
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm trying to figure out whether to pursue a neuropsych evaluation for my high school aged daughter.
I'm wondering if there's some inattentive ADHD going on. She's a smart girl who gets mostly As at the end of the marking period. But she finds school very stressful. It takes her a long time to get her homework done (and there really doesnt seem to be that much of it). She does well in most of her classes but struggles with the teacher that mostly lectures to the class where she has to take notes (there doesn't seem to be a lot of that going on in her other classes).
We do have tears sometimes over work that seems insurmountable but really aren't. And even though she's pretty smart, it takes her longer to pick up concepts.
She's been diagnosed with anxiety and has trouble making friends (although she has a small-but not very healthy friend group). She's in therapy for these issues, but I also wonder if there's something else going on?
Does someone else in the family have ADHD? If not, I'd try to see if other methods might work, because high school is a time when students find school to be stressful and older, inefficient methods of studying to not work with the increased workload.
Anonymous wrote:I'm trying to figure out whether to pursue a neuropsych evaluation for my high school aged daughter.
I'm wondering if there's some inattentive ADHD going on. She's a smart girl who gets mostly As at the end of the marking period. But she finds school very stressful. It takes her a long time to get her homework done (and there really doesnt seem to be that much of it). She does well in most of her classes but struggles with the teacher that mostly lectures to the class where she has to take notes (there doesn't seem to be a lot of that going on in her other classes).
We do have tears sometimes over work that seems insurmountable but really aren't. And even though she's pretty smart, it takes her longer to pick up concepts.
She's been diagnosed with anxiety and has trouble making friends (although she has a small-but not very healthy friend group). She's in therapy for these issues, but I also wonder if there's something else going on?
Anonymous wrote:That does sound like a possible inattentive ADHD profile. You should get her evaluated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anxiety and ADHD can look a lot alike. Who diagnosed her with anxiety and how long has she been in therapy? Has she considered medication for the anxiety?
She's been in therapy for a LONG time and we are discussing an SSRI now.
I'd get the anxiety under control with the SSRI and see if the other issues improve. Inability to focus / taking a long time can be due to perfectionism (anxiety) or ADHD. She has made it through high school with mostly As so it doesn't sound like it's a crisis right now.
She definitely is a perfectionist and that is something we've been working on. But sometimes it's like she just can't start her homework, not just complete it.
And to clarify, she's in high school, but just beginning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anxiety and ADHD can look a lot alike. Who diagnosed her with anxiety and how long has she been in therapy? Has she considered medication for the anxiety?
She's been in therapy for a LONG time and we are discussing an SSRI now.
I'd get the anxiety under control with the SSRI and see if the other issues improve. Inability to focus / taking a long time can be due to perfectionism (anxiety) or ADHD. She has made it through high school with mostly As so it doesn't sound like it's a crisis right now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anxiety and ADHD can look a lot alike. Who diagnosed her with anxiety and how long has she been in therapy? Has she considered medication for the anxiety?
She's been in therapy for a LONG time and we are discussing an SSRI now.
Anonymous wrote:Anxiety and ADHD can look a lot alike. Who diagnosed her with anxiety and how long has she been in therapy? Has she considered medication for the anxiety?