live than this.


    I’m a pretty big nerd when it


    comes to this stuff,


    so I enjoy learning about it


    and I really enjoy trying–


    reading medical papers,


    trying to figure out stuff,


    doing my own research,


    especially


    as it comes to some


    of these alternative techniques


    for treating ADHD.


    So having a basic level


    of competence with that I think


    has really helped.


    But then I think just


    at this point,


    having been through pretty much


    the better part of–


    being through 10 years


    of working


    with different therapists


    pretty consistently,


    learning the dialogue,


    learning the–


    basically just getting a better


    understanding of how my brain


    works.


    And I think that ultimately is


    the point of therapy is learning


    to have a better relationship


    with your own brain


    and understanding the mechanisms


    by which your brain works.


    I think that’s been the most


    helpful thing to be able to be


    a little bit more confident


    and trust in myself to know


    the things that I need to be


    doing.


    And maybe some aspect of it is


    being able to take ownership


    of not just expecting that I’m


    going to go to a doctor


    and they’re going to give me


    a pill and that’s going to fix


    everything.


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  • ADHD medication abuse in schools is a ‘wake-up call’ | CNN

    ADHD medication abuse in schools is a ‘wake-up call’ | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    At some middle and high schools in the United States, 1 in 4 teens report they’ve abused prescription stimulants for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder during the year prior, a new study found.

    “This is the first national study to look at the nonmedical use of prescription stimulants by students in middle and high school, and we found a tremendous, wide range of misuse,” said lead author Sean Esteban McCabe, director of the Center for the Study of Drugs, Alcohol, Smoking and Health at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.

    “In some schools there was little to no misuse of stimulants, while in other schools more than 25% of students had used stimulants in nonmedical ways,” said McCabe, who is also a professor of nursing at the University of Michigan School of Nursing. “This study is a major wake-up call.”

    Nonmedical uses of stimulants can include taking more than a normal dose to get high, or taking the medication with alcohol or other drugs to boost a high, prior studies have found.

    Students also overuse medications or “use a pill that someone gave them due to a sense of stress around academics — they are trying to stay up late and study or finish papers,” said pediatrician Dr. Deepa Camenga, associate director of pediatric programs at the Yale Program in Addiction Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut.

    “We know this is happening in colleges. A major takeaway of the new study is that misuse and sharing of stimulant prescription medications is happening in middle and high schools, not just college,” said Camenga, who was not involved with the study.

    Published Tuesday in the journal JAMA Network Open, the study analyzed data collected between 2005 and 2020 by Monitoring the Future, a federal survey that has measured drug and alcohol use among secondary school students nationwide each year since 1975.

    In the data set used for this study, questionnaires were given to more than 230,000 teens in eighth, 10th and 12th grades in a nationally representative sample of 3,284 secondary schools.

    Schools with the highest rates of teens using prescribed ADHD medications were about 36% more likely to have students misusing prescription stimulants during the past year, the study found. Schools with few to no students currently using such treatments had much less of an issue, but it didn’t disappear, McCabe said.

    “We know that the two biggest sources are leftover medications, perhaps from family members such as siblings, and asking peers, who may attend other schools,” he said.

    Schools in the suburbs in all regions of the United States except the Northeast had higher rates of teen misuse of ADHD medications, as did schools where typically one or more parent had a college degree, according to the study.

    Schools with more White students and those who had medium levels of student binge drinking were also more likely to see teen abuse of stimulants.

    On an individual level, students who said they had used marijuana in the past 30 days were four times as likely to abuse ADHD medications than teens who did not use weed, according to the analysis.

    In addition, adolescents who said they used ADHD medications currently or in the past were about 2.5% more likely to have misused the stimulants when compared with peers who had never used stimulants, the study found.

    “But these findings were not being driven solely by teens with ADHD misusing their medications,” McCabe said. “We still found a significant association, even when we excluded students who were never prescribed ADHD therapy.”

    Data collection for the study was through 2020. Since then, new statistics show prescriptions for stimulants surged 10% during 2021 across most age groups. At the same time, there has been a nationwide shortage of Adderall, one of the most popular ADHD drugs, leaving many patients unable to fill or refill their prescriptions.

    The stakes are high: Taking stimulant medications improperly over time can result in stimulant use disorder, which can lead to anxiety, depression, psychosis and seizures, experts say.

    If overused or combined with alcohol or other drugs, there can be sudden health consequences. Side effects can include “paranoia, dangerously high body temperatures, and an irregular heartbeat, especially if stimulants are taken in large doses or in ways other than swallowing a pill,” according to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.

    Research has also shown people who misuse ADHD medications are highly likely to have multiple substance use disorders.

    Abuse of stimulant drugs has grown over the past two decades, experts say, as more adolescents are diagnosed and prescribed those medications — studies have shown 1 in every 9 high school seniors report taking stimulant therapy for ADHD, McCabe said.

    For children with ADHD who use their medications appropriately, stimulants can be effective treatment. They are “protective for the health of a child,” Camenga said. “Those adolescents diagnosed and treated correctly and monitored do very well — they have a lower risk of new mental health problems or new substance use disorders.”

    The solution to the problem of stimulant misuse among middle and high school teens isn’t to limit use of the medications for the children who really need them, McCabe stressed.

    “Instead, we need to look very long and hard at school strategies that are more or less effective in curbing stimulant medication misuse,” he said. “Parents can make sure the schools their kids attend have safe storage for medication and strict dispensing policies. And ask about prevalence of misuse — that data is available for every school.”

    Families can also help by talking to their children about how to handle peers who approach them wanting a pill or two to party or pull an all-night study session, he added.

    “You’d be surprised how many kids do not know what to say,” McCabe said. “Parents can role-play with their kids to give them options on what to say so they are ready when it happens.”

    Parents and guardians should always store controlled medications in a lockbox, and should not be afraid to count pills and stay on top of early refills, he added.

    “Finally, if parents suspect any type of misuse, they should contact their child’s prescriber right away,” McCabe said. “That child should be screened and assessed immediately.”

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  • Adult ADHD Is the Wild West of Psychiatry

    Adult ADHD Is the Wild West of Psychiatry

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    In October, when the FDA first announced a shortage of Adderall in America, the agency expected it to resolve quickly. But five months in, the effects of the shortage are still making life tough for people with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder who rely on the drug. Stories abound of frustrated people going to dozens of pharmacies in search of medication each month, only to come up short every time. Without treatment, students have had a hard time in school, and adults have struggled to keep up at work and maintain relationships. The Adderall shortage has ended, but the widely used generic versions of the drug, known as amphetamine mixed salts, are still scarce.

    A “perfect storm” of factors—manufacturing delays, labor shortages, tight regulations—is to blame for the shortage, David Goodman, an ADHD expert and a psychiatry professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, told me. And they have all been compounded by the fact that the pandemic produced a surge in Americans who want Adderall. The most dramatic changes occurred among adults, according to a recent CDC report on stimulant prescriptions, with increases in some age groups of more than 10 percent in just a single year, from 2020 to 2021. It’s the nature of the spike in demand for Adderall—among adults—that has some ADHD experts worried about “whether the demand is legitimate,” Goodman said. It’s possible that at least some of these new Adderall patients, he said, are getting prescriptions they do not need.

    The problem is that America has no standard clinical guidelines for how doctors should diagnose and treat adults with ADHD—a gap the CDC has called a “public health concern.” When people come in wanting help for ADHD, providers have “a lot of choices about what to use and when to use it, and those parameters have implications for good care or bad care,” Craig Surman, a psychiatry professor and an ADHD expert at Harvard and the scientific coordinator of adult-ADHD research at Massachusetts General Hospital, told me. The stimulant shortage will end, but even then, adults with ADHD may not get the care they need.

