Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7329883 | Social Science & Medicine | 2016 | 37 Pages |
Abstract
To examine this issue, we conducted semi-structured interviews at four North American sites in 2010-11 with 125 young adults, originally diagnosed with ADHD as children, regarding their work and post-secondary educational environments. Many subjects describe their symptoms as context-dependent. In some contexts, participants report feeling better able to focus; in others, their symptoms-such as high energy levels-become strengths rather than liabilities. Modal descriptions included tasks that were stressful and challenging, novel and required multitasking, busy and fast-paced, physically demanding or hands-on, and/or intrinsically interesting. Consistent with a developmental psychopathology framework, ADHD is experienced as arising from an interaction between our subjects and their environments. These findings demonstrate the need to account for the role of context in our understanding of ADHD as a psychiatric disorder, especially as it manifests in young adulthood.
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Authors
Arielle K. Lasky, Thomas S. Weisner, Peter S. Jensen, Stephen P. Hinshaw, Lily Hechtman, L. Eugene Arnold, Desiree W. Murray, James M. Swanson,