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In addition to raising awareness, adults who believe they could be at risk have taken action, leading to the proper “assessment pathways. Dr. Jane Halsall, a chartered counseling psychologist, stated: “We are not seeing more people with ADHD than before.” We’re just getting better at recognizing. She went on, “Awareness is growing, stigma is declining, and adults are now more likely to seek assessment when they see patterns that are impairing an area of their life.

A British woman entrepreneur “who always felt disorganized and struggled with completing tasks despite her creativity, drive, and determination” was one of the medical cases the Dubai Health Authority-licensed practitioner had handled, aside from a nine-year-old boy at the Cornerstone Clinic. A sequence of “structured planning, coaching, and self-compassion work” followed an ADHD diagnosis. She currently manages her own consulting firm and serves as a guide to others facing similar challenges.

The apparent disturbances “in a pattern” are related to “work, relationships, or emotional well-being,” according to her books on adult patients. The “increasing and more recognition in women and high-functioning adults that ADHD exists” is based on the accessible and available “assessment pathways. Halsall was asked about ADHD in adults because social media has been flooded with notifications about it for the previous few years.

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