    For more than 200 years, symptoms related to ADHD—such as difficulty focusing, inability to sit still, and fidgeting—have largely been associated with children and teenagers. Doctors widely assumed that kids would grow out of it eventually. Although symptoms become “evident at a very early period of life,” one Scottish physician wrote in 1798, “what is very fortunate [is that] it is generally diminished with age.” For some people, ADHD symptoms really do get better as they enter adulthood, but for most, symptoms continue. The focus on children persists today in part because of parental pressure. Pediatricians have had to build a child-focused ADHD model, Surman said, because parents come in and say, “What are we going to do with our kid?” As a result, treating children ages 4 to 18 for ADHD is relatively straightforward: Clear-cut clinical guidelines from the American Academy of Pediatrics specify the need for rigorous psychiatric testing that rules out other causes and includes reports about the patient from parents and teachers. Treatment usually involves behavior management and, if necessary, medication.

    But there is no equivalent playbook for adults with ADHD in the U.S.—unlike in other developed nations, including the U.K. and Canada. In fact, the disorder was only recently acknowledged within the field of adult psychiatry. One reason it went overlooked for so long is because ADHD can sometimes look different in kids compared with adults: Physical hyperactivity tends to decrease with age as opposed to, say, emotional or organizational problems. “The recognition that ADHD is a life-span disorder that persists into adulthood in most people has really only happened in the last 20 years,” Margaret Sibley, a psychiatry professor at the University of Washington School of Medicine, told me. And the field of adult psychiatry has been slow to catch up. Adult ADHD was directly addressed for the first time in DSM-5—the American Psychiatric Association’s diagnostic bible—in 2013, but the criteria described there still haven’t been translated into practical instructions for clinicians.

    Addressing adult ADHD isn’t as simple as adapting children’s standards for grown-ups. A key distinction is that the disorder impairs different aspects of an adult’s life: Whereas a pediatrician would investigate ADHD’s impact at school or at home, a provider evaluating an adult might delve into its effects at work or in romantic relationships. Sources of information differ too: Parents and teachers can shed light on a child’s situation, but “you wouldn’t call the parent of a 40-year-old to get their take on whether the person has ADHD,” Sibley said. Providers usually rely instead on self-reporting—which isn’t always accurate. Complicating matters, the symptoms of ADHD tend to be masked by other cognitive issues that arise in adulthood, such as those caused by depression, drug use, thyroid problems, or hormonal shifts, Sibley said: “It’s a tough disorder to diagnose, because there’s no objective test.” The best option is to perform a lengthy psychiatric evaluation, which usually involves reviewing symptoms, performing a medical exam, taking the patient’s history, and assessing the patient using rating scales or checklists, according to the APA.

    Without clinical guidelines or an organizational body to enforce them, there is no pressure to uphold that standard. Virtual forms of ADHD care that proliferated during the pandemic, for example, were rarely conducive to lengthy evaluations. A major telehealth platform that dispensed ADHD prescriptions, Cerebral, has been investigated for sacrificing medical rigor for speedy treatment and customer satisfaction, potentially letting people without ADHD get Adderall for recreational use. In one survey, 97 percent of Cerebral users said they’d received a prescription of some kind. Initial consultations with providers lasted just half an hour, reported The Wall Street Journal; former employees feared that the company’s rampant stimulant-prescribing was fueling an addiction crisis. “It’s impossible to do a comprehensive psychiatric evaluation in 30 minutes,” Goodman said. (Cerebral previously denied wrongdoing and no longer prescribes Adderall or other stimulants.)

    The bigger problem is that too few providers are equipped to do those evaluations in the first place. Because adult ADHD was only recently recognized, most psychiatrists working today received no formal training in treating the disorder. “There’s a shortage of expertise,” Surman said. “It’s a confusing space where, at this point, consumers often are educating providers.” The dearth of trained professionals means that many adults seeking help for ADHD are seen by providers, including primary-care doctors, social workers, and nurse practitioners, who lack the experience to offer it. “It’s a systemic issue,” Sibley said, “not that they’re being negligent.”

    The lack of trained providers opens up the potential for inadequate or even dangerous care. Adderall is just one of many stimulants used to treat ADHD, and choosing the right one for a patient can be challenging—and not all people with ADHD need or want to take them. But even the most well-intentioned health-care professionals may be unprepared to evaluate patients properly. The federal government considers Adderall a highly addictive Schedule II drug, like oxycodone and fentanyl, and the risks of prescribing it unnecessarily are high: Apart from dependency, it can also cause issues such as heart problems, mood changes, anxiety, and depression. Some people with ADHD might be better off with behavioral therapy or drugs that aren’t stimulants. Unfortunately, it can be all too easy for inexperienced providers to start a patient on these drugs and continue treatment. “If I give stimulants to the average person, they’ll say their mood, their thinking, and their energy are better,” Goodman said. “It’s very important not to make a diagnosis based on the response to stimulant medication.” But the uptick in adults receiving prescriptions for those drugs since at least 2016 is a sign that this might be happening.

    The fact that adult ADHD is surging may soon lead to change. Last year, the American Professional Society of ADHD and Related Disorders began drafting the long-needed guidelines. The organization’s goal is to standardize care and treatment for adult ADHD across the country, said Goodman, who is APSARD’s treasurer. Establishing standards could have “broad, sweeping implications” beyond patient care, he added: Their existence could compel more medical schools to teach about adult ADHD, persuade insurance companies to cover treatment, and pressure lawmakers to include it in workplace policies.

    A way out of this mess, however long overdue, is only going to become even more necessary. Nearly 5 percent of adults are thought to have the disorder, but less than 20 percent of them have been diagnosed or have received treatment (compared with about 77 percent of children). “You have a much larger market of recognized and untreated adults, and that will continue to increase,” Goodman said. Women—who, like girls, are historically underdiagnosed—will likely make up a substantial share. Adults with ADHD may have suffered in silence in the past, but a growing awareness of the disorder, made possible by ongoing destigmatization, will continue to boost the ranks of people who want help. On social media, ADHD influencers abound, as do dedicated podcasts on Spotify.

    Until guidelines are published—and embedded into medical practice—the adult-ADHD landscape will remain chaotic. Some people will continue to get Adderall prescriptions they don’t need, and others may be unable to get an Adderall prescription they do need. Rules alone couldn’t have prevented the shortage, and they won’t stop it now. But in more ways than one, their absence means that many people who need help for ADHD are unable to receive it.

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    Yasmin Tayag

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  • FDA warns about Adderall, albuterol shortages

    FDA warns about Adderall, albuterol shortages

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    FDA warns about Adderall, albuterol shortages – CBS News


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    The Food and Drug Administration has issued a warning about a shortage in albuterol as well as the active ingredients used to manufacture Adderall. Albuterol is used to treat asthma, while Adderall is used to treat ADHD. Meg Oliver has more.

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


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  • ADHD Tied to Higher Rates of Anxiety, Depression

    ADHD Tied to Higher Rates of Anxiety, Depression

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    By Amy Norton 

    HealthDay Reporter

    THURSDAY, Jan. 19, 2023 (HealthDay News) — Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) may be an even bigger predictor of depression and anxiety in adulthood than autism is, a new study finds — highlighting the mental health side of the disorder.

    It’s known that kids and adults with ADHD often have co-existing conditions, including depression and anxiety. Research suggests that about 14% of children with ADHD have depression, while up to 30% have an anxiety disorder, according to the National Resource Center on ADHD.

    Adults with ADHD, meanwhile, are even harder-hit — with each of those conditions affecting up to half.

    The new study, researchers said, adds to what’s known by showing that ADHD is even more strongly linked to anxiety and depression than “autistic traits” are. Autism, which impairs communication and social skills, is itself tied to higher-than-normal rates of those mental health conditions.

    The findings spotlight the mental health component of ADHD, according to Richard Gallagher, an associate professor of child and adolescent psychiatry at NYU Langone Health in New York City, who reviewed the findings.

    “There’s a notion that people with ADHD have a ‘simple’ problem with paying attention,” he said. “They just need to learn to sit down and focus.”

    But like autism, ADHD is a neurodevelopmental disorder, and it can cause significant problems at school, work, home and in relationships, Gallagher said.

    “Over time, it can impact quality of life,” he said. If, for example, young people with ADHD become convinced they’re going to “fail” at completing tasks or doing them well, that could feed anxiety or depression.

