• xargs@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    3
    ·
    1 year ago

    Here’s my take which no one asked for:

    Key things beforehand:

    • ADHD is both overdiagnosed and undiagnosed
    • Underdiagnosis is dogshit, people who need treatment should 100% get it. I hope that those who feel that they have ADHD get a diagnosis and treatment, because we all know the horrible impact of it.
    • ADHD medication in theraputic doses can also calm down neurotypical brains. I see a lot of crap online about “if you take ADHD medication and don’t have it, it will make you hyper lol” which is just not true. The effects of ADHD medication do not help with the diagnosis of ADHD. If anything, it will make the person taking the medication **feel **like they are performing better (though studies seem to suggest that this is ultimately because of the increased domamine, and that NT brains actually perform worse).

    Unwanted Thoughts: In the effort to break stigma, ADHD has been continuously launched into the spotlight in the past 5 years, namely in social media. The issue is, accuracy over social media is extremely low. For example, in a review of 100 ADHD related TikTok videos, researcher Anthony Yeung found that 52 percent were highly relatable, and misleading. This content has millions and millions of views.

    It is not gatekeepy to say that social media is largely misrepresenting ADHD. Myself and the people reading this know the detrimental impact of ADHD on our lives, and so when there’s so much misinformation out there about the condition we struggle daily with, it makes me honestly rage.

    5 ways you know you have ADHD

    • Picking skin for hours
    • You forget your keys every so often
    • You like listening to the same song over and over.
    • You have issues sleeping at normal times
    • You walk past a tree and pick off a leaf

    I shit you not, the above is what I gathered from a few videos currently at the top for the tag ADHD. So what we have now is the most watered down impacts of ADHD like picking up a damn leaf being compared to something that has been massively destructive in our lives. Follow the train a little bit further, and you find videos talking through questionnaires like the DIVA along with what they are testing for.

    The issue I have is, all of this absolute garbage honestly, in my view, only hurts us. ADHD has become the ultra-relatable, “oh I think I have that” condition which makes opening up about it to people so damn pointless, if not damaging. When I say ADHD to people, the image they have in their head isn’t a DSM-5 definition within the context of having significant impacts in two or more areas of life, but rather a 30 seconds caricature.

    I think when people use the phrase gatekeeping, they are missing what is being gatekept. It’s not that the person wants people suffering with ADHD symptoms to not reach out for professional support, or that they feel that they want to put the breaks on people getting diagnosed now that they are in the new shiny exclusive club. I feel like it’s more that they are trying to protect what ADHD actually is, as when there’s images of it being painted online which are vastly different to the experiance that people with ADHD have, it waters down public perspection of the condition and only furthers the sigma attached to the diagnosis.

    It’s honestly heartbreakingly embarrasing to look through popular ADHD content online unless from good sources, as I cannot help but think that it’s this content that is shaping the views and perspection of NT people about ADHD.

    TL; DR, if I tell someone that I have ADHD, I don’t want them thinking that it means that I can’t walk past a tree without picking off a fucking leaf. It’s embarrasing. Also, I think social media is causing more people to think they have ADHD, which is because of the image of ADHD presented. I think that this image of ADHD that is being presented, which is more fun, quirky and relatable only serves to hurt us.

  • surewhynotlem@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    1 year ago

    It’d be easy to diagnose if we were a little more lax with our prescriptions.

    Here, take this Ritalin. Did it make you hyper? Yeah, you’re normal. Did it make you fold laundry the same day you washed it? ADHD.

    • Alacran@mander.xyz
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      1 year ago

      I take meds and I will never fold. Best I can do is actually doing the laundry.

  • rosatherad@kbin.social
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    That second tweet is a bit concerning, though. Let’s not forget that many ADHD meds are addicting to non-ADHD brains.

  • Blackstar1886@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    Gonna have to disagree with this. Not having a diagnosis gives people the false impression that ADHD is a state of being, a minor hindrance like having an “off day.” It makes it seem less distinct and thus taken less seriously. When that happens and someone seeks an accommodation at work or school they are much less likely to be taken seriously — which inhibits their ability to function in society.

    Taking any prescription medication for a condition you do not have is fucking stupid and/or dangerous.

    TLDR: Self-diagnosing is foolish and misinformation harms people that truly require equitable accommodations.

    • alternative_factor@kbin.social
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      1 year ago

      I have OCD and after the T.V show “Monk”, tons of people thought they had OCD for being very organized, etc. Media DOES greatly impact people’s notions of things and all the TikTok stuff can be very misleading and outright dangerous.

    • Nanachi@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      1 year ago

      ADHD is both overdiagnosed and underdiagnosed at the same time for me… I blame misinformation and overall confusion regarding ADHD… When I talked about my symptoms to others, a common answer I would get is “common among people” - if my pratically extreme executive dysfunction and lower leg muscle destroying hyperactivity was actually common among people than the global society wouldn’t last a week