Recent studies indicate that ADHD is one of the most costly health conditions in the U.S. - topped
only by alcohol abuse and clearly ahead of drug abuse in terms of cost.
Annually, alcohol abuse costs American families $86 billion in lost household income. The annual
cost for ADHD is $77 billion and the annual cost for drug abuse is $58 billion.
Hard costs, like out-of-pocket medical treatment, are only one aspect of lost income. ADHD high
school graduates and college graduates make considerably less money annually than their non-ADHD
counterparts.
Research indicates that it doesn’t matter if the person with ADHD has the same level of education as
someone who does not have ADHD, the person with ADHD will make less money than the person without
ADHD. The numbers are between $4500.00 and $10,000.00 annually. People with ADHD suffer from
symptoms like inattention, hyperactivity and impulsivity - which are not always conducive to the
work environment.
Although about half the children with ADHD learn to adequately manage their symptoms into adulthood,
the other half continue to struggle as they transition from school to work. If ADHD goes untreated
into adulthood, the symptoms can affect their financial health by making it harder to hold down a
job, making it harder to obtain the education needed to land high-paying jobs and it can cause more
lost work days.
Many psychiatrists that treat adults with ADHD ask their clients to bring in their employee
evaluations, most of the evaluations brought in read like a textbook case. The ADHD adult will talk
out of turn, have difficulty following through with instructions, show lack of focus, have
difficulty finishing projects and complain of being disorganized.
Symptoms like these make it very hard for an adult with ADHD to maintain a successful work
environment. More often than not, these are the employees that get passed up for a promotion or are
under-employed according to their abilities.
Not only does the adult with ADHD have more problems at work, without successful treatment the ADHD
adult typically also has:
_ Higher Divorce rates.
_ Lower levels of satisfaction with all aspects of their lives.
_ Less likely to have a positive self-image or be optimistic.
_ More likely to abuse drugs or alcohol.
_ More driving accidents.
Most experts agree that if ADHD is detected and treated at a young age, the ADHD adult will be less
likely to struggle with work and their everyday duties.
The key is in finding successful and healthful treatment for the ADHD adult.
Jeannine Virtue is a freelance writer who focuses on health related issues. For information about
effective and healthy treatments for Attention Deficit Disorder in adults and children, visit the
Attention Deficit Disorder Help Center at http://www.add-adhd-help-center.com
Submitted by:
- Name: Jeannine Virtue, author
- Date: 06/02/05 at 14:31
- Email: jvirtue@add-adhd-help-center.com
- Rem Agent: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1; .NET CLR 1.0.3705; .NET CLR 1.1.4322)
- Rem IP: 71.115.28.198
|