    It’s also possible that some people are more vulnerable to all three conditions, said Punit Shah, the senior researcher on the new study.

    “We know there are some shared genetic factors that make people susceptible to both ADHD and anxiety and depression,” said Shah, an associate professor of psychology at the University of Bath in the United Kingdom.

    Gallagher agreed that could play a role, too, noting that difficulties with emotional regulation are a feature of ADHD. That could mean there’s some overlap in the brain areas involved in the different conditions.

    The findings — published online Jan. 16 in the journal Scientific Reports — are based on 504 British adults who completed standard questionnaires gauging traits of ADHD and autism, as well as depression and anxiety symptoms.

    Overall, Shah’s team found, ADHD traits and depression/anxiety symptoms rose in tandem in the study group: The more severe the ADHD traits, the more severe the mental health symptoms. There was a correlation between autism traits and mental health, too, but it was weaker.

    “ADHD is more strongly statistically linked to anxiety and depression than autistic traits are,” Shah said.

    The study did not look at whether participants had ever been formally diagnosed and treated for ADHD or autism, and whether that affected the likelihood of depression/anxiety in adulthood.

    According to Gallagher, kids being assessed for ADHD should also have their emotional well-being evaluated. Attention problems are seen in depression and anxiety disorders, too, so those causes should be ruled out, he noted.

    Even if ADHD is the diagnosis, though, Gallagher said, mental well-being needs to remain on the radar. Ideally, young people with ADHD should have their mental health assessed over time.

    “It’s important to be aware that neurodevelopmental conditions, like ADHD, can come with emotional issues that need attention,” Gallagher said.

    The standard treatments for adulthood ADHD typically involve medication, training in skills like organization and time management, and psychological counseling. If depression or anxiety are also present, Gallagher said, the standard psychological therapies for those conditions can help.

    According to Shah, more research is needed to understand why ADHD is so strongly linked to depression and anxiety. He said his team is “running a range of studies” on ADHD, autism and mental health.

    More information

    The Mayo Clinic has more on ADHD in adults.

     

    SOURCES: Punit Shah, PhD, MSc, associate professor, psychology, University of Bath, United Kingdom; Richard Gallagher, PhD, associate professor, child and adolescent psychiatry, NYU Grossman School of Medicine, director, Organizational Skills and Executive Function Treatment Program, NYU Langone Health, New York City; Scientific Reports, Jan. 16, 2023, online

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  • Simulated Driving Program Helps Teens With ADHD Be Safer on the Road

    Simulated Driving Program Helps Teens With ADHD Be Safer on the Road

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    Dec. 29, 2022 — Nadia Tawfik was 17 years old when she got her first car. Two months later, Tawfik was following behind her mother’s car when her mother continued driving straight and she made a fast decision to go a different way and make a left-hand turn. The light was green but there was no green arrow. Mid-turn, Tawfik got distracted by watching her mother driving off and didn’t see the car that was coming straight toward her.

    She hit it head on.

    “I wasn’t paying as much attention as I should have been,” Tawfik says four years after the accident. 

    Tawfik, who has ADD and is now a college senior studying nursing, is not alone in having difficulty paying attention while on the road. The risk of motor vehicle crashes is greater among teens ages 16 to 19 than among any other age group, according to the CDC. Driving accidents are also the leading cause of death among teens.

    For teens with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), the crash risk is even higher. According to research published in JAMA Pediatrics, adolescents who have been diagnosed with ADHD are 36% more likely to get into a car accident than other teenage drivers. Some research has shown that having ADHD is also associated with a higher likelihood of multiple collisions. 

    Thankfully, Tawfik was not seriously injured in the car accident, but her car needed to be replaced. But the mishap left her shaken; she started to feel more afraid of driving.

    About 8 months later, the teen came across an ad on social media for a study testing a computerized driving skills training program for teen drivers with ADHD. She happily signed on.

    The purpose of the randomized, control trial was to determine if a computerized intervention could work to reduce long glances away from the roadway and lessen the driving risks for teens with ADHD, says Jeffrey Epstein, PhD, the lead author of the study, which was published this month in the New England Journal of Medicine. 

    The study showed that for adolescents with ADHD, the intervention significantly reduced the frequency of long glances away from the road as well as a measure of lane weaving compared to a control program. What’s more, in the year after training, the rate of collisions and near collisions during real-world driving was significantly lower for those in the intervention group. 

    Those were the most surprising and significant findings to Epstein, who is also a pediatric psychologist and director for the Center for ADHD at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital, the primary site for the study.

    “I had my doubts and I was very pleased when our results did generalize to real-world driving,” Epstein says. 

    Epstein says he decided to focus this study on the reduction of long glances (greater than 2 seconds) away from the roadway because an earlier ADHD research study, for which he was an author, found that teens with ADHD were not only having longer glances away from the roadway when they were distracted, but they were having more of those long glances.

    “And so we determined that was a likely reason for teens with ADHD getting into accidents, and we said, ‘OK,  let’s try to address that. Let’s see if we can fix that.’”

    For the study, a total of 152 teens drivers (ages 16 to 19) with ADHD were assigned to either the intervention or the control group. All the teens were licensed drivers and drove at least 3 hours per week. Each person received 5 weeks of training, once weekly. 

    Those in the intervention group were trained using a program called The Focused Concentration and Attention Learning (FOCAL) program, which targets decreasing long glances away from the roadway. Those in the control group were taught information generally taught in a typical drivers’ training program like rules of the road, but they did not learn anything about long glances and focusing their attention on the road.

    The FOCAL program was developed by Donald Fisher, PhD,  at the University of Massachusetts, who had been working on decreasing long glances away from the road in teens without ADHD. Epstein’s research team knew they needed to make the program more intensive to work with teens with ADHD, so they enhanced it to include multiple sessions. They also added a driving simulator piece where the teens had to go in the driving simulator after they completed this computerized FOCAL program and they were alerted with an alarm any time there was a glance that exceeded 2 seconds. The only way to make the alarm stop was to look at the roadway again. In effect, the  training involved teaching the teens not to look away from the roadway for more than 2  seconds.

    The multiple-time training lasted more than 7 hours, Epstein says.  

    “We kind of really made them learn the skill until it became rote.”

    One of the key differences between the intervention and control group was that the intervention group received the auditory feedback when the teen looked away from the simulated roadway for more than 2  seconds, while those in control group did not get that auditory feedback training. 

    Participants in the intervention group were found to have an average of 16.5 long glances per drive at 1 month and 15.7 long glances per drive at 6 months as compared to 28 and 27 long glances respectively in the control group. A measure of lane weaving was also significantly reduced at 1 month and 6 months in the intervention group as compared to the control group.

    “We got really large differences between the two groups and very, very statistically significant differences,” Epstein says. 

    Skill level didn’t change much between 1 and 6 months. 

    “They were remembering these skills that we taught them,” Epstein says. 

    Secondary trial outcomes were rates of long glances and collisions/near-collisions during 1-year of real-world driving.   

    In order to measure them, the research team placed cameras in the majority of the teens’ cars. The cameras detected and recorded the moments leading up to driving episodes triggered by a high g-force on the vehicle, which occurred due to sudden changes in vehicle momentum such as a hard brake, hard swerve, or collision.

    During real-world driving over the year after training, those who took part in the intervention had a 24% reduction in the rate of long glances per g-force event and a 40% reduction in the rate of collisions or near collision per g-force event as compared to controls.

    Tawfik, who was in the intervention group, says the study was something she was genuinely interested in. Participating in it also made her better understand why some of these accidents happen.

    “The simulation itself really stuck with me all these years,” she says. “It was helpful because it reminded me to be more aware of my surroundings and to not just pay attention directly on the road.” 

    “Training  does work,” says John Ratey, MD, who is known for his books about ADHD, such as  the “Driven to Distraction” series that was written with Edward Hallowell, MD. 

    “It’s like any learning, it helps if you go over and over and over,” Ratey says. 

    “I think the field of ADHD is moving toward skills-based learning. Like we need to teach teens with ADHD skills,” Epstein says. 

    There was at least one study limitation, however. While the researchers  monitored real-world driving for 1 year after teens completed the training, they were not able to monitor teen’s medication use during that phase of the study. In other words, it wasn’t clear if the teens were taking ADHD medication at the time of collisions or near-collisions. That said, the  medication rates across the intervention and controls were very similar, Epstein notes. 

    True Learning

    Tawfik says she feels more comfortable on the road now. She’s learned to be self-aware and not “freak out” over driving. She has also internalized the message of don’t keep your eyes off the road for more than 2 seconds, a key takeaway for her from the study that she says she still applies to this day.

    Sometimes her friends will try to show her something on their phones while she’s driving.

    “I don’t look because I know that quick glance might turn into something horrific,” Tawfik says. 

    Parents and teens interested in learning more about the program can visit this website. Jeffrey Epstein, PhD, lead study author, said he hopes the intervention may someday be available using virtual reality or a smart phone application. (Anyone is welcome to do the training – currently five weeks — onsite at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital starting in January 2023). 

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  • ‘Basically No One Believed Her’: How We’re Failing Girls With ADHD

    ‘Basically No One Believed Her’: How We’re Failing Girls With ADHD

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    Looking back, it’s tricky for Ohio mom Nina Weierman to pinpoint which of her own childhood behaviors were signs of ADHD, and which were simply symptoms of being a kid.

    “I remember getting in trouble for talking or struggling to stop laughing” at school, Weierman told HuffPost.

    But other, more significant issues arose as Weierman grew.

    “By the third grade I noticed that I was struggling with things that didn’t seem to be too difficult for other kids,” she said. “I remember being in the library and just breaking down because I couldn’t figure out how to do the research assignment that was in front of me.”

    By the time she was in fifth grade, reading had become a challenge.

    “I just could not focus and would end up reading the same line over and over again. I remember laying on the floor in the classroom during quiet reading time just pretending to read,” Weierman said.

    She continued to struggle throughout high school and into college, where she finally reached out for help. Medication, she says, was “life-changing.”

    “I could suddenly think that I needed to do something and actually do it. I could comprehend reading and take good notes in class.”

    In addition to helping her complete her coursework and graduate, Weierman says that the diagnosis brought her great relief.

    “I was just so happy to have an answer,” she said. “It was eye-opening to realize that I wasn’t just stupid.”

    Now, as a parent, “I would never want my kids to struggle through school the way that I did,” Weierman said.

    She also wonders what direction her life might have taken and what careers she might have pursued if her ADHD had been diagnosed and treated earlier.

    Weierman’s story is typical of girls whose ADHD is diagnosed relatively late in life. When she faced difficulty, she quietly pretended to stay on task rather than disrupt the class. By internalizing her struggles and meeting behavioral expectations, she effectively masked her symptoms for years — unintentionally preventing herself from getting the help that she needed.

    In this way, girls with undiagnosed ADHD can end up being punished for their good behavior, struggling silently and alone.

    Heidi Borst of North Carolina only realized that she had ADHD after her son received a diagnosis, writing in a New York Times essay, “I attributed my difficulties to character flaws: I was spacey and forgetful, a master procrastinator lacking drive and ambition.”

    When Borst struggled in college, “I never imagined an underlying neurological disorder was at play,” she wrote.

    While our understanding of ADHD has evolved in the years since Weierman and Borst were in elementary school, it’s still common for girls to face delays in diagnosis.

    “It was eye-opening to realize that I wasn’t just stupid.”

    – Nina Weierman, who was diagnosed with ADHD in adulthood

    Jamie D., a mom in the Washington, D.C., area, told HuffPost that when her daughter, now 11, said she was having trouble paying attention in class, “basically no one believed her.”

    “No one seemed to care because she was not disruptive and getting by in school,” said Jamie, who pushed for testing. The diagnosis led to therapy, medication and accommodations at school, all of which have brought about a “huge change.”

    Jamie says her daughter is now “thriving” and “so much happier.”

    Meg S., a mother of four in Pennsylvania, has been uniquely positioned to see the gender differences in ADHD diagnoses in her 8-year-old boy-girl twins.

    While her son’s inattentiveness and other symptoms were noticeable in preschool and he was screened by his pediatrician and referred to a psychiatrist for evaluation, his twin sister is only now awaiting her own evaluation.

    “They’ve acted the same in a doctor’s office, but my son has been pegged as inattentive or hyperactive — which he is,” Meg told HuffPost.

    “I think I have even downplayed her symptoms over the years because my son’s symptoms seem to so clearly fit the picture society has in their head of ADHD,” she continued.

    That picture — of the boy who can’t stay in his seat and keeps interrupting the class — predominates to such an extent that it can render invisible the girls who are similarly, yet often more quietly, struggling.

    What is ADHD and how is it diagnosed?

    Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder is “one of the most common neurodevelopmental disorders of childhood,” according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. As the name suggests, children with ADHD may struggle with inattentiveness, impulsivity and/or hyperactivity.

    The organization Children and Adults with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder estimates that 11% of school-aged children have ADHD and that in over 75% of cases, symptoms continue into adulthood.

    Children with symptoms of ADHD may be screened by their pediatricians and then referred for a neuropsychological evaluation. Parents can also request an evaluation from their child’s school or district.

    A neuropsychologist will meet with your child, talk with them, and have them perform a series of tasks that could be described as games or puzzles. The evaluator will also have you and your child’s teacher fill out questionnaires about your child’s behavior and may conduct a classroom visit to observe your child at school.

    How do symptoms tend to differ between boys and girls?

    There are three types of ADHD: 1) predominantly inattentive, 2) predominantly hyperactive-impulsive, and 3) combined presentation (a mix of 1 and 2).

    It is more common for girls to be diagnosed with inattentive type ADHD, while boys are more often diagnosed with hyperactive-impulsive type or a combined presentation.

    This difference often correlates with a delay in diagnosis for girls, whose symptoms tend to be less disruptive in a classroom setting.

    “It’s very demoralizing to have ADHD and not know it. People are thinking you’re not making enough of an effort.”

    – Dr. Helen Egger, child psychiatrist and chief medical officer of Little Otter

    Dr. Helen Egger, a child psychiatrist and chief medical officer of Little Otter, a company that provides online mental health care to kids, told HuffPost, “the average is a nine-year-old boy who is a class clown, who’s not doing well academically, who is getting yelled at all the time at home.”

    “And you talk to the parents, and they’re like, yeah, when he was 3, he was standing on top of the dresser and jumping into the crib.”

    These are classic examples of hyperactive behavior, more often seen in boys, who are diagnosed with ADHD at twice the rate of girls, and at earlier ages.

    Children with inattentive type ADHD — many of them girls, but boys, also — are often described as “daydreamers,” said Helen Egger, who has seen this as both a practitioner and a parent. Her daughter, Rebecca Egger, was diagnosed with ADHD around the eighth grade.

    Children with hyperactive presentation are sometimes described as being driven by a motor that just won’t stop. But Rebecca Egger, who is now CEO and co-founder of Little Otter, says she wasn’t like that at all, describing her younger self as “quiet and sleepy.”

    “I was always tired all the time. So how can I have a hyperactive disorder?” she said.

    Looking back, however, that exhaustion made sense. “You’re constantly trying to make sure you don’t lose something, make sure that you’re on top of something . . . you’re constantly struggling. Everything is that much harder,” she said.

    In children, explained Helen Egger, “the rate is boys to girls, two to one. In adulthood, it’s one to one. So why is that? Is that always ‘growing out of it’? Is it women getting diagnosed and recognized?”

    Because parents and teachers are usually the ones making referrals, their own biases about who ‘seems’ to have ADHD behavior impact which children get screened. Then, because boys are more often screened and diagnosed, the diagnostic criteria were shaped to conform to a mostly male set of patients.

    One study, which compared children who had been diagnosed to children who had a high level of symptoms but did not meet diagnostic criteria, found that the children’s parents underrated hyperactivity and impulsivity in girls and overrated it in boys.

    This same study also found that while boys were more likely to exhibit disruptive behavior, girls were more likely to have internalizing symptoms such as anxiety and depression.

    “Their minds are wandering, but they’ve sort of been conditioned to say, ‘I’m doing fine, and everything’s OK. I’m holding my stuff together.’”

    – Dr. Janine Zee-Cheng

    Dr. Janine Zee-Cheng, a pediatrician practicing in Indiana, says she finds herself often digging a little deeper with her questions before suspecting ADHD in a female patient.

    She says she’ll see girls around 9 to 13 years old who “come in and they’ll be very anxious and they’ll have some feelings of school avoidance, and then after having some conversations with them, they’re like, ‘Oh, you know, I get distracted partway through a test.’”

    “It’s not like they’re jumping out of their chairs, or they’re cutting off the teacher in the middle of a sentence, right? Because their minds are wandering, but they’ve sort of been conditioned to say, ‘I’m doing fine, and everything’s OK. I’m holding my stuff together.’”

    Without further probing, such patients might be given a diagnosis of anxiety or depression — which they may also have — but then, the underlying ADHD goes untreated.

    “We know that anxiety and depression very often co-occur with ADHD,” explained Helen Egger.

    “Of course, we don’t know directionality. But it’s very demoralizing to have ADHD and not know it. People are thinking you’re not making enough of an effort. Or, ‘just try harder, you’re not applying yourself.’ That feeling of failing over and over again, when you’re trying your best, has a huge impact on self-esteem and self-efficacy,” said Helen Egger.

    It’s possible that girls who are able to mask their ADHD symptoms with “good” behavior develop anxiety or depression from the strain of compensating for their ADHD.

    What does an ADHD diagnosis mean?

    Rebecca Egger had dealt with, and gotten therapy for, anxiety since earlier in her childhood, but it wasn’t until the end of middle school that she began to struggle academically and was given the ADHD diagnosis.

    Helen Egger says that a gap between a child’s ability and performance is common in kids with ADHD. You know your child is smart, but you’re not seeing it in grades or test scores. These kids are sometimes called unmotivated or said to not live up to their potential.

    “Try to understand what your child is experiencing before you interpret the child’s behaviors as lack of commitment,” she said.

    “The thing about ADHD is it’s a neurodevelopmental disorder, which means it’s something that is the way your brain was wired,” she continued.

    Medication, therapy and learning coping strategies can all help a person live successfully with ADHD, but there is nothing that can be done to “re-wire” their brains.

    Some people with ADHD follow the example of others with autism who identify as “neurodivergent” and choose to see ADHD not as a disorder but as a difference that has its own benefits, such as the ability to hyper-focus on something they feel passionate about, or to think outside of the box.

    Rebecca Egger recalls an organizational coach she worked with in high school telling her, “I love my job, because people with ADHD are so fun. That’s why I do this job, because you all are really fun and I like how your brains work.”

    What’s the value of an ADHD diagnosis?

    Practically speaking, you’ll use your child’s diagnosis to access therapy and medication using your health insurance. It will also give your child the right to have a 504 plan that will provide them with accommodations at school. Students diagnosed with ADHD often receive preferential seating (near the teacher) and testing accommodations such as extended time, separate location, and having the questions read aloud.

    Of her son’s diagnosis, Meg S. said, “It’s opened all the doors to services he may need. A diagnosis is a means to an end, a description of an observed set of behaviors and needs.”

    “Those words on paper allow all the adults in his life to help him the best way they know how to,” she continued.

    The validation of having a diagnosis can also bring relief after a lifetime of struggle.

    “I remember getting the report back after my testing and it was like, ‘Oh, my God, finally,’” said Rebecca Egger. “When you finally are able to put a name to it, it felt really liberating,” she said.

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  • Brain Balance of Cedar Park is Now a Board Certified Cognitive Center

    Brain Balance of Cedar Park is Now a Board Certified Cognitive Center

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    Press Release



    updated: Jan 9, 2020

    ​Brain Balance Achievement Center in Cedar Park, Texas, has been designated as a Board Certified Cognitive Center (IBCCC) by the International Board of Credentialing and Continuing Education Standards (IBCCES). The designation requires that center staff complete a training and professional certification program that focuses on individuals with a variety of needs, such as anxiety, dyslexia, autism and ADHD.

    “When looking for options to help a child who has moderate to severe challenges, there are not many attractive options. Progress is slow and children often don’t reach their full potential. At Brain Balance, we are the experts. Brain Balance identifies the root cause of the problem and, typically, we start making progress quickly. This could be the most important thing you do in your child’s future,” said Frank Francis, Executive Director of the Cedar Park location.

    For almost 20 years, IBCCES has been the industry leader in cognitive disorder training and certification for healthcare, education and corporate professionals around the globe.

    “Since Brain Balance Centers work with children with a variety of needs and cognitive disorders, the Board Certified Cognitive Center program is a perfect fit. Our program complements the team’s existing areas of focus, enhancing their understanding of these cognitive areas and helping them to continue to have a positive impact on the thousands of families they serve,” said Myron Pincomb, IBCCES Board Chairman.

    Brain Balance was founded in 2007 and currently has more than 100 centers across the US. Brain Balance employs a personalized and integrative approach through sensory engagement, physical development, academics and nutrition, which provides answers to social, emotional, behavioral and academic development. Brain Balance has announced a goal of having all centers nationally become certified, with almost half committed to the program to date.

    “Professional training is incredibly important in our industry, and IBCCES has standardized training and certification that is globally recognized,” said Dr. Rebecca Jackson, Vice President of Programs and Outcomes at Brain Balance Achievement Centers. “We worked closely with the IBCCES team to develop instruction that meets the needs of our more than 100 centers. This new training program will give our team an even greater understanding as they work with students who face challenges with attention and focus, anxiety, learning, socialization and more.”

    Brain Balance of Cedar Park collaborates with local therapeutic centers and schools to ensure that their shared students/patients are reaping the benefits of all the community has to offer. The Center regularly participates in events geared towards children with special needs as well as providing CPE hours for teacher development hours. The Center will begin to hold free public monthly educational panels starting January 2020 on a variety of developmental, behavioral and academic topics.

    ###

    MEDIA CONTACT:

    IBCCES

    Meredith Tekin, President

    904.508.0135 / 904.434.1534

    meredith@ibcces.org

    Brain Balance of Cedar Park

    Frankie Francis, Executive Director

    (512) 328-7771

    ffrancis@brainbalancecedarpark.com

    Source: IBCCES

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  • Raleigh, NC Student is Ready for College, Following Years of School Struggles, Thanks to LearningRx Training

    Raleigh, NC Student is Ready for College, Following Years of School Struggles, Thanks to LearningRx Training

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    Young Cowboy Named Winner in National Contest for Exceptional Brain Training Results

    Press Release



    updated: Aug 9, 2019

    ​​College-bound cowboy Wesley Fowler has been named the top winner in LearningRx’s national Student of the Year competition, celebrating the top brain training results across the country.

    “His entire life, all Wesley wanted to be was a farmer,” says Jennifer Huntington, executive director of LearningRx Cary, where Wesley completed personal brain training. “Every grade counted toward his GPA, which was his ticket to getting into the agricultural program at North Carolina State.”

    But Wesley struggled academically. He would study for hours only to get a poor grade on a test. His mother Kelley, who is a teacher at Wesley’s school, had tried everything she could to try to help Wesley. She had even researched LearningRx and written it down in her prayer journal as a possible solution. By coincidence, two years later, Kelley won “Teacher of the Month” and received a free cognitive skills assessment from LearningRx. She brought Wesley in and the results of the assessment showed several weak cognitive skills, especially in long-term memory.

    Suddenly, Wesley’s long history of academic struggles made complete sense.

    “His exact words to me when we were leaving LearningRx that day were ‘I’m not stupid! There’s a reason!’ As a parent, I was shocked at what he had dealt with. The cognitive skills in so many areas were so low that it was no wonder he had struggled so much.”

    With hope on the horizon, Wesley’s dream of going to college was resurrected. He enrolled in LearningRx personal brain training.

    By his senior year of high school, Wesley could focus more in school, keep up with taking notes and remember what he studied. He used his visual memory skills at work to memorize the names and stall locations of 50 horses he had begun working with. He remembered to take care of responsibilities at home. His confidence soared and he earned all As and Bs his senior year—including an A in an AP class. Best of all, Wesley was accepted into the agricultural program at NC State. Now, he’s officially part of the Wolf Pack.

    Watch his submission video: http://studentshoutouts.com/2019/08/08/adhd-student-ready-college-learningrx-training-raleigh-nc-review/

    About LearningRx

    LearningRx, headquartered in Colorado Springs, Colorado, is the largest one-on-one brain training organization in the world. With more than 70 Centers in the U.S. and 48 international locations, LearningRx has helped more than 100,000 individuals and families sharpen their cognitive skills to help them think faster, learn easier and perform better. Their on-site programs partner every client with a personal brain trainer to keep clients engaged, accountable, and on-task—a key advantage over online-only brain exercises. Their pioneering methods have been used in clinical settings for over 35 years and have been verified as beneficial in peer-reviewed research papers and journals. To learn more about LearningRx research resultsprograms and their 9.6 out of 10 client referral rating visit http://www.learningrx.com/.

    Source: LearningRx

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  • Biofeedback Therapeutic Wearable for People With ADHD

    Biofeedback Therapeutic Wearable for People With ADHD

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    Press Release



    updated: Jul 22, 2019

    Our Mission

    Many children and adults with Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder (ADHD) have difficulties managing their symptoms. It can be very challenging for these individuals to succeed in school, in their careers and can have struggles with their personal relationships. Matt Giordano, President of Drum Echoes, Inc., is no stranger to these challenges. Matt was diagnosed with ADHD and Tourette syndrome when he was 5. Matt and his team have decided to do something about the struggles many people with this common disorder are going through. He and his team are developing a patent pending personal biofeedback device for individuals with ADHD to assist them with self-management by using a variety of effective therapies and techniques. This device will detect stress levels in real time through the use of biofeedback sensors. These sensors will function in conjunction with the therapeutic features for the most optimal results. The goal is to help these individuals function more independently, achieve higher grades in school, increase work productivity, have better relationships and improve their overall quality of life.

    Matt’s Experiences and Discoveries

    Matt started having his first symptoms of Tourette Syndrome and ADHD at the age of 2. He also started playing the drums when he was 2 and shortly after that, he learned how powerful music and the arts can be. His symptoms disappear when he plays the drums! Music and the arts are a great way for him to organize and express his thoughts and feelings. It helps to increase his level of focus and confidence. Most art forms require a form of collaboration and Matt’s drumming allowed his peers to see past his symptoms. They gained a higher level of understanding, acceptance and appreciation for Matt as a quality individual that resulted in lasting relationships. Many people with ADHD are gifted in the arts and have similar experiences. 

    Matt’s mom gained a great deal of knowledge from working with Matt to overcome many extreme challenges he had as a child. As a result, she became the Education Specialist for the Tourette Association of America since 2003. During those years, Matt has witnessed his mom helping thousands of children in many schools across the United States. He has learned what kinds of services need to be provided by schools for their students with Tourette Syndrome and ADHD. A countless number of children she has supported, appeared to have a hopeless future until she collaborated with the schools to provide the needed services.

    In 2003, Matt started his company Drum Echoes, Inc. to give back what the arts and his community have given to him. His drumming work and personal story have received media attention by the BBC, PBS Nova and was written about in the New York Times bestseller book titled Musicophilia by the highly respected author and neurologist, Dr. Oliver Sacks.  Matt has provided his drumming workshops for thousands of children and adults with ADHD throughout the United States, Canada, Puerto Rico, and Australia. During that time, he has learned the most common struggles this vast population are experiencing in their schools, workplace, social lives and families. He has also learned the most effective therapies and coping techniques for these individuals. It is those therapies and techniques he has carefully chosen to integrate into this new wearable technology.

    FAQ’S

    • ADHD is the most common neurological disorder in the U.S.
    • 9.4% (6.1 Million) children ages 2-17 in the U.S. have ADHD
    • 4.4% (8 million) adults in the U.S. have ADHD  
    • Productivity and income losses $87-$138 billion
    • Overall costs of adults with ADHD $105-$194 billion
    • Untreated adults with ADHD lose an average of 22 days of productivity per year 
    • 25-40% adults in the criminal justice system have ADHD 

    Studies

    • 98 music therapy case studies on children with ADHD averaged 4.1 overall effectiveness on a scale of 1-5
    • Arts Integration Education, 2009-2012 Students achieving or surpassing standards for reading grew from 73%-81%, Math 62%-77%, 2009-2011 disciplinary problems decreased 23%

    We need your help!

    We need funds to take this concept into a working prototype, to beta testing and into the lives of millions of people who need it. 

    • $15,000 to pay license therapists to finish the specs for the therapeutic features. 
    • $15,000 to pay license therapists to study the results of the working prototype during the beta test phase.
    • $250,000 (Estimated) to pay product design company during all phases of development.

    Please donate and help make a difference! We are open to potential investors. Matt has two patents pending, renderings, a solid business plan, an investor presentation and an impressive professional team who are eager to continue working on this wearable technology! 

    Initial target market are individuals with ADHD. However, this product will be effective and sold to many other large markets such as seniors and the disabled for independent living, education, many emotional and neurological disorders, therapeutic and medical monitoring and research, physical therapy, health and fitness, simulation training and research, NASA, gaming and more!

    Please donate by clicking this GoFundMe link below:

    https://www.gofundme.com/f/drum-echoes-biofeedback-wearable-for-adhd&rcid=r01-156307925494-645bf50bf7c040c1&pc=ot_co_campmgmt_w 

    Matt Giordano

    Phone: 585.487.9954

    Email: Matt@drum-echoes.com

    Website: drum-echoes.com/tech-products

    Thank you!

    Source: Drum Echoes

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  • Shreveport, LA Family Reviews Improvements to Reading, Focus, and Vocabulary After LearningRx Brain Training

    Shreveport, LA Family Reviews Improvements to Reading, Focus, and Vocabulary After LearningRx Brain Training

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    Boy goes from struggling reader with attention issues to increased focus, vocabulary and comprehension

    LearningRx (www.LearningRx.com), the world’s largest personal brain training company, is celebrating the success of Braedon who saw significant changes in reading, paying attention and confidence after completing a LearningRx program.

    Braedon came to LearningRx in Shreveport because he was struggling with reading comprehension, especially understanding the parts of a story. He didn’t enjoy doing homework and had trouble focusing and following directions.

    After completing his LearningRx personal brain training program, Braedon achieved big results—seeing significant improvements in reading comprehension, focus in the classroom, his vocabulary and his ability to follow instructions.

    “He now has better grades in school and actually wants to go,” says Braedon’s mother. “His will to want to learn is better and he can express himself much better now. I just want him to have the confidence that he needs to succeed in life and that he can do anything he puts his mind to.”

    Braedon says he’d recommend LearningRx to a friend because it can “help them with math, spelling and confidence.”

    Now Braedon wants to become a baseball coach and Navy Seal. We know he can do it!

    Watch his video: http://studentshoutouts.com/2018/11/27/brain-training-improves-reading-comprehension-learningrx-shreveport-la-review

    About LearningRx

    LearningRx, headquartered in Colorado Springs, Colorado, is the largest one-on-one brain training organization in the world. With 80 Centers in the U.S., and locations in 39 countries around the globe, LearningRx has helped more than 100,000 individuals and families sharpen their cognitive skills to help them think faster, learn easier, and perform better. Their on-site programs partner every client with a personal brain trainer to keep clients engaged, accountable, and on-task — a key advantage over online-only brain exercises. Their pioneering methods have been used in clinical settings for over 35 years and have been verified as beneficial in peer-reviewed research papers and journals. To learn more about LearningRx research resultsprograms, and their 9.6 out of 10 client satisfaction rating visit http://www.learningrx.com.

    Source: LearningRx

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  • Short Hills, NJ Student Reviews Grade Improvements After LearningRx Training

    Short Hills, NJ Student Reviews Grade Improvements After LearningRx Training

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    LearningRx (www.LearningRx.com), the world’s largest personal brain training company, is celebrating the success of Sam, who saw significant changes in grades, academic enjoyment and confidence after completing a LearningRx program.

    Sam came to LearningRx at age 12 because he was struggling in school and unable to complete his homework. Although he tried tutoring, his parents realized that it wasn’t a problem that could be fixed by re-teaching the same information.

    After completing his LearningRx personal brain training program, Sam achieved drastic improvements­—and the changes have made him a successful student.

    “I felt like my homework was easier to do and I could understand it better,” says Sam. “My grades started to go up and I started to do better in almost all my classes.”

    His mother says his confidence went way up and the changes happened quickly after he started LearningRx.

    Sam says his memory and attention are so much better. He adds that he’d recommend LearningRx to his friends because they’d enjoy the brain games and it can really help them with their academics.

    “It was entertaining, but it also helped me with learning,” says Sam, referring to his experience with LearningRx. “I think it was a lot of fun!”

    Watch his video: http://studentshoutouts.com/2018/12/26/student-improves-grades-one-one-brain-training-learningrx-short-hills-nj-review

    About LearningRx

    LearningRx, headquartered in Colorado Springs, Colorado, is the largest one-on-one brain training organization in the world. With 80 Centers in the U.S., and locations in 45 countries around the globe, LearningRx has helped more than 100,000 individuals and families sharpen their cognitive skills to help them think faster, learn easier, and perform better. Their on-site programs partner every client with a personal brain trainer to keep clients engaged, accountable, and on-task—a key advantage over online-only brain exercises. Their pioneering methods have been used in clinical settings for over 35 years and have been verified as beneficial in peer-reviewed research papers and journals. To learn more about LearningRx research resultsprograms, and their 9.6 out of 10 client referral rating visit http://www.learningrx.com.

    Source: LearningRx

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  • Charlottesville, VA Mom Reviews Daughter’s Attention Improvements After LearningRx Brain Training

    Charlottesville, VA Mom Reviews Daughter’s Attention Improvements After LearningRx Brain Training

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    LearningRx (www.LearningRx.com), the world’s largest personal brain training company, is celebrating the success of Ayda, who saw significant changes in sustained, divided and selective attention after completing a LearningRx program.

    Ayda came to LearningRx after her teacher was concerned that although she was smart, she was struggling to pay attention in class.

    “I just knew that if she could focus, she could have real power,” says her mom. “I’ve known since she was little that she had attention issues. It’s cute when you’re 4, but it’s not cute when you’re 10. I had talked to my pediatrician and I was on the verge of putting her on some ADHD medication when the pediatrician suggested LearningRx.”

    Ayda’s mom says that a cognitive skills assessment showed how smart Ayda was, but that she had some brain skills that were weaker, including attention, working memory and processing speed.

    After completing her LearningRx personal brain training program, Ayda achieved drastic improvements­—and the changes have made her a successful student.

    “It’s been amazing,” says her mom. “I just had parent-teacher conferences a few weeks ago and I had the best report on Ayda I’ve had in years. All of her teachers said it’s amazing how much she’s focusing. I can tell that she’s practicing. She’s doing her homework. She’s being way less disruptive in class. She’s getting so much more out of school. I can see that as she is starting to enter her pre-teen years, she is full of confidence about her abilities. Having LearningRx help her build on her skills that were weak has really allowed her to access her skills that are strong.”

    Watch Ayda’s story: http://studentshoutouts.com/2019/01/02/mom-reviews-brain-training-daughter-attention-struggles-learningrx-charlottesville-va

    About LearningRx

    LearningRx, headquartered in Colorado Springs, Colorado, is the largest one-on-one brain training organization in the world. With 80 Centers in the U.S., and locations in 39 countries around the globe, LearningRx has helped more than 100,000 individuals and families sharpen their cognitive skills to help them think faster, learn easier, and perform better. Their on-site programs partner every client with a personal brain trainer to keep clients engaged, accountable, and on-task — a key advantage over online-only brain exercises. Their pioneering methods have been used in clinical settings for over 35 years and have been verified as beneficial in peer-reviewed research papers and journals. To learn more about LearningRx research resultsprograms, and their 9.6 out of 10 client satisfaction rating visit http://www.learningrx.com. 

    Source: LearningRx

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  • Mom Reviews Her Son’s Improvements After Personal Brain Training

    Mom Reviews Her Son’s Improvements After Personal Brain Training

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    LearningRx (www.LearningRx.com), the world’s largest personal brain training company, is celebrating the success of Maddox, who saw significant changes in grades, confidence and homework after completing a LearningRx program.

    Maddox came to LearningRx after having a hard time keeping up in class and with his siblings. He was struggling with reading and math in particular, and his mother said he would just “shut down” at school. He’d also avoid homework and participating in class.

    A cognitive skills assessment helped determine where some of Maddox’s cognitive skills were weak and, using those results, LearningRx created a personal brain training program to target and strengthen those weak skills.

    Since completing his LearningRx program, Maddox has seen huge improvements in grades, confidence, organization and homework.

    “We have seen amazing strides with him,” says his mom. “He’s doing great; his confidence is way up there. He’s more attentive in class and participating more. Now, he’s getting Bs and doing really well. Now, he enjoys reading, and I don’t even have to ask him if he has homework. He gets it done right away. He’s participating much more in class and is more confident.”

    Maddox’s mother encourages other parents with children who struggle in school to get a cognitive skills assessment at LearningRx.

    Watch Maddox’s video: http://studentshoutouts.com/2019/01/22/reading-grades-confidence-improved-brain-training-learningrx-eagan-savage-woodbury-eden-prairie-maple-grove-shoreview-mn-review/

    About LearningRx

    LearningRx, headquartered in Colorado Springs, Colorado, is the largest one-on-one brain training organization in the world. With 78 Centers in the U.S. and locations in 39 countries around the globe, LearningRx has helped more than 100,000 individuals and families sharpen their cognitive skills to help them think faster, learn easier and perform better. Their on-site programs partner every client with a personal brain trainer to keep clients engaged, accountable and on-task — a key advantage over online-only brain exercises. Their pioneering methods have been used in clinical settings for over 35 years and have been verified as beneficial in peer-reviewed research papers and journals. To learn more about LearningRx research resultsprograms, and their 9.6 out of 10 client satisfaction rating, visit http://www.learningrx.com/.

    Source: LearningRx

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  • LearningRx Announces Executive Leadership Transition

    LearningRx Announces Executive Leadership Transition

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    Press Release



    updated: Jan 25, 2017

    ​LearningRx, the largest one-on-one brain training organization in the world, is pleased to announce the transition of the organization’s founder and CEO Dr. Ken Gibson to the position of Chairman of the Board. Effective immediately the new leadership of LearningRx is as follows:

    ·Kim Hanson, Chief Executive Officer

    I am thrilled by this appointment and am dedicated to seeing my father’s vision fulfilled, which is to help hundreds of thousands of people think faster, learn easier and perform better

    Kim Hanson, CEO LearningRx

    ·Dean Tenpas, Chief Operating Officer

    ·Tanya Mitchell, Chief Recruitment and Research Officer

    ·Dr. Ken Gibson, Chairman of the Board

    Dr. Gibson opened the first LearningRx center in August 2002 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. By 2003, market research and requests from program graduates prompted him to begin franchising in order to serve more clients in more cities. Today, LearningRx has grown to nearly 80 centers in the U.S. and locations in 40 countries around the globe. Their one-on-one brain training programs have helped over 95,000 individuals and families learn easier, think faster, perform better, and improve IQ. Graduates range in age from 4 to 84 — from kids with diagnoses of ADHD, autism, dyslexia, and learning struggles; to career and senior adults who wanted to improve mental skills; to victims of stroke or traumatic brain injury.

    “This is an exciting day for our family-operated business. Today, I turn my focus toward guiding the new executive team as it deepens its efforts to grow our franchise base both in the United States and across the globe while increasing the depth and results driven from our research group, The Gibson Institute of Cognitive Research,” said Dr. Gibson. “This 18-month transition process is now complete and I am excited to support LearningRx and its leadership as its board chairman while enjoying more time with my grandchildren, family, and friends.”

    “We often joke in the family that I was my father’s first one-on-one cognitive brain trainer when I was a teen,” said Kim Hanson. “However that work at an early age was my initial preparation to take the reins as CEO of LearningRx. I am thrilled by this appointment and am dedicated to seeing my father’s vision fulfilled, which is to help hundreds of thousands of people think faster, learn easier and perform better with our unique brain training programs, while also supporting our team as we delve into new and exciting research and franchise markets across the United States and throughout the world.” 

    The one-on-one nature of the training relationship allows LearningRx brain trainers to focus on results by customizing each training session and encouraging their clients to work past their comfort levels. Brain trainers focus on attitude by challenging clients to recognize and pursue their potential, learning to see failure not as something to be avoided at all costs, but as a temporary stepping stone to greater success. LearningRx trainers focus on confidence by encouraging struggling children and adults to engage, embrace challenges, recognize improvements, and celebrate gains.

     “My father, Dr. Ken Gibson, is a true visionary who spent a majority of his career helping those with cognitive learning and reading struggles better themselves,” said Tanya Mitchell. “The training methods we use are built on over 35 years of research, and we have cognitive test results on tens of thousands of clients. I am energized by our company’s new chapter and I am personally dedicated to my role which is growing our base of franchises in the U.S. and abroad while also supporting the groundbreaking research at The Gibson Research Institute, where we are currently conducting many studies on LearningRx cognitive training programs with several industry thought leaders.”

    In 2016, LearningRx reached a milestone by opening centers in three more countries, while also launching collaborative research studies through The Gibson Institute of Cognitive Research, focusing on ADHD, Traumatic Brain Injury and Mild Cognitive Impairment/Early Alzheimer’s with a timeline of releasing its results to the public beginning in the spring of 2017.

    “Our team’s work is critical to improving the lives of those struggling with learning and reading,” said Dean Tenpas. “From my perspective, our programs give clients new opportunities in learning and in life; advancements and experiences that they may have never achieved because a weak cognitive skill was holding them back. I am honored to lead the operations of such an important company and am dedicated to ensuring that our extended team has the tools it needs to grow our organization each and every year in both revenue and positive impact on people’s lives.”

    About LearningRx:

    LearningRx, headquartered in Colorado Springs, Colorado, is the largest one-on-one brain training organization in the world. With close to 80 Centers in the U.S., and locations in 40 countries around the globe, LearningRx has helped more than 95,000 individuals and families sharpen their cognitive skills to help them think faster, learn easier, and perform better. The company’s on-site programs partner every client with a personal brain trainer to keep clients engaged, accountable, and on task — a key advantage over online-only brain exercises. Their pioneering methods have been used in clinical settings for 35 years and have been verified as beneficial in peer-reviewed research papers and journals. To learn more about LearningRx research results, programs, and their 9.6 out of 10 client satisfaction rating visit http://www.learningrx.com/.

    Source: LearningRx

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  • LearningRx -One-on-One Brain Training Reviews 50 Year-Round Military Discounts

    LearningRx -One-on-One Brain Training Reviews 50 Year-Round Military Discounts

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    Press Release



    updated: Nov 10, 2016

    One-on-one brain training company LearningRx is sharing a list of “50 Military Discounts Just for Showing ID.” Although establishments across the country tend to offer some discount on Veterans Day, Memorial Day or Armed Forces Day, there are some businesses that offer year-round discounts to active duty soldiers, retired military members and/or their family members. Here are a few from the list:

    1.   Sears (5-20% off): Sears offers 20% off regular price merchandise and an additional 5% off sales prices throughout the tools/hardware and lawn & garden departments, excluding grills and patio furniture and décor. Sears also offers 7% off all automotive services and products.
       
    2.  Yankee Candle  (10% off): Yankee candle offers 10% off in all retail stores, outlets and online.
       
    3.  LearningRx (varies by location): Although each center is its own franchise, some brain training centers will give active duty and retired military and their family members a discounted cognitive skills assessment just for asking and showing ID.
       
    4.  Massage Envy ($60/year): All active-duty military who join get $60 off a year.
       
    5.  Bass Pro Shops (10%): For one week beginning the 15th of each month, active duty and retired military members receive a 10% discount.

    To see the full list, visit: http://media.learningrx.com/50-military-discounts-just-for-showing-id/

    LearningRx, headquartered in Colorado Springs, Colorado, is the largest one-on-one brain training organization in the world. With 80 Centers in the U.S., and locations in 40 countries around the globe, LearningRx has helped more than 95,000 individuals and families sharpen their cognitive skills to help them think faster, learn easier, and perform better. Their on-site programs partner every client with a personal brain trainer to keep clients engaged, accountable, and on-task — a key advantage over online-only brain exercises. Their pioneering methods have been used in clinical settings for 35 years and have been verified as beneficial in peer-reviewed research papers and journals. To learn more about LearningRx research results, programs, and their 9.6 out of 10 client satisfaction rating visit http://www.learningrx.com/.    

    Source: LearningRx

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  • LearningRx – Reviews  10 Ways Parents Can Partner With Teachers

    LearningRx – Reviews 10 Ways Parents Can Partner With Teachers

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    Brain Training company LearningRx shares tip on how parents can partner with teachers at learningrxblog.com

    Press Release


    Aug 16, 2016

    ​​​​One-on-one brain training company LearningRx is sharing a list of 10 ways parents can partner with teachers. Here are a few from the list:

    1. Offer to help at home. Not everyone can volunteer in the classroom. Parents work, stay home with younger children, take care of sick or elderly family members, or live too far away to make multiple trips to school. But many teachers have things that can be done at home instead. “I have sorted and stapled piles of papers, cut out materials, done online research and sorted art materials into plastic baggies for a craft project,” says one mother of two. If you can spare even an hour a week, ask your child’s teachers what you can do at home to help with materials for the classroom.

    I love the tip about how any parent who donates funds to help a classroom can double their money!

    Tanya Mitchell, Mom of four school-aged kids

    2. Share good deals. Even if you can’t afford to buy a ton of extra school supplies for the classroom, you can share extra-special deals that you run across. “I make a list of businesses that are offering freebies during Teacher Appreciation Week and give them to my kids’ teachers,” says one mom. “It doesn’t cost me anything and they love knowing about places like Chipotle and Chick-fil-A that offer freebies or BOGO deals.” Sites like Donors Choose and Fund My Classroom let teachers in high-needs communities post requests for financial assistance for specific projects, equipment, field trips and events. “I would donate $25 and then use a promo code I’d find online to get a matching the donation from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, so the teacher would instead get $50 toward her project,” says another mom. “Then I’d share the code with the teacher and other parents, so any parent in the class who donated funds could double their money.”

    3. Donate supplies. Time magazine reports that teachers spent, on average, $500 of their own money on classroom supplies. If you have contacts at stores or large companies, ask if they can donate supplies. (Some schools will even supply you with their tax ID number in order for the company to get a write-off.) You can also check yard sales and thrift shops to pick up cheap deals, or ask the teacher to create a list of classroom “needs” and “wants” that you can offer to copy and share with other parents.

    To see the full list, visit: http://media.learningrx.com/files/2016/08/PrintablePartnerWithTeacher-copy.pdf

    LearningRx, headquartered in Colorado Springs, Colorado, is the largest one-on-one brain training organization in the world. With 80 Centers in the U.S., and locations in 40 countries around the globe, LearningRx has helped more than 95,000 individuals and families sharpen their cognitive skills to help them think faster, learn easier, and perform better. Their on-site programs partner every client with a personal brain trainer to keep clients engaged, accountable, and on-task — a key advantage over online-only brain exercises. Their pioneering methods have been used in clinical settings for 35 years and have been verified as beneficial in peer-reviewed research papers and journals. To learn more about LearningRx research results, programs, and their 9.6 out of 10 client satisfaction rating visit http://www.learningrx.com/.    

    Source: LearningRx

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